CalPERS: What s New, What s Old and What s to Come

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CalPERS: What s New, What s Old and What s to Come Agenda Introductions CalPERS GASB 68 Cost Sharing Reports Annual Actuarial Valuations Where Rates are Headed Funding Risk Mitigation The Rialto Example Analysis and Comments

Introductions Alan Milligan, CalPERS Chief Actuary, CalPERS, Partner, Public Section Labor and Employment Law George Harris, City of Rialto Assistant to the City Administrator/Director of Administrative Services Labor Negotiator, HR Director, CFO, Risk Manager GASB 68 Cost Sharing Reports

GASB 68 Actuarial Reports June 30, 2014 GASB 68 Cost Sharing Reports are available Contracting agencies can order reports through my CalPERS - Non-Pooled Plan Report Cost: $2,500 per plan - Pooled Plan Report Cost : $850 per plan June 30, 2015 GASB 68 Cost Sharing Reports will be available in 2016, after the June 30, 2014 Actuarial Valuations are complete 5 Annual Actuarial Valuations

June 30, 2014 Actuarial Valuations Expect June 30, 2014 Actuarial Valuations to be complete by the end of December 2015 7 Where Rates Are Headed

Five Year Outlook for Safety Plans 80 Percent Increase starting at 2015 2016 Employer Rates over 5 Years Non Pooled Public Agency Safety Plans 70 60 Number of Plans 50 40 30 20 10 0 Decrease Increase 0% to 10% Increase between 10% to 20% Increase between 20% to 30% Increase between 30% to 40% Increase between 40% to 50% Increase more than 50% 9 Five Year Outlook for Miscellaneous Plans 180 Percent Increase starting at 2015 2016 Employer Rates over 5 Years Non Pooled Public Agency Miscellaneous Plans 160 Number of Plans 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Decrease Increase 0% to 10% Increase between 10% to 20% Increase between 20% to 30% Increase between 30% to 40% Increase between 40% to 50% Increase more than 50% 10

Funding Risk Mitigation What is Funding Risk Mitigation? Funding Risk Mitigation seeks to reduce CalPERS funding risk over time Reducing funding risk should mitigate the impact of investment volatility on employer contribution rates and funding levels 12

How Would Funding Risk Mitigation Work? If an investment return exceeds the discount rate by a certain threshold, a Funding Risk Mitigation Event will be triggered When a Funding Risk Mitigation Event occurs, a portion of the investment return is used to pay for lowering the expected investment return and discount rate For example, a 11.5% investment return would reduce the expected investment and discount rate return five (5) basis points (.05%) 13 Where Are We With Funding Risk Mitigation CalPERS staff are drafting a Funding Risk Mitigation Board Policy The first reading of the Funding Risk Mitigation Board Policy is scheduled to occur in the October 2015 Finance and Administration Board Meeting 14

City of Rialto Example City of Rialto, CA San Bernardino County 101,000 Population FY 15/16 $67M General Fund Budget, $144M Citywide 315 FTEs Full Service Police, Fire and Water and Sewer Utility 5 Member Council w/ Mayor elected Separately from 4 Council at large Median Household Income $45,415 City of Rialto Example Rialto PERS Plan 3 Contracts Pre 2011 Misc. Employees 2.0 @ 55 Fire Employees 2.0 @ 50 Police Employees 2.0 @ 50 In 2008, Council Approved (3 2 Vote) new MOUs Granting Retroactive PERS formula enhancement effective January 1, 2011. 3 Contracts Post January 1, 2011 Misc. Employees 2.7 @ 55 Fire Employees 3.0 @ 50 Police Employees 3.0 @ 50

City of Rialto Example Perfect Storm Increased PERS Costs in 2011 with Enhancement Revenues reduced due to the state of the Economy Dissolution of RDA Mass Exodus of Staff and Department Heads as a result of the enhanced formulas Forced into Deficit Spending despite the loss of personnel Unfunded PERS Liability grew to $50M PERS Rates doubled City of Rialto Example

City of Rialto Example PERS Expense ($M) 14 12 10 8 6 50.000% 45.000% 40.000% 35.000% 30.000% 25.000% 20.000% 4 2 0 Total Paid City Paid 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 15.000% 10.000% 5.000% 0.000% Fiscal Year City of Rialto Example Pre PEPRA Employer Side Cost Sharing for CGMA and Fire was approved on a Post Tax basis per CA Gov. Code 20516(f); Police only agreed to Cost Sharing on a Pre Tax Basis PERS Restrictions No multiple contract amendments active at one time Cost Sharing Plans could not vary within a contract Post PEPRA Allow for Cost Sharing Plans to vary by MOU and between Classic and New Members

