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New Hampshire Retirement System. Overview of Presentation. Structure and Governance Plan Funding Legislation Important Reminders Health Insurance after Retirement Working after Retirement. Membership Structure. 53,000 active and vested deferred members
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New Hampshire Retirement System
Overview of Presentation • Structure and Governance • Plan Funding • Legislation • Important Reminders • Health Insurance after Retirement • Working after Retirement
Membership Structure • 53,000 active and vested deferred members • Employees, teachers, firefighters, police officers • 24,500 pension recipients • Retirees and beneficiaries • Growing by 1,500 - 2,000 per year • 475 participating employers • State of NH, cities, counties, towns, school districts, and other units of local government
Plan Governance • NH Legislature: Plan Sponsor • RSA 100-A serves as plan document • NHRS Board of Trustees and Independent Investment Committee Members serve as fiduciaries • Internal Revenue Code provisions • NH Constitution Art. 36-a protects funds “for the exclusive purpose” of providing benefits • Sununu – Supreme Court ruling
Defined Benefit Plan • Benefits are determined by a specific formula which consists of three components: • Earnings • Creditable Service • Benefit Multiplier
Defined Benefit Plan • Lifetime pension benefits • To retired member • To eligible beneficiary upon retired member’s death (Survivorship Option) • Benefits are not based on investment returns or contributions
Fiduciary Management Contributions Benefit Payments = + + Investment Earnings Expenses + • Equation must balance over time
Member Contributions • Member Contributions Set by Statute • Group I Members: • Employees* & teachers = 5.0% of earnings • Group II Members: • Firefighters & police officers = 9.3% of earnings *State employees hired on or after July 1, 2009, must contribute 7.0% of gross earnings
Employer Contributions • Biannual Actuarial Valuation • Calculates funding status and employer rates • Rates based on membership classification • Rates include pension contribution and medical subsidy contribution • Actuarial Experience Study • Conducted every five years • Evaluates underlying assumptions
Employer Contributions – FY 10 Group I Political Subdivision Employers *The State of NH contributes 30% of the cost for teacher members, and the employer contributes the remaining 70%.
Employer Contributions • State’s share reduced for teachers, firefighters, and police officers of political subdivisions (Laws of 2009) • From 35% to 30% for fiscal year 2010 • To 25% for fiscal year 2011 • To revert back to 35% for fiscal year 2012 and each fiscal year thereafter
Employer Assessment • Employer assessment for excess pension benefits • “Spiking” • To address high end of career payments
Employer Assessment “Spiking” Legislation from 2009 • Delayed the implementation of employer assessment - “spiking assessment”- to July 1, 2010 (House Bill 223) • NHRS to recommend methodology for determining employer assessment for excess pension benefits (House Bill 641) • Established a study committee to review employer assessments (Senate Bill 108)
Employer Assessment Status of “Spiking” in 2010 • Senate Bill 504 recommends delaying spiking assessment to July 1, 2011 • NHRS recommended methodology for determining fair assessment • Study committee reviewing employer assessments • Surveying employers, seeking spiking data • Recommends delaying employer assessment one more year
2010 Legislation • House Bill 1576 – employment as a retired member • House Bill 1664-FN – increase in member contribution rates • Senate Bill 108 (retained) - study committee reviewing implementation of employer assessments • Senate Bill 504 - spiking assessment
Important Reminders • Salary Continuance Plans • Contributions must be remitted to NHRS based on the portion of the plan funded by the employer • Member earns service credit • Member is “in service” for certain benefits
Important Reminders • Health Insurance “Buy Outs” and “Payments in lieu of” are not earnable compensation • Do not report those amounts to NHRS • Do not remit contributions on those amounts
Important Reminders • Workers’ Compensation • Report supplemental pay paid by the employer while the member is receiving Workers' Compensation • Contributions must be remitted to NHRS on supplemental pay but not on actual Workers’ Compensation payments
Important Reminders • Active Military Duty • Report military differential pay • Contributions must be remitted to NHRS on differential pay • Members should contact NHRS upon returning to NHRS-covered employment • May be eligible for service credit even if no differential pay
Retiree Health Insurance • NHRS-participating local government employers must allow their retiring employees to participate in their health insurance plan • Employers are not required to pay for the health insurance coverage • Legislative Study Commission re: funding of medical benefits
Retiree Health Insurance • Deductions from pensions for health insurance premiums cannot be pre-tax • Internal Revenue Code regulations • Cafeteria plans for employees only
Medical Subsidy • A payment made by NHRS directly to the former employer or health insurance administrator, applied toward the cost of health insurance for the qualified retired member and qualified spouse • The medical subsidy is not a health insurance plan
Medical Subsidy Rates Type of PlanRate 1 Person $375.56 2 Person $751.12 1 Person $236.84 (Medicare supplement) 2 Person $473.68 (Medicare supplement) Rates effective through 6/30/2012
Working after Retirement • May work for non-NHRS employer (such as private sector) • May not occupy NHRS-covered position and receive pension • Pension will cease • Active membership will be restored • Disability Retirement – Contact NHRS for details
Working after RetirementFrom Retiree to Active Member • Teachers who are “regularly scheduled” for 30 hours per week • Employees who are “regularly scheduled” for 35 hours per week • Teachers who are employed for 30 or more hours per week for 18 weeks during the school year
Working after RetirementFrom Retiree to Active Member • NHRS-covered position that requires mandatory enrollment • “Under Contract” or “Independent Contractor” to avoid enrollment • “Part-time” but working and/or being paid for full-time work
Communications Initiatives • Outreach and education • Member education sessions • Regional approach - more members • Mailing to employers in March • 2009 Law books • Employer newsletter • Website and content enhancements • Online resources • User-friendly information
Does NHRS have your current email address? Send email to:public_relations@nhrs.org
NH Retirement System 54 Regional Drive Concord, NH 03301 Phone: 603-410-3500 Toll Free: 877-600-0158 www.nhrs.org info@nhrs.org