Legislature(2007 - 2008)BELTZ 211

03/19/2008 09:30 AM Senate STATE AFFAIRS


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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Continued from 03/18/08 --
+ SB 183 REPEAL DEFINED CONTRIB RETIREMENT PLANS TELECONFERENCED
Moved SB 183 Out of Committee
*+ SB 259 EFFECTIVE DATE: MEDICAL ASSISTANCE LAWS TELECONFERENCED
Moved SB 259 Out of Committee
*+ SB 260 2008 REVISOR'S BILL TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSSB 260(STA) Out of Committee
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
= HB 88 TVS AND MONITORS IN MOTOR VEHICLES
Moved CSHB 88(FIN) Out of Committee
         SB 183-REPEAL DEFINED CONTRIB RETIREMENT PLANS                                                                     
                                                                                                                              
9:36:21 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE announced the consideration of SB 183.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PAT  LUBY,   Advocacy  Director,  AARP  Alaska,   said  financial                                                               
security  is the  cornerstone of  the American  dream -  you work                                                               
hard and  follow the rules and  you'll be able to  retire without                                                               
financial  worries. However,  one  quarter  of [Alaska]  retirees                                                               
don't participate  in social security.  A person  doesn't outlive                                                               
social  security. In  the  past  it didn't  matter  so much  that                                                               
Alaska's public  employees did not participate,  because they had                                                               
a defined  benefit plan  (DBP) that  would last  as long  as they                                                               
lived. Now,  they have  no DBP or  social security.  The American                                                               
dream  no   longer  exists  for   Alaska's  newly   hired  public                                                               
employees.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. LUBY  said it  is possible to  make the  defined contribution                                                               
plan (DCP)  work "as long as  you don't live too  long." But most                                                               
people live into their mid 80s and  many into their mid 90s. If a                                                               
DCP is to  work, people need to predict their  life expectancy as                                                               
well  as their  spouse's.  They  need to  know  if  they will  be                                                               
healthy  up until  death or  if  they will  need long-term  care.                                                               
Medicare doesn't  pay for  nursing homes or  home care.  A person                                                               
will need to  know if there will be inflation  in health care and                                                               
utility  costs.  Defined  benefits and  social  security  provide                                                               
annual COLAs  [cost of living  allowances], but the  DCP doesn't.                                                               
The price of fuel oil and gasoline  may go up. "You better have a                                                               
crystal  ball to  make a  defined contribution  plan work."  Many                                                               
companies have switched to DCPs, but  all who work in the private                                                               
sector have social security that will  last as long as they live.                                                               
No  matter how  much is  saved  in a  401k or  I.R.A., they  will                                                               
always  have the  defined benefits  of social  security. Alaska's                                                               
public employees used to have  the same financial security before                                                               
SB 141 [of 2005],  and no matter how long they  lived or what bad                                                               
luck was  dealt them, they would  not starve or end  up on public                                                               
assistance.  AARP members  rely on  Alaska's public  servants for                                                               
police assistance, to  teach their grandchildren, and  to put out                                                               
fires, and  they don't  want these  honorable public  servants to                                                               
end up worrying  about their health coverage  and outliving their                                                               
savings. They deserve better than  that. He asked for support for                                                               
SB 183. Give them the security they deserve, he said.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:39:09 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BUNDE asked if social security will exist in 50 years.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. LUBY  said yes. It can  pay complete benefits up  until 2041.                                                               
There will definitely be changes  to the social security program,                                                               
like was  done in 1983. Everyone  needs to share in  the changes.                                                               
Senator   Lisa  Murkowski   expects   changes   after  the   next                                                               
presidential election. Social  security will be there;  it is the                                                               
cornerstone for all  of us in retirement. No one  wants to see it                                                               
go away. "We will tinker with it, but it will be there."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BUNDE said  a lot of young people he  talks to think that                                                               
social security won't be there. It  has become a Ponzi scheme. It                                                               
may be  around but it  will change,  "and that's what  we've done                                                               
with state retirement." A constituent  said the SBS state program                                                               
is really a  form of social security. That program  may be around                                                               
longer than social security.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:40:59 AM                                                                                                                    
BARBARA  RICH, President,  Alaska Retired  Educators Association,                                                               
Juneau, said the association is  the original retired teachers of                                                               
Alaska,  and  it   is  not  union.  She  said   she  listened  to                                                               
