LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
 
FISCAL NOTE, 88TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
 
March 26, 2023

TO:
Honorable Bryan Hughes, Chair, Senate Committee on State Affairs
 
FROM:
Jerry McGinty, Director, Legislative Budget Board
 
IN RE:
SB1446 by Hughes (Relating to the fiduciary responsibility of the governing body of the public retirement systems in this state and the investment agents acting on behalf of those systems.), As Introduced


Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for SB1446, As Introduced : a negative impact of ($535,916) through the biennium ending August 31, 2025. 

The negative impact of the bill would be to the Pension Review Board for two additional reports that agency would need to produce.  The cost to the Teacher Retirement System, the Employees Retirement System, and the Texas Emergency Services Retirement System cannot be determined.



The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill.

General Revenue-Related Funds, Five- Year Impact:

Fiscal Year Probable Net Positive/(Negative) Impact to
General Revenue Related Funds
2024($307,520)
2025($228,396)
2026($228,396)
2027($228,396)
2028($228,396)

All Funds, Five-Year Impact:

Fiscal Year Probable (Cost) from
General Revenue Fund
1

Change in Number of State Employees from FY 2023
2024($307,520)2.0
2025($228,396)2.0
2026($228,396)2.0
2027($228,396)2.0
2028($228,396)2.0


Fiscal Analysis

The bill would amend the Government Code to require the investment agents of Texas public retirement systems to consider only financial factors when performing their duties. The governing body of a public retirement system would not be permitted to grant proxy voting authority to an investment agent unless the agent offers a policy with the sole goal of maximizing financial return, or the governing body has a publicly available policy they require the agent to follow. The governing body of the system would have to post on its website details on how the proxy advisor or other agent will cast a proxy vote. The governing body would then be required to tabulate all proxy votes for the preceding fiscal year and submit them annually to the Pension Review Board (PRB). For each vote, the report must include a vote caption, the system's vote, and, as applicable, the recommendation of the investment agent. The PRB would be required to post all such reports to its website.  

Under the provisions of the bill, the governing bodies of public retirement systems would also have to submit an annual report to the PRB on the investment relationships maintained by the system, including detailed information about limited partnerships, as well as investment managers and consulting firms. The PRB would be required to post this information to its website. 

Methodology

The bill would require the PRB to receive and make publicly available two new annual reports from public retirement systems containing detailed investment information and large data files.  According to PRB, this would require two new FTEs, an Investment Analyst III and a Program Specialist III. 

The Investment Analyst would set up the new reporting requirements, develop guidance and possible rules, provide training, handle requests for assistance from systems, and review the two new annual reports.  The Program Specialist would manage the implementation of the new reporting requirement, communicate with systems about reporting deadlines, and assist with data storage and website management to ensure the new reports are accessible on the PRB website.  The estimated cost of the two new FTEs, including salary, retirement, social security, health insurance, and agency payroll contribution is $217,520 in fiscal year 2024 and $228,396 in fiscal year 2025 and subsequent years.

The financial impact to the Employees Retirement System, the Teacher Retirement System, and the Texas Emergency Services Retirement System related to returns on investments cannot be determined. The difference in returns between affected investments and those that would potentially replace them cannot be estimated.  


Technology

The PRB estimates it will cost $90,000 in fiscal year 2024 to upgrade its data storage systems in order to receive, store, and publish the two new annual reports required by the provisions of the bill.  The agency's IT consultant estimates it will take approximately five months at a cost of $18,000 per month to complete the necessary upgrade.


Local Government Impact

According to the PRB, local public retirement systems generally identified the potential for higher administrative costs but indicated uncertainty about precise amounts and types of costs. Types of potential costs identified by local systems include staff to manage data and reporting requirements as well as monitor compliance; legal fees to modify current and new legal contracts with investment managers; and additional investment fees and costs involved with liquidating assets and changing managers if the bill's provisions impact the willingness of investment or asset managers to do business with Texas public retirement systems and potentially shrink the pool of available managers.

According to the Texas County and District Retirement System, the bill's provisions could cause the agency to lose access to some private investment managers and result in the system hiring several new FTEs. According to the Texas Municipal Retirement System, the provisions of the bill could result in increased operating costs, but those costs cannot be estimated.


Source Agencies:
323 Teacher Retirement System, 326 Texas Emergency Services Retirement System, 327 Employees Retirement System, 338 Pension Review Board, 706 Texas Permanent School Fund Corporation
LBB Staff:
JMc, SMAT, LCO, JPO, NV, MMo