LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
 
ACTUARIAL IMPACT STATEMENT

87TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
 
March 30, 2021

TO:
Honorable Rafael Anchia, Chair, House Committee on Pensions, Investments & Financial Services
 
FROM:
Jerry McGinty, Director, Legislative Budget Board
 
IN RE:
HB3898 by Anchia (Relating to the funding of public retirement systems.), As Introduced

COST ESTIMATE
The bill would amend Texas Government Code to strengthen and clarify the funding policy and funding soundness restoration plan (FSRP) requirements and to align them with Pension Review Board Pension Funding Guidelines.

SYNOPSIS OF PROVISIONS
The bill would update Government Code Section 802.2011 to change existing funding policy provisions for systems that are not statewide retirement systems to require the sponsoring entity of a public retirement system to be included in funding policy development. The bill would require revision of the funding policy to reflect any significant changes that are a result of an FSRP, and the revised funding policy must include any automatic contribution or benefit changes designed to avoid the need for future revised FSRPs. The funding policy must also be provided to system members and annuitants upon adoption or change.

Additionally, the bill would update Government Code Sections 802.2015 and 802.2016 to make several changes to the FSRP requirements. It would lower the FSRP amortization period trigger from 40 to 30 years, for systems that receive three consecutive annual actuarial valuations, or two consecutive valuations (if the system conducts valuations every two or three years) with amortization periods above the trigger. The bill would also introduce a tiered trigger: effective September 1, 2025, if a system's amortization period is greater than 40 years, or greater than 30 years with a funded ratio below 65 percent, the FSRP requirement would be triggered immediately.

The bill would give public retirement systems two years rather than six months to develop an FSRP but effective September 1, 2025, would require the system to achieve a target amortization period of 30 years within two years, rather than within 10 years under the current provisions.  If another FSRP is triggered within 10 years of adoption of the initial FSRP, the revised plan must target a 25-year amortization period. Revised FSRPs are not required if the amortization period is between 30 and 40 years; the system is implementing or will ultimately use an actuarial determined contribution rate; and the actuarial valuation shows that the system is expected to achieve full funding.  The bill would require an FSRP to contain an aggregate analysis showing the anticipated impact of the combined changes; it may not include items requiring future action; and it must be adopted by both the retirement system and its sponsoring entity at open meetings.

FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
The bill does not have a direct actuarial impact because it does not propose to change the benefit structure or obligations of any systems. However, it would have a positive actuarial effect on the systems to the extent that the systems and their sponsoring entities adopt and adhere to a funding policy that is actuarially sound. 


Source Agencies:
338 Pension Review Board
LBB Staff:
JMc, AAL, LCO, JPO