YOUR PENSION UNDER
ATTACK!
IRS Is Considering Rule That Would Bar Public Employee
Retirements Before Age 55
From The Las Vegas Review-Journal, September 22
CARSON CITY, NV – A major change proposed by the IRS for public
pension plans, including Nevada's public employee retirement
system, could eliminate early retirement pay for government
employees in less than two years.
A new regulation the agency is pursuing would prohibit most
public pension plans from allowing participants to retire and
collect benefits earlier than age 55, with a preferred
retirement age of 62. This would cover everyone from teachers to
police to city and state workers in Nevada and across the
country.
The Nevada Public Employees' Retirement System, for example,
allows most participants to retire and receive benefits at any
age after 30 years of service. Police and firefighters can
retire even earlier.
The IRS regulation, which public pension systems have been
fighting since it was first proposed, would end such a practice.
The IRS has the ability to implement the rule because public
pensions have tax deferral status given to them by the federal
agency.
Labor unions and pension officials across the country, including
Nevada, are fighting implementation of the rule. They are taking
their case to Congress but are not sounding the alarm to their
members just yet.
Others are welcoming the proposal as a modest but necessary
reform.
A briefing paper on the proposed regulation prepared by
officials with the city of Henderson says the impetus for the
regulation is that the IRS believes a normal retirement age
younger than 55 is not reasonable.
Workers covered under the Social Security program cannot receive
full benefits now until they reach the age of 67.
The IRS regulation is set to take effect June 30, 2010, although
a large number of national groups, from the Fraternal Order of
Police to the National Education Association, asked in April for
a delay in its implementation.
The IRS has not responded to the request, according to the
Henderson briefing paper dated Aug. 11.
The state retirement system is questioning the new regulation as
well.
Tina Leiss, operations officer for Nevada PERS, said the agency
is waiting for more direction from the IRS on how this
regulation would affect the Nevada retirement system before it
reacts to the proposed regulation.
Employees in the state's retirement system are believed to have
constitutional rights under the contracts clause to the benefits
as they currently exist, she said. Any changes to the benefits
for current participants could provoke lawsuits from employees
or their associations, Leiss said.
"It's just not clear yet how this would affect any of the public
pension plans," Leiss said.
The IRS regulation would apply to public pension plans such as
PERS because they are tax qualified plans under the agency's
regulations, she said. Such a designation provides tax benefits
to participants who might otherwise have to pay taxes on their
retirement contributions, Leiss said.
Dave Kallas, an official with the Las Vegas Police Protective
Association, said he is fielding a number of calls from
concerned police officers about the rule but suggested there is
no immediate cause for alarm.
Public pension officials and other stakeholders are working with
the IRS to come to an agreement on the issue, which was never
intended to apply to public pensions in the first place, the
union official said.
Kallas said it is his understanding that the legislation that
prompted the IRS rule, a pension reform bill sponsored by Rep.
Sam Johnson, R-Texas, was aimed at private pensions and not
intended to apply to public pension plans.
"I'm not worrying about this issue quite yet," Kallas said. "We
have to wait and see what transpires over the next few months."
Public awareness of the potential IRS change to the nation's
public pension systems has come at the same time as calls for
reforms to the plans.
A study released earlier this month by the Las Vegas Chamber of
Commerce concludes that the government support of the public
retirement system has become a drain on state and local
government resources, leading to the underfunding of important
programs such as education and transportation.
Hugh Anderson, vice president of the ABD&F Group at Merrill
Lynch in Las Vegas and chairman of the chamber's government
affairs committee, said the proposed IRS change is the right
move.
A retirement age should better reflect today's demographic
reality that people are living much longer, he said.
It is conceivable that a public employee could retire at age 55
with 30 years of service under today's rules and end up
receiving retirement benefits for longer than the years worked,
Anderson said.
"This whole demographic shift is here," he said. "It is no
longer in the future. The baby boom generation is here and they
are living a long time."
Withdrawals from personal retirement accounts are not permitted
before age 59.5, so why should public employees be immediately
entitled to retirement benefits at age 50 or 55, Anderson asked.
While there might be legitimate reasons why public pension rules
should not be changed for those approaching retirement, ignoring
the longevity issue puts the long-term viability of the public
pensions at risk, he said.
A decision by the IRS to move forward could take the politically
difficult decision out of the hands of elected officials, some
of whom may be reluctant to implement such a reform, he said.
The development of the IRS regulation began about three years
ago following passage of the pension reform legislation in
Congress.
Those opposed to the new regulation are seeking help from
Congress, circulating letters in both the House and Senate to
get the IRS to hold off on the change.
Letters are also being sent to the Treasury secretary and the
head of IRS suggesting the IRS overstepped its bounds and
indicating that Congress never intended to give the agency such
authority.
The Henderson memo states a public pension plan would completely
comply with IRS regulations if the retirement age is set at 62.
But if a plan wants participants to receive benefits before they
reach age 62, and no earlier than age 55, the plan administrator
must prove to the IRS that such an age range is reasonably
representative of the industry in which the covered workforce is
employed.
A delay is being sought in the regulations in part because of
concerns about the rights of those participating in the pension
plans.
The memo states that when the Nevada Legislature made changes to
the retirement system in 1989, a lawsuit arose and the state
lost. The finding was that once an employee joins the PERS
system, a contract is established and benefit levels, such as
retirement after 30 years, cannot be taken away.