yesterday's  testimony  and spoke  with  many  new teachers.  Her                                                               
group just  gave a  scholarship to  a wonderful  young, life-long                                                               
Alaskan  who  really wants  to  teach  in  Alaska, but  when  she                                                               
learned about  Alaska's pension for  new hires she decided  to go                                                               
to a  state with good benefits.  There are 13 to  15 states where                                                               
workers do  not have social  security, but  all have a  very good                                                               
defined benefit plan  -- except Alaska. The  other states provide                                                               
their teachers  with full social  security and a  defined benefit                                                               
plan,  and there  are a  few  that have  a hybrid  plan. This  is                                                               
important, and students  are looking at this.  Senator Bunde said                                                               
new teachers  are only interested in  a high salary, but  that is                                                               
not true - they are interested in the pension.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  RICH said  that right  after her  husband retired  he had  a                                                               
heart attack.  He needed  by-pass surgeries. "If  we had  not had                                                               
the retirement  plan that we  have, my  husband and I  would have                                                               
been wiped  out completely - all  of our savings, our  house, and                                                               
everything.  There would  have  been nothing  left  for us."  New                                                               
teachers need to  have something like she has.  Alaska can afford                                                               
to do  that. If Alaska  doesn't provide  for them, it  won't have                                                               
decent  people teaching  its children.  Alaska needs  to get  the                                                               
best people  to teach, not  people who  can't get a  job anywhere                                                               
else.  Alaska  will  become  a  training  ground.  She  won't  be                                                               
personally affected because she has  her pension, as does Senator                                                               
Bunde, but she is concerned for the young people.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:44:55 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  BUNDE said  he has  an excerpt  from the  Pew Charitable                                                               
Trust's  article  entitled  Mandate  to  Measure.  It  said  many                                                               
workers are not looking for  retirement, but they are looking for                                                               
"flexibility,  opportunity,  and   performance  pay."  There  are                                                               
different points  of view. By  an accident  of birth he  got [his                                                               
benefit plan], but he didn't choose  the date of his birth and so                                                               
he "had  an opportunity to  deal with  what existed in  Alaska at                                                               
that time. Today is another day." Circumstances are different.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:45:57 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  STEVENS  said  he agrees  that  Alaska  needs  well-paid                                                               
teachers, and  he would like  to return  to the days  when Alaska                                                               
paid  them  as high  as  any  other  state.  He asked  about  the                                                               
unfunded liability. It has to be paid by someone.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. RICH said to look at  what caused the unfunded liability. One                                                               
cause is the  legislature. She lobbied heavily  against the Early                                                               
Retirement Incentive program. The only  comment she heard was the                                                               
same thing  she heard  from Senator Bunde  yesterday: "We  have a                                                               
lot of teachers who don't want to  be teaching, so we want to get                                                               
rid  of them."  An early  buyout is  not the  way to  get rid  of                                                               
teachers. Even  her middle school students  could understand that                                                               
it would hurt  the system. "That was only one  of the things that                                                               
hurt it." The  other one was lack of funding  by communities. The                                                               
market was part of it. This body  has passed a bill to get things                                                               
back in place. The fourth  part [of the unfunded liability] deals                                                               
with health, which Alaska can't  control, but the state can start                                                               
dealing  with prescription  drugs.  "One thing  we  have to  stop                                                               
doing  is  cutting back  Medicare  -  that's really  hurting  the                                                               
senior population in  Alaska." People who have  older doctors who                                                               
retire  can't  get  another  doctor.  If  the  state  works  with                                                               
Congress, "we  can control a lot  of this." Health is  a national                                                               
issue, and we need affordable  health care for everyone. The PERS                                                               
pension  is  funded  over  100  percent, the  TRS  is  funded  93                                                               
percent,  and  actuaries feel  it  is  tremendous  if one  is  80                                                               
percent funded.  "So our pension is  very good … and  if we could                                                               
get the health  care taken care of…"  The Tier II in  TRS and the                                                               
Tier III PERS  is suppose to take care of  that, but there hasn't                                                               
been time to see if it  does because people have not retired much                                                               
out of those plans. Most retired people are Tier I.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GREEN asked what was funded at 100 percent.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. RICH said  the PERS retirement pension is over  100 percent -                                                               
