|
LEOFF
I COALITION
Moves To Protect Surprise
Pension Surplus
The
LEOFF I Coalition, on behalf of active and
retired Law Enforcement Officers and Fire
Fighters members and beneficiaries, will
testify in the House Appropriations Committee,
Thursday, February 15, 2001, 3:30 p.m.,
. . .
"We [the Coalition] are strongly
opposed to House Bill 1072,"
said Coalition Chairman, Mark Curtis.
Curtis went on to say, "The
LEOFF I members and beneficiaries generally
believe that whatever happens, they have
a legal, equitable, and moral right to the
surplus as a matter of good faith and justice.
For the Legislature to ignore such a position
would in fact be a breach of good faith
and a gross injustice."
"The
Coalition is committed to protect the surplus
from unwarranted invasion by various governmental
entities who believe that they have found
a source of scarce funds to be used to relieve
a burden they are otherwise legally obligated
to carry," according
to Curtis.
The
LEOFF I pension system was started in 1970
as a result of legislation bringing law
enforcement officers and fire fighters together
under one state wide pension system. The
pension is what is called a "defined benefits
plan" wherein employers and employees contribute
to the pension fund. The State of Washington,
after years of delaying its contribution,
finally contributed to the plan to assure
its solvency. The plan is now closed to
new members with a successor plan called
LEOFF II for current employees and new hires.
In
recent years, many private and public pensions
are found to harbor an unexpected surplus.
It is believed that on an international
basis, pension surpluses exceed a trillion
dollars. This has occurred because of the
"bull stock market" of recent years and
wise investment strategies. "The
9000 plus active and retired members and
beneficiaries of the LEOFF I (Law Enforcement
Officers and Fire Fighters I Pension System)
are among the groups that have found that
their pension system has a surplus in excess
of $1.2 billion dollars according to the
Office of the State Actuary," Curtis,
said.
Last
year the legislature granted a "contributions
holiday" to current active LEOFF I members
and employers relieving them of the need
to make contributions to the plan because
of the surplus. Retired members and beneficiaries
received no additional benefit. Now the
legislature has proposed several new bills,
HB 1072 and SB 5191, that would make the
first "preemptive strike" on the plan's
surplus. The legislature's plan is to subsidize
part of the current employer obligation
in order to take care of certain medical
and long term care costs by dipping into
the fund's surplus.
While
under a "defined benefit plan" retirees
are generally limited to a set of predefined
benefits, it is the belief that since no
provisions have been made for a surplus,
and because under state law pension funds
are special funds and not "state funds",
that plan members and beneficiaries have
a "contractual and constitutionally vested
right" to those funds under legal and equitable
principals of law. However, since certain
legislators believe those funds belong to
"the state", it is has become necessary
for the LEOFF I members and beneficiaries
to find a way to protect their interest
and to assure that they have "a say" in
how the funds are utilized.
Curtis
said, "The LEOFF I Coalition
is prepared to lobby and negotiate with
the legislature if possible. If the legislature
is unresponsive and proceeds with the invasion
of the fund surplus, then the Coalition
is prepared to seeking legal counsel to
review the law on the matter and if necessary
to pursue litigation as a last resort."
|