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TO PARAGRAPH TEN OF THIS SUBDIVISION, SHALL BE REFUNDED TO A PARTICIPANT
IN THE TWENTY-FIVE-YEAR AND AGE FIFTY-FIVE RETIREMENT PROGRAM, TO
INCLUDE A PREVIOUS PARTICIPANT WHO HAS SUCCESSFULLY RETIRED UNDER SUCH
PROGRAM TOGETHER WITH INTEREST THEREON AT THE RATE OF FIVE PERCENT PER
ANNUM, COMPOUNDED ANNUALLY AND SUCH REFUND SHALL BE PAYABLE UPON SUCH
PREVIOUS PARTICIPANT'S APPLICATION, AS PERMITTED UNDER PARAGRAPH TEN OF
THIS SUBDIVISION, AND PURSUANT TO PROCEDURES PROMULGATED IN REGULATIONS
OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE RETIREMENT SYSTEM.
S 2. Paragraph 10 of subdivision e of section 604-b of the retirement
and social security law, as amended by chapter 379 of the laws of 2007,
is amended to read as follows:
10. The New York city transit authority, by the adoption of a resol-
ution or resolutions, may make an election or elections to eliminate the
additional member contributions required to be made pursuant to para-
graph one of this subdivision. Such election or elections may be made
applicable to all employees of the transit authority, to employees who
are represented by a specific collective bargaining organization, recog-
nized or certified pursuant to article fourteen of the civil service
law, and/or to employees who are not represented for the purposes of
collective bargaining. Such election or elections shall define the
starting date of the elimination of additional member contributions,
except as set forth below, which shall in no event be earlier than the
first payroll period following December fifteenth, two thousand. An
election made pursuant to this paragraph shall be irrevocable. A demand
for an elimination of additional member contributions shall not be
subject to the provisions of subdivision five of section two hundred
nine of the civil service law. The New York city transit authority shall
notify the head of the New York city employees' retirement system of any
election or elections made pursuant to this paragraph. Notwithstanding
the aforementioned starting date of the elimination of additional member
contributions or any other provision of this section, an eligible
participant, as defined below, shall be entitled to a refund of all of
his or her accumulated additional member contributions made pursuant to
this subdivision which shall include any and all interest thereon paid
to the retirement system, together with interest thereon at the rate of
five percent per annum, compounded annually, and such refund shall be
payable, upon such participant's application, pursuant to procedures
promulgated in regulations of the board of trustees of the retirement
system. An eligible participant shall be a participant (i) who is or was
employed in a title represented for purposes of collective bargaining by
an employee organization representing a majority of non-supervisory
employees in the New York city transit authority's Queens Bus and/or
Staten Island Bus Divisions, recognized or certified pursuant to article
fourteen of the civil service law, and who, on December twenty-eight,
two thousand five, had an accumulated balance of additional member
contributions at the retirement system; [or] (ii) who is or was employed
in a title represented for purposes of collective bargaining by the
employee organization representing the majority of non-supervisory
employees in the New York city transit authority in other than the
Queens Bus and/or Staten Island Bus Divisions, recognized or certified
pursuant to article fourteen of the civil service law, and who, on
December sixteenth, two thousand five, had an accumulated balance of
additional member contributions at the retirement system[.]; OR (III)
WHO WAS EMPLOYED IN A TITLE REPRESENTED FOR PURPOSES OF COLLECTIVE
BARGAINING BY THE EMPLOYEE ORGANIZATION REPRESENTING THE MAJORITY OF
NON-SUPERVISORY EMPLOYEES IN THE NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT AUTHORITY IN
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OTHER THAN THE QUEENS BUS AND/OR STATEN ISLAND BUS DIVISIONS, RECOGNIZED
OR CERTIFIED PURSUANT TO ARTICLE FOURTEEN OF THE CIVIL SERVICE LAW, AND
WHO, BY REASON OF RETIREMENT PRIOR TO DECEMBER SIXTEENTH, TWO THOUSAND
FIVE, WAS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR A REFUND UNDER (II) OF THIS PARAGRAPH, BUT
HAD OR WOULD HAVE HAD AN ACCUMULATED BALANCE OF ADDITIONAL MEMBER
CONTRIBUTIONS AT THE RETIREMENT SYSTEM IF THE IMPACT OF THE ELECTION BY
SUCH TRANSIT AUTHORITY TO ELIMINATE ADDITIONAL EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTIONS
UNDER THIS PARAGRAPH IS TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT AND APPLIED TO THEIR PREVIOUS
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTIONS AS OF THE DAY OR DATE OF THEIR RETIREMENT. NO
INTEREST AUTHORIZED BY THIS PROVISION SHALL ACCRUE AFTER THE DAY OR DATE
OF THE RETIREMENT OF THE APPLICANT.
S 3. This act shall take effect immediately.
FISCAL NOTE.--Pursuant to Legislative Law, Section 50:
PROVISIONS OF PROPOSED LEGISLATION: This proposed legislation would
amend New York State Retirement and Social Security Law ("RSSL")
Sections 604-b.e(1) and 604-b.e(10) to provide to certain New York City
Transit Authority ("NYCTA") retired members of the New York City Employ-
ees' Retirement System ("NYCERS") a refund of Additional Member Contrib-
utions ("AMC") that were paid by these members while they were partic-
ipants of the Transit 25 Year/Age 55 Retirement Program ("Transit 55/25
Program").
The Effective Date of the proposed legislation would be the date of
enactment.