not counting health care. The TRS is 93 percent.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:49:54 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GREEN said that is news to her.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. RICH said she believes the  figures come from the ARM [Alaska                                                               
Retirement Management] board.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GREEN said  if that is the case Alaska  wouldn't have the                                                               
unfunded liability.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  RICH   said  there  is   the  liability  because   of  early                                                               
retirement,  and it  wasn't funded  the  way it  should be.  Some                                                               
districts  did not  pay their  share. The  state has  to pay  its                                                               
share just  like the  public employees, "and  they didn't  in all                                                               
cases."  The early  retirement and  the health  portions are  why                                                               
there is the unfunded liability.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GREEN asked when the state didn't pay its share.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  RICH said  a  few  years ago  everyone  thought the  pension                                                               
system was  doing so well, and  some districts did not  pay their                                                               
share.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GREEN  said that is not  the state. The state  has always                                                               
paid, she  assumed. There are unique  characteristics about these                                                               
plans that don't  allow overfunding. There are  things that don't                                                               
allow preparation for the bad days.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:52:07 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BUNDE said  many actuarial organizations say  not to fund                                                               
over  80 percent,  because  there will  be  pressure to  increase                                                               
benefits, which will  spiral into problems. If the  state is over                                                               
100 percent, it needs to be looked at.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said that during  the Knowles  administration, the                                                               
ARM  board  wasn't presenting  accurate  information  - they  got                                                               
their  numbers  from  Mercer.  "Then  add  to  it  the  political                                                               
equation of having  to put into the budget the  real numbers that                                                               
it would cost to afford a  system. And then to ask employees, who                                                               
are then your voters, to contribute  an amount that would also be                                                               
reflective  of  reality,  and  you   start  seeing  where  things                                                               
spiral." It isn't any one single  thing, there is enough blame to                                                               
go around.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  FRENCH said  it comes  down to  the unfunded  liability.                                                               
This bill  does not fix  it or break it.  "We've fixed it  with a                                                               
different mechanism,  which is to  contribute more money  to that                                                               
unfunded liability and to correct  the past errors, whatever they                                                               
were." With  or without  DBP, the  unfunded liability  exists and                                                               
needs to be fixed. He firmly  believes in going back to DBPs, and                                                               
it can be  funded in a way that doesn't  cause any economic pain,                                                               
any more pain than necessary,  to provide for a stable retirement                                                               
for public employees.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:54:47 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STEVENS  said the  question is how  to avoid  an unfunded                                                               
liability.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR FRENCH  said that is  a perfect question, and  the answer                                                               
is to  be ever vigilant.  There are many jurisdictions  that have                                                               
avoided   this   problem   by  being   proactive,   conservative,                                                               
questioning the assumptions, and staying on top of it.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE said someone needs to  sit down and reflect on Tier                                                               
II  and III.  Perhaps  it  will be  a  carve-out  for medical,  a                                                               
separate  stipend, or  a bare-bones  plan. She  is young  and she                                                               
knows  that her  friends are  looking at  retirement. Some  young                                                               
people  might   not  care  about   it,  but  her   generation  is                                                               
increasingly looking  at retirement and  how they will  live with                                                               
dignity and  health in  their final  years. If  it really  were a                                                               
choice between  high pay and  benefits, "I might even  be willing                                                               
to go down that path, but I don't  see this state ever going to a                                                               
merit-based system and I don't  see … us increasing teacher pay."                                                               
Alaska has  the worst of all  scenarios - teachers are  paid some                                                               
of the  lowest rates in  the nation, the state  is geographically                                                               
challenged, especially  with rural  teachers and  peace officers,                                                               
and on  top of that,  the state won't  give social security  or a                                                               
stable retirement.  It makes it  a real challenge to  attract and                                                               
retain good people in Alaska.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:57:02 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BUNDE  said, "Where you  stand on an issue  often depends                                                               
