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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Campos
DATE TYPED 02/15/05 HB
SHORT TITLE Free Service Credit for Vietnam Veterans
SB 609
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates: HB 759
Conflicts with: HJM 5, SJM 18
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Employees Retirement Association (PERA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 609 would enact a new section of the Public Employees Retirement Act requiring
PERA to grant to PERA members one month of free service credit for each month of military
service performed during the Vietnam Era (1961-1973) if: A) the member has at least five years
of service credit; B) the member received an honorable discharge from the military; C) the free
service credit is not granted for periods of service that are used to obtain or increase a benefit
from another retirement program; and D) the free service credit is not granted for periods of ser-
vice for which free service credit has been granted under section 10-11-6 or for which service
credit has been purchased pursuant to 10-11-7.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 609 -- Page 2
Significant Issues
Senate Bill 609 seeks to provide an enhanced pension benefit for New Mexico’s many employ-
ees who served honorably in the military during the Vietnam era.
However, PERA has identified three significant issues raised by SB 609:
1) Appropriateness of granting free service credit for military service prior to employment with
a affiliated public employer. PERA members who served in the military prior to their PERA-
affiliated employment are entitled to purchase PERA service credit for their prior military ser-
vice. Also, PERA members are entitled to receive “intervening” service credit at no cost if they
are called to active duty while a PERA member. However, there are strict requirements that eli-
gible members must be employed immediately before and after service and the service must be
mandatory as opposed to voluntary. SB 609 would appear to contradict legislative intent that no
cost service credit only be awarded for involuntary service.
2) SB 609 does not appear to treat all former members of the military who are now PERA mem-
bers equally. PERA notes that there are a great many PERA members who served in the military
prior to their PERA-affiliated employment. These members served in the military in time frames
encompassing World War II, and the conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Bosnia, Somalia,
Afghanistan, Iraq and other places around the world. Many PERA members who served in Viet-
nam have already retired and many have already purchased service credit for their prior military
service. SB 609 would give a disproportionate benefit, not only to Vietnam era veterans, but
specifically to Vietnam era veterans who did not retire or purchase their prior military service
before the enactment and effective date of SB 609. A deviation from this distinction that exclu-
sively benefits only certain Vietnam era veterans will be subject to legal challenge by other vet-
erans who served prior to their PERA-affiliated employment and by Vietnam era veterans who
are no longer able to take advantage of the benefit.
3) SB 609 would provide an enhanced benefit without an appropriation.
The costs related to granting of the free service credit proposed by SB 609 are likely to be sig-
nificant. Currently the “free” intervening service credit currently authorized by Section 10-11-6
is not actually free—it is borne by the PERA trust fund. The benefit proposed by SB 609, as it is
presently drafted, would be an additional significant expense to the PERA Trust Fund.
It is questionable if the legislature has the authority to enact SB 609 without providing funding
for the benefit proposed by the bill. In 1997, the New Mexico Constitution was amended and the
relevant section Art. XX, Sec. 22 (C) reads “the legislature shall not enact any law that increases
the benefits paid by the system in any manner or changes the funding for a retirement plan unless
adequate funding is provided.” In accordance with this constitutional requirement, PERA be-
lieves any legislation requiring PERA to recognize and grant a new kind of free service credit
would have to provide funding for the benefit from a source other than the PERA Trust Fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
If this bill is passed it will have a negative fiscal impact on the Public Employees Retirement
Trust Fund and per the New Mexico Constitution PERA believes appropriation would be re-
quired to support the enhanced benefit.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 609 -- Page 3
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
PERA believes there could be legal challenges from both:
1) Veterans from other wars and conflicts who performed their military service prior to their
PERA-affiliated employment and who must purchase service credit for their prior military ser-
vice under 10-11-7; and
2) Vietnam era veterans who performed their military service prior to their PERA-affiliated
employment and who have already retired or who have already purchased service credit for their
prior military service under 10-11-7.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Duplicates HB 759. SB 609 conflicts with Senate Joint Memorial 18 & House Joint Memorial 5
which propose a moratorium of pension benefit enhancements through 2006. Without an appro-
priation, SB 609 may conflict with the New Mexico Constitution, Article XX, Section. 22 (C).
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Background on Military Service and PERA Service Credit
The PERA Act contains two different mechanisms to acquire PERA service credit for time spent
in the military. The first is an award of free service credit for intervening military service. It is
authorized by Section 10-11-6 (A). That section states that a PERA member who leaves the em-
ploy of an affiliated public employer to enter the armed services of the United States shall be
given service credit for periods of active duty, subject to several conditions. Among these condi-
tions are the requirements that the member must be reemployed by an affiliated public employer
within ninety days and the requirement that: “credited service shall not be given for periods of
active duty following voluntary reenlistment.” This permits PERA members who are called to
active duty, required to leave their PERA-affiliated jobs, and return promptly to those jobs at the
conclusion of their military service to receive PERA service credit for their military service at no
cost to them. The legislature first enacted this section in 1987. The strict requirements that eli-
gible members must be employed immediately before and after service and the service must be
mandatory as opposed to voluntary give insight into the legislature’s intentions in passing this
statute. The federal Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployments Rights Act
(“USERRA”) was enacted in 1994. Among many other things, it requires employers to make
pension benefits available to employees who are called to military service and return to their em-
ployment at the conclusion of their military service. USERRA permits pension plans to require
payment from the pension plan member in whatever amount the plan member would have paid if
present at his or her job and working as normal
The second mechanism for acquiring PERA service credit for military time allows PERA mem-
bers who served in the military prior to their PERA-affiliated employment to purchase PERA
service credit for their prior military service. Like 10-11-6, this section was enacted in 1987.
The opportunity to purchase prior service is made available notwithstanding the fact that these
individuals were not PERA members when they entered the military and did not necessarily
commence PERA employment immediately after their military service. Except for the opportu-
pg_0004
Senate Bill 609 -- Page 4
nities to acquire service credit found in Section 10-11-7, the PERA Act requires individuals to
provide personal service to a PERA affiliated employer in order to acquire service credit. There
is no federal law requiring pension plans to permit plan members to purchase service credit
based on time spent in the military prior to employment.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
Vietnam era veterans would continue to be allowed to purchase PERA service credit for the time
they spent in the military prior to their PERA employment, in the same way that all veterans with
pre-employment military service can. Only individuals (including Vietnam era veterans) that are
employed by a PERA-affiliated employer, called to active military service and return promptly to
their PERA-affiliated employment will be eligible for free, intervening military service credit.
GG/lg