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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Vigil
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2-12-07
HB 800
SHORT TITLE Motor Transportation Officer Retirement
SB
ANALYST Aubel
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$3,000.0 Non-Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$3,000.0
Non-Recurring PERA
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07 FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$50.0
$50.0
Non-
Recurring PERA
$476.4
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 280, HB 411, HB 595, HB 765 and SB 575 (duplicate of HB 595)
Conflicts with SJM6
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Employees Retirement Association (PERA)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
pg_0002
House Bill 800 – Page
2
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 800 proposes to provide certified officers of the Department of Public Safety Motor
Transportation Division MTD) and Special Investigations Division (SID) the same benefits as
provided under State Police Member and Adult Correctional Officer Coverage Plan 1. If
approved by election of the affected membership, these officers would be eligible for a 20
percent service credit increase in all credited service (past and future), a 3 percent pension factor,
and an 80 percent pension maximum.
HB 800 renames “State Police and Adult Correctional Officer Plan" [NMSA 1978, Sections 10-
11-27 through 10-11-32] “State Officer Coverage Plan 1."
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The estimated increase in unfunded liabilities to the PERA fund is calculated at approximately
$2.7 million for MTD Police Officers and $259,121.00 for SID Agents. HB 800 provides for a
$3 million appropriation to pre-fund the $2.7 million unfunded liability that results from the new
liabilities being added to the existing State Police and Adult Correctional Officer coverage plan.
The employer contribution rate for the affected employees (currently in State Plan 3) will
increase over 8 percent, from 16.59 percent to 25.1 percent, resulting in increased retirement
funding of approximately $476 thousand for the DPS operating budget that would be recurring.
Motor Transportation
Special Investigations
Number of Employees
129
22
Payroll
$4,759,236
$838,666
8.51% Increase
$405,011
$71,370
Any decrease in vacancy and turnover rates will most likely reduce overtime costs for DPS
operating budget.
PERA’s operating budget will be negatively impacted by HB 800. Every new coverage plan
added to the PERA Act requires system changes to PERA’s computerized integrated pension
administration system. If further revisions to the system are necessary in FY08, PERA will be
required to seek a BAR to cover the costs of these system changes, which in the past have cost
up to $50.0 thousand.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Motor Transportation and Special Investigations Division police officers and agents have not
been included in a hazardous duty retirement plan. They currently fall under the general PERA
plan, which is available to all state employees (State Member Plan 3), for which these officers
must complete twenty-six years (26), eight (8) months of service before they can retire at any age
and be eligible for a pension equivalent to eighty percent (80 percent) of the highest three (3)
years of their salary.
pg_0003
House Bill 800 – Page
3
A primary policy issue is whether motor transportation officers and special investigations
members employed by DPS are to receive a 20 percent service credit increase in all credited
service (past and future). DPS maintains that the duties and scope of work performed by the
commissioned personnel of MTD and SID is similar, if not identical, to the duties performed by
other police personnel.
Maintaining PERA fund solvency is also an essential consideration. The cumulative effect of
multiple benefit enhancements is unknown. However, the combination of enhancing members’
prior service credit, providing salary increases in excess of PERA’s assumed rate of 4.5 percent
per year for existing members of the State Police and Adult Correctional Officer Plan (as well as
those members being proposed to enter the plan), and any downturn in the near-term future
performance of the PERA portfolio could possibly cause a decrease in the funded status of the
existing State Police and Correctional Officer plan below 100% and also have a measurable
effect on the funded status of the overall PERA system.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
DPS relates that the agency is attempting to bring salary and retirement parity to all three of its
law enforcement divisions. The department notes that successful increases in officer salaries
have begun in phases and asserts that providing fair and equal retirement benefits for all sworn
police officers employed by DPS is vital to the agency’s efforts to provide a healthy work
environment for its officers. DPS points out that all the officers play important roles in the
mission of DPS and must all work as a cohesive group in order to carry out that mission.