on where  you sit." There is  merit pay for teachers.  He said he                                                               
helped get it passed a couple  of years ago. It was fought, tooth                                                               
and claw,  by NEA because they  want to support common  factors -                                                               
if not  mediocre ones. A number  of schools took advantage  of it                                                               
and  rewarded outstanding  performance with  additional pay.  But                                                               
for how  to deal with the  unfunded mandate, the state  should do                                                               
it as  they currently are --  dipping into the general  fund. One                                                               
of the biggest frustrations that  he hears from people in private                                                               
enterprise  is "you  guys are  using  their money  to fund  state                                                               
employees' retirement." If there is  a DBP, the contribution from                                                               
the  employee  has to  go  up  enough  so  there is  no  unfunded                                                               
mandate. He doesn't think that is politically achievable.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE said there could be  a discussion about it. She was                                                               
frustrated  that  the  debate  and   the  repeal  became  such  a                                                               
political pressure  cooker that  a lot  of details  and potential                                                               
corrections were lost in the mix.  There might be a middle ground                                                               
to pull  back to. It  would likely be higher  contribution rates,                                                               
but at  the end  of the  day, the  state needs  to pay  for state                                                               
functions.   "Last  I   checked   education  is   still  in   the                                                               
constitution.  It's  still something  that  we  want to  publicly                                                               
fund.  We want  an education  to  be accessible  to all  Alaskans                                                               
irrespective of income and irrespective  of where they live." The                                                               
state has that  commitment and it is different  from what happens                                                               
in the private sector. It is a constitutional commitment.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:59:42 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GREEN  said the conversations during  the construction of                                                               
the new  plans were  about not  being able  to change  a contract                                                               
[with workers],  and a new tier  would need to be  created. "Does                                                               
this do that? Is it a Tier V and Tier IV?"                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
JESSE  KIEHL,  Staff to  Senator  Kim  Elton,  said the  bill  is                                                               
prospective and will put new  hires into the previous tier. Those                                                               
who are in the DCP will get  a choice of taking their DCP account                                                               
and converting  the funds,  value for value,  to the  DBP system.                                                               
The bill ensures  that if they choose to change,  it won't create                                                               
any unfunded  liability because  it will be  the lesser  of their                                                               
actual time  of service or  the actuarial value of  their account                                                               
balance. If  he had a  DCP for  two years, had  done staggeringly                                                               
well  in the  market,  and  the actuarial  value  of his  account                                                               
balance was greater than his two  years of service, he might only                                                               
have  a year  and a  half of  value. That  would be  the credited                                                               
service he would get with such  a conversion. A new hire would be                                                               
a Tier III hire, in effect, no matter what it might be called.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:02:57 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. KIEHL noted  information provided to the  committee on normal                                                               
costs. Normal  cost is the percentage  of pay that has  to be put                                                               
in the  system this  pay period  for this  pay period's  worth of                                                               
benefits. It  is forward  looking. "It's  the prefunding  that we                                                               
do."  The chart  on accrued  liability represents  2007 when  the                                                               
unfunded liability was  valued at roughly $7  billion between the                                                               
two systems.  The accrued liabilities of  Tier I in PERS  and TRS                                                               
are about $13  billion. For Tier II  TRS and Tier III  PERS it is                                                               
about $1.4 billion. Those are the  tiers the bill will go back to                                                               
and there are two  thirds as many members as Tier  I, and yet the                                                               
total  liability is  one  fifteenth. "We  have  never broken  out                                                               
assets by  tiers, so  I can't compare  the unfunded  liability of                                                               
Tier I and  Tier II of TRS."  In essence, the change  from Tier I                                                               
to Tier II in TRS and the change  from Tier I to Tier III for the                                                               
PERS pretty much  cover the unfunded liability issue.  SB 141 did                                                               
other  things that  assured the  constant vigilance  that Senator                                                               
French  suggested. It  provided for  a second  actuary, mandatory                                                               
experience  studies, and  that  nobody ever  pays  less than  the                                                               
normal cost rate -- even if  there is extra money. "Under SB 141,                                                               
nobody ever pays  less than the normal cost rate  of the benefits                                                               
