(1) The Teachers' Retirement Law establishes the State Teachers' Retirement System (STRS) and creates the Defined Benefit Program of the State Teachers' Retirement Plan, which provides a defined benefit to members of the program, based on final compensation, credited service, and age at retirement, subject to certain variations. STRS is administrated by the Teachers' Retirement Board. The Defined Benefit Program is funded by employer and employee contributions, as well as investment returns and state appropriations, which are deposited or credited to the Teachers' Retirement Fund, which is continuously appropriated for the purposes of the system.
Existing law, the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) , prohibits an employer from engaging in various defined forms of discriminatory employment practices. Existing law makes it an unlawful employment practice under FEHA for an employer with 5 or more employees to, among other things, include on any application for employment any question that seeks the disclosure of an applicant's conviction history, to inquire into or consider the conviction history of an applicant until that applicant has received a conditional offer, and, when conducting a conviction history background check, to consider, distribute, or disseminate information related to specified prior arrests, diversions, and convictions. Existing law specifies situations in which an employer is authorized to request this information, including when hiring for a position for which a state or local agency is otherwise required by law to conduct a conviction history background check.
This bill would authorize STRS to collect specified criminal history information for employees of STRS and applicants for employment with STRS while a tentative offer is pending, if the position includes certain duties.
(2) Existing law, the Public Employees' Retirement Law (PERL) , creates the Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS) for the purpose of providing pension benefits to state employees and employees of contracting agencies and prescribes the rights and duties of members of the system and their beneficiaries. Under PERL, benefits are funded by investment income and employer and employee contributions, which are deposited into the Public Employees' Retirement Fund, a continuously appropriated trust fund administered by the system's board of administration. Existing law vests management and control of PERS in its board of administration. PERS provides a defined benefit to members of the program, based on final compensation, credited service, and age at retirement, subject to certain variations.
Existing law permits the board to charge interest on payments due and unpaid by a contracting agency at the greater of the annual return on the system's investments for the year prior to the year in which payments are not timely made or a simple annual rate of 10%.
This bill would remove the board's option to charge interest at the annual return on the system's investments for the year prior in which payments are not timely made, and instead would require the board to charge interest at a simple annual rate of 10%.
(3) Existing law authorizes a member of PERS, who is credited with less than a certain number of years of service and who enters employment as a member of another public retirement system supported by state funds, within 6 months of leaving state service, to elect to leave their accumulated contributions on deposit in the retirement fund. Existing law specifies that a member's failure to make an election to withdraw accumulated contributions is deemed an election to leave the member's accumulated contributions on deposit in the retirement fund. Existing law provides that a member may revoke their election to allow accumulated contributions to remain in the retirement system, except under specified circumstances. Existing law requires a member who is permanently separated from all PERS covered service, who meets specified conditions, and who attains 7112 years of age, to be provided with an election to withdraw contributions, or, if vested, an election to either apply for service retirement or to withdraw contributions.
This bill would instead require a member permanently separated under the circumstances described above to attain the age that is 12 of a year prior to the age specified by federal law before being provided with those election options.
(4) Existing law establishes the Supplemental Contributions Program as a defined contribution plan to supplement the benefits provided under PERL. Existing law establishes the Supplemental Contributions Program Fund as a special trust fund, with moneys in the fund continuously appropriated to the Board of Administration of PERS, for purposes of the program. Under existing law, a participant or beneficiary is not permitted to elect a distribution under the plan that does not satisfy federal requirements related to being a qualified pension trust plan. Existing law requires the beginning date of distributions that reflect the entire interest of the participant, for a lump-sum distribution to the participant, to be made not later than April 1 of the calendar year following the later of the calendar year in which the participant attains 72 years of age or the calendar year in which the participant terminates all employment. Existing law requires the beginning date of distributions, if provided in periodic payments, to begin not later than April 1 of the calendar year following the later of the calendar year in which the participant attains 72 years of age or the calendar year in which the participant terminates all employment subject to plan coverage. Existing law also requires, if a benefit is payable on account of the participant's death, and the beneficiary is the participant's spouse, that distributions commence on or before the later of either December 31 of the calendar year immediately following the calendar year in which the participant dies or December 31 of the calendar year in which the participant would have attained 72 years of age.
This bill would change the age for required distributions, in the circumstances described above, from 72 years of age to the age specified by federal law.
(5) Existing law creates the California Employers' Pension Prefunding Trust Program and the California Employers' Pension Prefunding Trust Fund to allow state and local public agency employers that provide a defined benefit pension plan to their employees to prefund their required pension contributions. Existing law authorizes an employer, upon terms and conditions set by the board, to elect to participate in the prefunding plan by entering into a contract with the board relative to the prefunding plan.
This bill would authorize an employer participating in the program, upon terms and conditions established by the board, to request a disbursement of funds from its account in the California Employers' Pension Prefunding Trust Fund and transfer those funds directly into the Public Employees' Retirement Fund. By authorizing the transfer of funds from the continuously appropriated California Employers' Pension Prefunding Trust Fund to the continuously appropriated Public Employees' Retirement Fund, this bill would make an appropriation.
(6) The Judges' Retirement Law prescribes retirement benefits for judges, as defined, who were first elected or appointed to judicial office before November 9, 1994. Existing law also establishes the Extended Service Incentive Program to provide enhanced retirement benefits for those judges who continue in service beyond retirement age, as specified, and directs the Board of Administration of PERS to implement the program. Existing law prescribes that the required beginning date of distributions that reflect the entire interest of the judge, for a lump-sum distribution, be made not later than April 1 of the calendar year following the later of the calendar year in which the judge attains 72 years of age or the calendar year in which the judge terminates employment. Existing law also requires, if a benefit is payable on account of the judge's death, and the beneficiary is the judge's spouse, that distributions commence on or before the later of December 31 of the calendar year immediately following the calendar year in which the judge dies or December 31 of the calendar year in which the judge would have attained 72 years of age.
