San Diego Union-Tribune

CALPERS AGREES TO PAY $2.7B

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The nation’s largest public pension fund has agreed to pay up to $2.7 billion to refund policyhold­ers hit with huge hikes in their premiums, it was announced Tuesday.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System, or CalPERS, has agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit over the fee hikes that were imposed on nearly 80,000 people who paid for policies to cover the long-term costs of nursing care and included “inflation protection” coverage, according to a joint news release from CalPERS and the plaintiffs.

A judge must approve the deal, which could happen sometime next year, according to the release.

Several policyhold­ers sued in 2013 after CalPERS notified them that their premiums would jump by 85 percent over two years beginning in 2015.

CalPERS said it needed to raise the premiums to keep the expensive longterm care policies solvent. The fund has suspended new enrollment and plans to implement two more rate increases as early as this November and next year that could nearly double the premium cost, the Sacramento Bee reported.

CalPERS, which has some $470 billion in assets, provides pension and other retirement benefits to more than 2 million employees of state and local agencies and public schools, retirees and their families.

However, the money for the settlement won’t come from those assets, which cover pensions, but rather from a separate long-term care fund of nearly $5.5 billion, according to the news release.

If approved, the settlement would avoid a jury trial in the case scheduled for March.

Under the deal, most policyhold­ers would receive between $35,000 and $50,000 but would have to give up their long-term care insurance plans to receive full payment refunds, the Bee reported.

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