accrued, and this bill does  nothing to change those things." All                                                               
the safety valves  are kept, while still going back  to a benefit                                                               
that gives retirement security.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:05:56 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR MCGUIRE said  that was excellent. There are a  lot of myths                                                               
about  what the  bill does.  She  asked if  SB 183  will fix  the                                                               
problem with SB 141 and reconnect PERS to TRS for vesting.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. KIEHL said  the problem is fixed for the  person who is hired                                                               
after SB  183 passes. If  a person is in  the DCP and  chooses to                                                               
convert, the problem is fixed. But  the problem will not be fixed                                                               
for those who choose not to convert.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
10:07:15 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR FRENCH  said this  committee has  had a  good discussion,                                                               
but there  are huge financial  implications that should  be taken                                                               
up  by  another  committee.  He  moved  to  report  SB  183  from                                                               
committee  with individual  recommendations  and attached  fiscal                                                               
note(s).                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BUNDE  objected. Different  people have  different points                                                               
of  view.  "Right  up  there  with  the  frustration  that  state                                                               
employees  only  work  a  37.5-hour   work  week  --  stipulating                                                               
teachers  work a  lot more  than  that --  is the  fact that  the                                                               
public is supporting  a retirement plan that  is vastly different                                                               
than what  the public would  have access  to prior to  141." What                                                               
disturbs  him  is  making   people  indentured  servants,  making                                                               
workers stay  in Alaska  because it  is financially  important to                                                               
them when  they retire.  They could  be sour  on their  job, "but                                                               
we're going  to encourage them,  force them almost, to  stay here                                                               
because of the retirement that  they'll lose if they move." Chair                                                               
McGuire is the only member that  was born in Alaska and "the rest                                                               
of us came from somewhere else."  He cashed out his retirement in                                                               
Washington  to move  to  Alaska.  He doesn't  want  to deny  that                                                               
opportunity to  someone in Alaska.  Those who grew up  here would                                                               
like to move to other parts of  the world. He would not deny them                                                               
that. Making people  stay in Alaska so they can  meet that ironic                                                               
definition of  sourdough -- sour  on Alaska without  enough dough                                                               
to leave --  just doesn't make sense. If the  DCP is repealed, it                                                               
will drain  the public  treasury, and  in a  few years  the state                                                               
will be in  a deficit. Once a retirement  program is established,                                                               
the state has to  stick with it. The money would  need to be paid                                                               
with the corpus of the  permanent fund. Bills are sometimes moved                                                               
just  out  of courtesy,  and  it  causes  a  mess on  the  floor.                                                               
Sometimes those political mistakes pass into law.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:10:55 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said her vote  to move  the bill will  reflect the                                                               
fact that it is  a good idea. There is more work  to be done. She                                                               
prefers an  option of  a DCP  and a DBP.  Perhaps there  are more                                                               
places where  the bill  can be ratcheted  down. In  general, [SB]                                                               
141 went  too far  and the effects  will be seen  when it  is too                                                               
late. The  state is seeing it  already in its teachers.  She made                                                               
note  of  the front  line  folks  that  face  fires to  save  our                                                               
families and respond  to those crimes in the middle  of Alaska in                                                               
the cold,  dark winter  nights. If  we are  going to  attract and                                                               
retain people  to do these  state functions,  we need to  be sure                                                               
that they have a humane and adequate retirement.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:12:11 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR STEVENS  said the  discussion has  to continue.  The bill                                                               
may not  make it  through this  session, but it  is too  early to                                                               
kill it.  He has  serious concerns  about the  unfunded liability                                                               
and  the transferability  of the  TRS and  PERS. This  bill might                                                               
resolve his concern.  "I'm going to vote to move  it ahead to the                                                               
next committee, although I have very serious qualms about it."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
A  roll  call  vote  was taken.  Senators  French,  Stevens,  and                                                               
McGuire voted in  favor of moving SB 183, and  Senators Bunde and                                                               
Green voted against  it. Therefore SB 183 moved  out of committee                                                               
on a vote of 3:2.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                

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