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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Picraux
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/04/06
HM 34
SHORT TITLE PERA Calculation of Employee Average Salary
SB
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
Unknown
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates: SM 29
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Responses Received From
Public Employees Retirement Association (PERA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of House Memorial
House Memorial 34 requests a study by PERA to assess the impact that would result from basing
an employee’s final average salary (used to calculate pension benefit) on the employee’s highest
salaried thirty-six months regardless of whether the months are consecutive. PERA shall report
its findings to the appropriate interim committee of the legislature in 2006.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
PERA provides that there will be staff time and actuarial consultant costs to complete this study
but they do not have an estimate.
pg_0002
House Memorial 34 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Currently, the calculation for determining a public employee’s pension is based on the highest
salary the employee received for any consecutive thirty-six month period. In some circum-
stances, this formula my disadvantage some employees whose salary histories have peak salary
periods that are not consecutive.
On the other hand, PERA notes that using an employee’s highest salaried 36 months, regardless
of whether the months are consecutive, may lead to the employee to “cherry-pick” their highest
36 months over their public employment career. For example, state workers are paid every 2
weeks and have 26 pay periods per year. Generally, there are two 3- pay period months each
year. Should this change in the final average salary calculation be enacted, it will undoubtedly
increase PERA's overall pension costs, possibly to the extent of requiring contribution increases.
Moving forward, the issue will remain on whether the proposed formula for calculating a public
employee’s final average salary is a benefit enhancement that conflicts with Article XX, Section
22 of the New Mexico Constitution (the legislature shall not enact any law that changes the fund-
ing formula for a retirement plan unless adequate funding is provided).
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
PERA states that HM 34 will have a significant administrative impact on PERA. PERA’s only
means of assessing the impact on the Fund in changing the formula for calculating a member’s
final average salary is by manual audits on a random sampling of PERA members within 5 years
of retirement and calculate their final average salary under both methodologies. This work will
in large part be a manual task since PERA’s current pension administration system is pro-
grammed to calculate final average salary according to statute. PERA actuaries will then be re-
quired to assess the raw data to determine whether the proposed formula for calculating final av-
erage salary will have an impact on the fund.
Currently, PERA is experiencing a higher than usual backlog in member requests. Redirecting
staff to the assessment requested by HM 34 will result in additional staff workload.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HM 34 is duplicated by SM 29.
GG/nt