
A frozen river is not a dry one, itâs just a still river on the surface but is still moving. ~Willie Nelson
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Snowmageddon descended on Olympia, and things came to a halt, but now that the worst (we can hope) is over, the process is moving again.
Agendas have been lengthened. As cut off dates approach the list of bills for executive action by individual committees grows long.
This is a brief summary of bills that are either moving or should be pushed to move. The last section of this report has some suggested actions on bills that need support and advocacy in order to advance before cutoffs.
Retirement Related Proposals
SB 5400/HB 1390 would provide a 3% cost of living adjustment (COLA) to TRS1 and PERS1 members. These bills are Select Committee for Pension Policy (SCPP) agency request legislation. HB 1390 has been scheduled for a public hearing before the House Appropriations Committee on February 18th at 3:30 PM.
SB 5360/HB 1308 Revise provisions in the public employeesâ retirement system, the teachersâ retirement system, and the school employeesâ retirement system with regard to plan membership default. It would change the present retirement plan default for new hires from Plan 3 to Plan 2.
SB 5360 was voted out of the Senate Ways and Means Committee and has been moved to Rules committee awaiting action.
HB 1308 was voted out of committee and sent to Houses Rules awaiting action.
Substitute Options for Early Retirees
SHB 1139 | Sections 305â7 state that educators that are members of Teachersâ Retirement System (TRS) Plans 2 or 3 that retired under the 2008 Early Retirement Factors are permitted to return to work before age 65 in any non-administrative position, not just in substitute teaching and instructional positions, and work for up to 867 hours per year without suspension of pension benefits. The ending date on the current provisions of August 1, 2020, as well as the separate section expiring the section of law, are removed, making the section effective indefinitely.A provision similar to the TRS provision is created for School Employeesâ Retirement System, which is for classified school employees. It also removes the August 1, 2020 sunset date and the directive regarding substitute pay. It passed out of committee on an 18â1 vote and has moved to Appropriations.
SB 5430/HB 1388 Allow retirees who retired under alternate early retirement factors enacted in chapter 491, Laws of 2007, to use post-retirement options prior to reaching age sixty-five. This is SCPP agency request legislation. It is similar to the above referenced bill but broader in that administrators are not excluded, bus drivers, para-pros, OTâs etc. are included. It also includes PERS retirees who have retired from positions with cities and counties for example. Smaller cities/counties need the expertise of their retirees for short durations. They testified in support of this change. Both bills are still awaiting hearings before their respective fiscal committees.
SUGGESTED ACTION:
Please contact Senator Rolfes, chair of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, to request a hearing on SB 5430. Office: 360â786â7644
Please contact Timm Ormsby, chair of the House Appropriations Committee, to request a hearing on HB 1388. Office: 360â786â7946
Certainly, contact your own legislators as well and urge movement on these bills.
These proposals are much broader than either of the other proposals. (SB 5801 below; SHB 1139 above) and would allow districts the greatest flexibility over time with no need to add other exceptions as they arise.
SB 5801 | This bill is a modified/slimmer version of SB 5430/HB 1388 mentioned above. It reads: â (a) The retired teacher reenters employment more than one calendar month after his or her accrual date and after June 9, 2016; (2) The retired teacher is employed exclusively as either (i) A substitute teacher as defined in RCW 41.32.010(48)(a) in an instructional capacity, as opposed to other capacities identified in RCW 41.32.010(49); (ii) An athletic coach,(iii) A mentor to teachers or an adviser to students in teacher1 preparation programs; or (iv) A counselor; and(c) The employing school district compensates the districtâs substitute teachers at a rate that is at least eighty-five percent of the full daily amount allocated by the state to the district for substitute teacher compensation. (2) For the purposes of this section, âmentorâ means an educator who has achieved appropriate training in assisting, coaching, and advising beginning teachers or student teaching residents as defined by the office of the superintendent of public instruction, such as national board certification or other specialized training.(3) This section expires July 1, 2023 It has been scheduled for a public hearing before the Senate Ways and Means Committee on February 20th at 3:30.
SUGGESTED ACTION:
Senator Wellman, chair of the Senate Education Committee needs to be encouraged to focus on SB 5430 as it is broader and offers more flexibility to districts particularly in allowing use of classified retirees. The SCPP reviewed and approved this proposal. Office: 360â786â7641
SB 5350/HB 1413 Authorizes the following, at the time of retirement, to purchase an optional actuarially equivalent life annuity benefit from:
1. The public employeesâ retirement system plan 1 fund;
2. The public employeesâ retirement system combined plan 2 and plan 3 fund;
3. The public safety employeesâ retirement system plan 2 fund; or
4. The school employeesâ retirement system combined plan 2 and 3 fund, as appropriate.
This bill was agency request legislation from the SCPP. SB 5350 was voted out of committee and sent to Senate Rules for further action. HB 1413 was voted out of committee and sent to Rules.
School Employee Benefit Board (SEEB) Health Related Proposals
SUGGESTED ACTION:
School districts need to continue contacting their legislators to educate them and express any concerns over the impending costs of SEBB. It has become clear that legislators are expressing discomfort, (some might say âshockâ) with the $900+million-dollar cost of implementing the program and collective bargaining agreement. T.J. Kelly from OSPI released estimates that the local levy burden to districts for SEBB assuming the legislature accepts the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) would be $258 million per school year. If the benefit multipliers agreed to in the CBA were disallowed, the cost to districts would be $742 million/year.
Caution: It is important to underscore that districts are not against the principle of providing affordable health insurance. Itâs the right thing to do.The unions have done a very effective campaign, resonant with many legislators, about the need to provide affordable health insurance. Complaining about SEBB runs the risk of seeming cold-hearted and callous to the issue. But the message is simple:Itâs a question of cost; How much? Who pays? How does a district pay?
Health Care
SB 5469/HB 1085 Concerns reducing the insurance premium for Medicare-eligible retiree participants in the public employeesâ benefits board program. It requires the amount of a premium reduction for Medicare eligible retiree participants to be no less than fifty percent of the premium cost.
HB 1085 held a public hearing 1/28 at 3:30 before the House Appropriations Committee and is awaiting further action by the committee.
HB 1813 incorporates the costs of employee health benefits into school district contracts for pupil transportation.A portion of the bill reads : âBeginning January 1, 2020, any pupil transportation services contract must include: (i) Sufficient funds specifically for the contracting employer to provide the employees of the contractor with an employer health benefits contribution equal to the rate for the school employeesâ benefits board program, less the retiree remittance for the public employeesâ benefits board; and (ii) An amount equivalent to the total employer and employee contribution rate to the school employeesâ retirement system, multiplied