This Fiscal Note assumes that the proposed legislation is intended to
refund interest on AMC in accordance with NYCERS procedures for credit-
ing interest on member contributions including an assumption that no
interest would be paid past a member's retirement date.
IMPACT ON PLAN PROVISIONS - ADDITIONAL MEMBER CONTRIBUTIONS: Those
NYCERS members who participated in the Transit 55/25 Program paid AMC of
2.3% of gross wages for service rendered between August 28, 1994 and
December 15, 2000.
This proposed legislation would refund AMC to retired Transit 55/25
Program participants who are former members of the Transit Workers Union
Local 100 ("Local 100") and who retired prior to December 16, 2005 with
initial Transit 55/25 Program participation dates on or before December
15, 2000, including interest at 5.0% per annum accrued through the
retired member's retirement date.
To receive such refund, those eligible retirees would be required to
file an application pursuant to procedures to be established by the
NYCERS Board of Trustees.
FINANCIAL IMPACT - OVERVIEW: If enacted into the law, the ultimate
employer cost of this proposed legislation would be determined by the
reduction in Fund assets due to the refund of AMC.
IMPACT - UNFUNDED ACTUARIAL ACCRUED LIABILITY: With respect to NYCERS
and based on the census data and actuarial assumptions and methods
described herein, the enactment of this proposed legislation would
result in a decrease in the Actuarial Asset Value as of June 30, 2015
and an increase in the Unfunded Actuarial Accrued Liability ("UAAL") of
approximately $2,751,000.
FINANCIAL IMPACT - ADDITIONAL ANNUAL EMPLOYER COSTS AND CONTRIBUTIONS:
With respect to NYCERS, the enactment of this proposed legislation would
increase annual employer costs by approximately $840,000 per year for
four years.
Increases in employer contributions would be comparable to the esti-
mated increases in employer costs.
A. 7238 4
As the impact is generally measurable and RSSL Section 430 expresses
the idea that benefit improvements are not to be implemented in a fiscal
year prior to the commencement of financing, enactment of the proposed
legislation on or before June 30, 2015 would result in increased employ-
er contribution to NYCERS beginning Fiscal Year 2015.
CENSUS DATA: The census data used for estimates of the expected refund
of AMC and change in employer contributions presented herein are the 263
retired Local 100 members of NYCERS who participated in the Transit
55/25 Program, retired prior to December 16, 2005 and are alive as of
March 25, 2015.
ACTUARIAL ASSUMPTIONS AND METHODS: Estimates of changes in AAL, UAAL
and employer costs have been calculated using the actuarial assumptions
and methods adopted by the NYCERS Board of Trustees during Fiscal Year
2012 and enacted as Chapter 3 of the Laws of 2013 ("2012 A&M") for
determining employer contributions for fiscal years beginning on and
after July 1, 2011 (i.e., Fiscal Years 2012 and after).
In accordance with Section 13.638.2 (k-2) of the Administrative Code
of the City of New York ("ACNY") as enacted by Chapter 3/13, as one
component of the 2012 A&M, new UAAL attributable to benefit changes are
to be amortized as determined by the Actuary but generally over the
remaining working lifetimes of those impacted by these benefit changes.
For this proposed legislation, the average remaining working lifetime
is zero years because all those that would be impacted have already
retired.
Legislation with similar structures were enacted for Transit Operating
non-supervisory employees as Chapter 734 of the Laws of 2006 ("Chapter
734/06") and as Chapter 379 of the Laws of 2007 (Chapter 379/07") and
the additional UAAL was amortized for each legislation under the actuar-
ial assumptions and methods then in effect (i.e., amortized implicitly
over the average remaining working lifetimes of all NYCERS active
members).
Similar legislation to the proposed legislation was enacted for
certain Station Supervisors Level 2 as Chapter 522 of the Laws of 2013
("Chapter 522/13"). The additional UAAL for that legislation has been
amortized over five years using four payments beginning one year after
the establishment of the UAAL in accordance with One-Year Lag Methodol-
ogy ("OYLM") that is used for the actuarial valuations of NYCERS.
The Actuary believes that the appropriate financing period for this
proposed legislation would be the average remaining working lifetime of
the entire group impacted.
However, given the history of the financing of similar legislations
(e.g., Chapter 734/06, Chapter 379/07 and Chapter 522/13), the Actuary
is inclined to amortize the proposed legislation over five years.
Essentially, this is a compromise between the remaining average working
lifetime of the entire group impacted and the average remaining lifetime
of all NYCERS members.
For this particular legislation, as with Chapter 522/13, the Actuary
would likely treat the five years of amortization with the payment peri-
od beginning one year after the establishment of the UAAL. This approach
is consistent with OYLM, where the UAAL is considered to be amortized
over five years with four years of payments beginning in the second
year.
Also note that, historically, other legislation impacting primarily
retired or soon-to-be-retired members was often amortized over five
years (Retirement Incentive Programs) or 10 years (Supplemental
Programs).
A. 7238 5
STATEMENT OF ACTUARIAL OPINION: I, Robert C. North, Jr., am the Acting
Chief Actuary for the New York City Retirement Systems. I am a Fellow of
the Society of Actuaries and a Member of the American Academy of Actuar-
ies. I meet the Qualification Standards of the American Academy of Actu-
aries to render the actuarial opinion contained herein.
FISCAL NOTE IDENTIFICATION: This estimate is intended for use only
during the 2015 Legislative Session. It is Fiscal Note 2015-18, dated
March 31, 2015, prepared by the Acting Chief Actuary for the New York
City Employees' Retirement System.