City of Rialto Example City of Rialto Example City of Rialto has 7 Bargaining Units Unit Contribution Amount Employee vs. Employer Side CGMA Department Heads Safety 12% Employer YES Misc. 8% Mid Managers 8% Employee No General Unit 8% Employee No EPMC Benefit Yes/No Fire Management (Division Chief and Battalion Chiefs) Fire General Unit (Captains and below) 12% Employer Yes 9% Employer No Police Management (Sergeants and Up) Safety 12% Misc. 8% Employer Yes Police General Unit (Corporals and Down) Safety 12% Misc. 8% Employer No City of Rialto Example Negotiation and Budget Tactics Exchange PERS contributions with fixed dollar non PERSable benefits; Deferred Compensation 457 Plan contributions Cafeteria Plan or pre tax medical contributions Discuss the State wide pension issues and concerns Discuss Citywide Budget concerns Classification and Compensation studies You may not be as far behind the Market as your employees may want to believe Discuss new service models and new technology Civilian Ambulance Operators vs Sworn Firefighters Mobile Technology and Automation Discuss the trade off of service vs. costs

BURKE in California Will Be A Tinderbox. Why? Cost Sharing for Pension and Retiree Medical Creates Overall Reductions In Take Home Pay Increasing PERS Employer Rates Health Care and Affordable Care Act 2014 Increasing Premiums for Medical Insurance BURKE in California Will Be A Tinderbox. Why? Need for Cities to Reinstate Service Cuts and Deferred Infrastructure Making up for Lost Wages of Recent Years Increasing Agency Revenue Trends Increased use of Factfinding and the Martinez PERB

BURKE Pension Cost Sharing Progression Reduces Take Home Pay Eliminate EPMC Implementation of 2018 50/50 Normal Costs Negotiating Actual 50/50 Sharing of Normal Costs Negotiating More than 50/50 Normal Cost Share Sharing City s UAAL Costs BURKE Pension Cost Sharing Results In Net Reduction in Take Home Pay (continued) Substantial increased costs over next 5 years Retiree Medical Net Reduction in Employee Pay for Cost Sharing of Pensions Need for Wage Increase Offset

BURKE Key Pension Cost Sharing Statutes Standard: 50/50 Share of Normal Costs Gov. Code 7522.30(a) & 20516.5(a) 2018 Unilateral Imposition of 50/50 Share Gov. Code 20516.5(b) and (c) Greater than 50/50 Share with MOU Gov. Code 7522.30(e) Cost Sharing By Agreement & PERS Contract Change Gov. Code 20516 (a) (e) Cost Sharing Outside PERS Contract Gov. Code 20516(f) BURKE Cost Sharing Negotiations Setting the Stage current or future wages Similar to medical premium cost sharing negotiations Salary offset as negotiating tool Great care needed in drafting MOU language

BURKE Pension Cost Sharing Negotiations Complicated by Concurrently Addressing: ACA Issues Increased costs from fees and penalties Takes staff time & energy Labor relations issues Increasing Medical Insurance Premium Costs Impact on employees take home pay Continuation of struggle to share costs of premiums BURKE Cities Need to Restore Service Cuts and Restart Deferred Infrastructure Citizens Demands to Restore Services to Pre 2009 Levels Deferred Infrastructure Restoration of Prudent Budget Reserves

BURKE Making up for Lost Wages of Recent Years Depends on Whether the Wage Reductions Were Temporary (snap backs) or Structural (e.g. salary schedule reductions) Wage Loss v. CPI Increase BURKE Increasing Agency Revenue Trends Raw Numbers Looking Better Increased Expectation for Service Restorations and Wage Increases

BURKE Unions Increasing Use of Fact finding and the Martinez PERB Fact finding Forces Planning for Negotiations Using: Comparable Agencies Total Compensation Increase in Inflation (CPI) Ability to Pay Increases Total Compensation is Key Include Total Costs of: Wages All H&W Benefits Retiree Medical Full Pension Costs Other Compensation (special pay, vacation, etc.) BURKE Unions Increasing use of Fact finding and the Martinez PERB PERB Will be an Unfriendly Forum for Cities in Foreseeable Future More notice, more interaction with unions & more time required to implement decisions Understand and Adjust to the New Reality Procedural compliance is key to successful implementation

BURKE What Does All Of This Mean? A Major Conflict of Expectations For PEPRA s Phase II Employees: Increases in Wages Overdue Rising City Revenues Use of Factfinding and PERB VS. Cities: Pension Cost Sharing Medical Cost Sharing Funding Retiree Medical Restore Services & Reserves, Restart Infrastructure Increased Cost in Cities Pension and Medical Costs BURKE REFLECTION & SUMMARY Phase II of PEPRA (Cost Sharing) Is Occurring in a Context of Rising Expectations and Conflicting Interests Of Cities, Employees and Citizens Don t Depend on Unilateral Imposition Cost Sharing Agreements are Key Carefully Craft the Agreements According to Law Focus on Total Compensation to Reach Agreement

Q & A