DPS reports it has hired and trained sworn personnel only to lose them to agencies that offer
benefits such as a 20 year retirement and concludes that the successful enactment of HB 800 will
aid in the efforts of the department to retain and attract the additional personnel to reduce current
vacancy rates, which as of December 2006 stand at 34 percent (SID) and 11.5 percent (MTD).
The potential for increased retention will improve performance in achieving agency objectives.
It should be noted that short term evidence supporting the theory that enhanced retirement plans
improve hiring and retention has so far remained elusive. Using the experience of the
Department of Corrections, which instituted the enhanced plan effective July 1, 2004,
performance results are inconclusive:
Performance Measure FY02
FY03
FY04
FY05
FY06
Percent turnover of
correction officers
10.97% 9.97% 11.8%
10.8%
20.91%*
Number of cadets
entering corrections
department training
academy
274
236
215
206
206
*In 2006, 85 officers retired the first month of eligibility under the new plan.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
PERA will need to coordinate the election for adoption of the new coverage plan by the motor
transportation officers, special investigations members, and DPS on or before October 1, 2007.
PERA would be required to move affected membership, along with corresponding assets and
pg_0004
House Bill 800 – Page
4
liabilities, from State General Plan 3 into the proposed State Officer Member Coverage Plan 1.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HB 800 relates to HB 280, HB 411, HB 595 (SB 576), and HB 765, all which propose adding
additional groups of employees to State Police Member and Adult Correctional Officer Member
Coverage Plan 1.
HB 800 conflicts with SJM 6 proposes a 2-year moratorium on benefit enhancement legislation
affecting the Public Employees Retirement Association
TECHNICAL ISSUES
PERA notes that page 9, line 5, states that the retirement board shall certify that “a majority of
the members voting have voted to approve adoption of the plan." Line 5 should be corrected to
state, “a majority of eligible motor transportation and special investigation members have voted
to approve adoption of the plan."
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Article XX Section 22 of the Constitution of the State of New Mexico requires that an increase in benefits
under the retirement system be adequately funded to preserve the PERA fund’s actuarial soundness. The
membership affected by the proposed legislation requested and received an actuarial study for
the actuarial cost determination of the benefit increase. HB 800 provides for a $3 million
appropriation to pre-fund the unfunded accrued actuarial liability (“increased liabilities") that the
enhanced retirement benefits will cause, rather than amortizing the $2.7 million unfunded
liability over 30 years. The consensus of the PERA Board supports pre-funding of any unfunded
liability created by benefit enhancement legislation as a safeguard to the fund’s solvency.
In addition to providing the unfunded liability estimate, the study indicates that the present
funding status of the State Police and Adult Correctional Officer Coverage Plan 1 would be
sufficient to provide the additional coverage and benefits for these officers, as the bill proposes.
HB 800 provides for an 18-month eligibility period for motor transportation officers and special
investigations members to first become eligible to retire with enhanced benefits under the plan.
PERA maintains that a 36-month mandatory waiting period is appropriate before members are
eligible to retire from the plan to allow for payment of contributions at higher levels toward their
enhanced benefit prior to retirement. This prudent strategy will lessen the impact of increased
liabilities on the new plan that may occur if a number of members immediately retired with
enhanced benefits sooner than normally projected.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
If HB 800 is not enacted, sworn members of MTD and SID will remain under the general state
retirement coverage plan instead of being transitioned into a hazardous-duty-type retirement
plan. DPS maintains that this may result in further difficulties in the areas of hiring and retention
in what has become a very competitive job market. Additionally, efforts by DPS to bring parity
and equality to their law enforcement program will be delayed.
SUGGESTED AMENDMENTS
pg_0005
House Bill 800 – Page
5
Page 9, line 5 should read:
a majority of eligible motor transportation and special investigation members have voted to
approve adoption of the plan.
Page 9, line 20:
Replace “eighteen" with “thirty-six"
MA/csd