With the potential effective date of the IRS regulation nearly
two years away, those now in public pension plans will have the
opportunity to determine whether to pursue retirement to avoid
the mandatory retirement age policy.
PERS has a $6.3 billion unfunded liability and $22 billion in
assets. Nearly 104,000 state and local government workers and
teachers and school staffers are PERS members.
An additional 37,000 retired workers are receiving benefits.
Contact Capital Bureau reporter Sean Whaley at
swhaley@reviewjournal.com or 775-687-3900. proposed, would end
such a practice. The IRS has the ability to implement the rule
because public pensions have tax deferral status given to them
by the federal agency.
Labor unions and pension officials across the country, including
Nevada, are fighting implementation of the rule. They are taking
their case to Congress but are not sounding the alarm to their
members just yet.
Others are welcoming the proposal as a modest but necessary
reform.
A briefing paper on the proposed regulation prepared by
officials with the city of Henderson says the impetus for the
regulation is that the IRS believes a normal retirement age
younger than 55 is not reasonable.
Workers covered under the Social Security program cannot receive
full benefits now until they reach the age of 67.
The IRS regulation is set to take effect June 30, 2010, although
a large number of national groups, from the Fraternal Order of
Police to the National Education Association, asked in April for
a delay in its implementation.
The IRS has not responded to the request, according to the
Henderson briefing paper dated Aug. 11.
The state retirement system is questioning the new regulation as
well.
Tina Leiss, operations officer for Nevada PERS, said the agency
is waiting for more direction from the IRS on how this
regulation would affect the Nevada retirement system before it
reacts to the proposed regulation.
Employees in the state's retirement system are believed to have
constitutional rights under the contracts clause to the benefits
as they currently exist, she said. Any changes to the benefits
for current participants could provoke lawsuits from employees
or their associations, Leiss said.
"It's just not clear yet how this would affect any of the public
pension plans," Leiss said.
The IRS regulation would apply to public pension plans such as
PERS because they are tax qualified plans under the agency's
regulations, she said. Such a designation provides tax benefits
to participants who might otherwise have to pay taxes on their
retirement contributions, Leiss said.
Dave Kallas, an official with the Las Vegas Police Protective
Association, said he is fielding a number of calls from
concerned police officers about the rule but suggested there is
no immediate cause for alarm.
Public pension officials and other stakeholders are working with
the IRS to come to an agreement on the issue, which was never
intended to apply to public pensions in the first place, the
union official said.
Kallas said it is his understanding that the legislation that
prompted the IRS rule, a pension reform bill sponsored by Rep.
Sam Johnson, R-Texas, was aimed at private pensions and not
intended to apply to public pension plans.
"I'm not worrying about this issue quite yet," Kallas said. "We
have to wait and see what transpires over the next few months."
Public awareness of the potential IRS change to the nation's
public pension systems has come at the same time as calls for
reforms to the plans.
A study released earlier this month by the Las Vegas Chamber of
Commerce concludes that the government support of the public
retirement system has become a drain on state and local
government resources, leading to the underfunding of important
programs such as education and transportation.
Hugh Anderson, vice president of the ABD&F Group at Merrill
Lynch in Las Vegas and chairman of the chamber's government
affairs committee, said the proposed IRS change is the right
move.
A retirement age should better reflect today's demographic
reality that people are living much longer lives, he said.
It is conceivable that a public employee could retire at age 55
with 30 years of service under today's rules and end up
receiving retirement benefits for longer than the years worked,
Anderson said.
"This whole demographic shift is here," he said. "It is no
longer in the future. The baby boom generation is here and they
are living a long time."
Withdrawals from personal retirement accounts are not permitted
before age 59.5, so why should public employees be immediately
entitled to retirement benefits at age 50 or 55, Anderson asked.
While there might be legitimate reasons why public pension rules
should not be changed for those approaching retirement, ignoring
the longevity issue puts the long-term viability of the public
pensions at risk, he said.
A decision by the IRS to move forward could take the politically
difficult decision out of the hands of elected officials, some
of whom may be reluctant to implement such a reform, he said.
The development of the IRS regulation began about three years
ago following passage of the pension reform legislation in
Congress.
Those opposed to the new regulation are seeking help from
Congress, circulating letters in both the House and Senate to
get the IRS to hold off on the change.
Letters are also being sent to the Treasury secretary and the
head of IRS suggesting the IRS overstepped its bounds and
indicating that Congress never intended to give the agency such
authority.
The Henderson memo states a public pension plan would completely
comply with IRS regulations if the retirement age is set at 62.
But if a plan wants participants to receive benefits before they
reach age 62, and no earlier than age 55, the plan administrator
must prove to the IRS that such an age range is reasonably
representative of the industry in which the covered workforce is
employed.
A delay is being sought in the regulations in part because of
concerns about the rights of those participating in the pension
plans.
The memo states that when the Nevada Legislature made changes to
the retirement system in 1989, a lawsuit arose and the state
lost. The finding was that once an employee joins the PERS
system, a contract is established and benefit levels, such as
retirement after 30 years, cannot be taken away.
With the potential effective date of the IRS regulation nearly
two years away, those now in public pension plans will have the
opportunity to determine whether to pursue retirement to avoid
the mandatory retirement age policy.
PERS has a $6.3 billion unfunded liability and $22 billion in
assets. Nearly 104,000 state and local government workers and
teachers and school staff members are PERS members. Another
37,000 retired workers are receiving benefits.