Alaska Pensions Bill Unlikely to Advance?

By JAMES BROOKS

Alaska Beacon

As public employees prepared to rally in front of the Alaska Capitol on Tuesday, demanding the reinstatement of a public pension system, leading members of the state Senate said their request was unlikely to be fulfilled this year.

Members of the 17-member bipartisan Senate majority said at the start of this year’s legislative session that a bill intended to improve recruitment and retention of state employees was a priority, but with only two weeks now left in the regular legislative session, Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak, said a pension bill is now expected to become law no sooner than next year.

“We started the year hoping that we could get this through this year, but I think the reality has sort of set in to realize that there’s a lot of work yet to do,” he said. 

Alaska currently offers a 401(k)-style defined contribution retirement system, and the Senate’s preferred pension bill, Senate Bill 88, would create a defined benefit retirement system, commonly known as a pension, but modified to allow adjustments to benefits and employees’ required contributions in the future.

That idea still has to overcome the doubts of some senators as well as lawmakers in the House and Gov. Mike Dunleavy before becoming law, and it isn’t guaranteed that it will pass next year, either.

“Some of us haven’t concluded that a complete change is the solution,” said Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, and one of the majority’s leading skeptics.

On Tuesday, SB 88 received its first hearings in the Senate Finance Committee, where Stedman sits as co-chair.

Sen. Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage and the bill’s lead sponsor, pointed to a front-page article from the Anchorage Daily News when talking about the need for the proposal.

That article showed the state Office of Public Advocacy declaring that it can no longer provide public guardians for disabled or handicapped Alaskans.

“We have a problem: It’s difficult to retain. It’s difficult to recruit using a defined contribution system,” she said.

“Certainly the pension issue — going back to a defined benefit — is not the single solution, but it’s certainly a big piece,” Giessel said.

Dan Doonan, executive director of the National Institute on Retirement Security, told members of the finance committee that a study examining Alaska’s teacher retention problems found that teachers were more likely to quit if they had the new 401(k)-style retirement system than if they had the old pension-style system.

The difference held up even when comparing teachers of the same age, in the same schools, with the same principals, he said.

“The turnover rates here are fairly high compared with other states and what used to be the case with the (defined benefit) plan,” he said.

Dominic Lozano, president of the Alaska Professional Firefighters Association, testified in support of the bill and said it was crafted using ideas from other states, including Wisconsin and North Dakota.

“We’ve stolen the best practices from each of them,” he said.

If implemented, Senate Bill 88 would require new employees to use the pension, while existing employees would be given the choice to stay with the current retirement system or switch to the new one.

Benefits would be guaranteed: Police, firefighters and other public safety employees would be able to retire at age 50 with 25 years of service (or at age 55 with 20 years), while teachers and other public employees would be allowed to retire at age 60 or with 30 years of service.

If the state’s pension fund begins running below the amount that actuaries believe is needed to pay benefits, a state board would be able to adjust required contribution rates to make up the gap.

Medical benefits aren’t included, which Giessel and proponents said was a compromise intended to encourage passage of the bill.

At times during Tuesday’s hearing, Stedman interrupted testimony with pointed questions about facts, figures and how the bill would function.

The state’s prior pension system was eliminated by the Alaska Legislature because of shortfalls in the pension fund that were exacerbated by mistakes committed by the state’s prior actuary. 

Stedman’s questioning caused Sen. Donny Olson, D-Golovin and the meeting’s chairman, to note that the meeting was “getting kind of prickly.”

Several members of the committee noted that their decision has high stakes: The Alaska Constitution guarantees pension benefits pledged under law, and failing to properly analyze the legislation could leave the state stuck with a high price tag.

Giessel, testifying at the opposite end of the meeting table from Olson, said she understood the need for scrutiny.

“I would expect nothing less from the Senate Finance table,” she said.

Former Anchorage Republican Rep. Chuck Kopp and current Rep. Ashley Carrick, D-Fairbanks, speak after a rally in support of Senate Bill 88 on the steps of the Alaska State Capitol, Tuesday. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

–––––

https://alaskabeacon.com/james-brooks

 

 

Thanks to the generosity and expertise of the the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska broadband department, Tidal Network ; Christopher Cropley, director of Tidal Network; and Luke Johnson, Tidal Network technician, SitkaSentinel.com is again being updated. Tidal Network has been working tirelessly to install Starlink satellite equipment for city and other critical institutions, including the Sentinel, following the sudden breakage of GCI's fiberoptic cable on August 29, which left most of Sitka without internet or phone connections. CCTHITA's public-spirited response to the emergency is inspiring.

Login Form

 

20 YEARS AGO

September 2004

Photo caption: Nikko Friedman and Gus Bruhl of the Rain Forest Rascals running team, dressed in skunk cabbage and boots, make their way down Lincoln Street during the  annual Running of the Boots. Scores turned out for the event, a fundraiser for the Dog Point Fish Camp.

50 YEARS AGO

September 1974

The freshmen students initiation will be Friday at the school. Dress will be respectable. ... Suspension of three days will be enforced for any of the following violations: throwing of eggs; spraying of shaving cream; cutting of hair; and any pranks which could be harmful to the welfare of the students.


Calendar

Local Events

Instagram

Daily Sitka Sentinel on Instagram!

Facebook

Daily Sitka Sentinel on Facebook!