This bill would change the age for required distributions, in the circumstances described above, from 72 years of age to the age specified by federal law.
(7) Existing law establishes the Judges' Retirement System II, which provides retirement and other benefits to its members and is administered by the Board of Administration of PERS. Under the Judges' Retirement System II, a judge is eligible to retire upon attaining both 65 years of age and 20 or more years of service, or upon attaining 70 years of age with a minimum of 5 years of service. Existing law, on and after January 1, 2024, and until January 1, 2029, additionally authorizes a judge who is 60 years of age and has 15 years or more of service or 65 years of age and has 10 years or more of service who is not eligible to retire pursuant to the provisions described above to elect to retire and defer receipt of a monthly allowance, subject to specified formulations. Existing law requires a judge who leaves judicial office before accruing at least 5 years of service to be paid the amount of the judge's contributions to the system.
This bill would make various changes to the Judges' Retirement System II to grant a judge who elects to retire under the provisions operative January 1, 2024, benefits and options given to a judge who elects to retire upon attaining both 65 years of age and 20 or more years of service, or upon attaining 70 years of age with a minimum of 5 years of service, as described above, including, among others, authorizing a judge to receive service credit for specified military service and requiring the retirement allowance to be increased for the cost of living. The bill would require a monthly allowance or optional settlement payable to a surviving spouse of a judge who elected to retire under the provisions operative January 1, 2024, and who died before receiving a retirement allowance, to begin the date the judge would have been eligible to receive a retirement allowance until the death of the surviving spouse. The bill would specify that a judge who elects to retire under the provisions operative January 1, 2024, makes that election in lieu of being paid the amount of the judge's contributions to the system. The bill would remove the January 1, 2029, repeal date for the election operative January 1, 2024, and would instead provide that the election only applies to a judge who retires before January 1, 2029.
(8) Existing law permits a member of the Judges' Retirement System II to select from various optional settlements for the purpose of structuring their retirement benefits. Existing law, under optional settlement 1, provides for payment of a retirement allowance until death and the payment of any remaining contributions at death to their surviving spouse or estate.
Under an optional settlement 1 retirement, this bill would allow, if there is no surviving spouse, for the remaining contributions at death to be paid to a judge's designated beneficiary.
(9) The California Constitution grants the retirement board of a public employee retirement system plenary authority and fiduciary responsibility for investment of moneys and administration of the retirement fund and system. The California Constitution qualifies this grant of powers by reserving to the Legislature the authority to prohibit investments if it is in the public interest and the prohibition satisfies standards of fiduciary care and loyalty required of a retirement board. Existing law prohibits the boards of administration of PERS and STRS from making investments in certain countries and in thermal coal companies, as specified, subject to the boards' plenary authority and fiduciary responsibility for investment of moneys and administration of the systems.
Existing law, upon the passage of a federal law that imposes sanctions on the government of Turkey for failure to officially acknowledge its responsibility for the Armenian Genocide, prohibits the boards of administration of PERS and STRS from making additional or new investments, or renewing existing investments, of public employee retirement funds in an investment vehicle in the government of Turkey that is issued by the government of Turkey or that is owned by the government of Turkey. Existing law requires these boards to submit a report to the Legislature regarding the above-prescribed divestment action on or before January 1, 2024.
This bill would change the January 1, 2024, reporting date to January 1, 2035.
(10) Existing law, the County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) , authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to county, city, and district employees and their beneficiaries. Under existing law, CERL provides for a defined retirement benefit based upon credited service, final compensation, and age at retirement subject to specified formulas relating to membership classification.
This bill would clarify the definition of final compensation for specified members, members who are subject to the California Public Employees' Pension Reform Act of 2013, and members whose services are on a tenure that is temporary, seasonal, intermittent, or part time in the CERL, as described.
(11) Under existing law, CERL prescribes requirements regarding notification of members who have left service and elected to leave accumulated contributions in the retirement fund or have been deemed to have elected deferred retirement, as specified. Existing law requires the retirement system to begin paying an unmodified retirement allowance to a member, or a one-time distribution of all accumulated contributions and interest if the member is otherwise ineligible for a deferred retirement allowance, not later than April 1 following the calendar year in which the member attains 72 years of age, if the member can be located but does not submit a proper application for a deferred retirement allowance, as specified. Existing law prescribes alternate requirements if a member cannot be located and attains 72 years of age. Existing law establishes the Deferred Retirement Option Program, which a county or district may elect to offer and that provides an additional benefit on retirement to participating members.
This bill would clarify that the above-described notice shall be provided by the board. The bill would revise the age at which the retirement system is required to either start payment of an unmodified retirement allowance or make a one-time distribution of accumulated contributions and interest to the age specified by federal law. The bill would change the age threshold from April 1 of the calendar year in which the member attains 72 years of age to the age specified by federal law with regard to requirements that apply when members cannot be located and with reference to when distributions are to be made to members who are participating in a Deferred Retirement Option Program.
This bill would correct several erroneous references and also make other technical, nonsubstantive changes to these provisions.
Statutes affected: SB885: 7513.74 GOV, 20537 GOV, 20731 GOV, 22970.85 GOV, 31462 GOV, 31462.05 GOV, 31462.2 GOV, 31593 GOV, 31706 GOV, 31725.7 GOV, 31726 GOV, 31776.3 GOV, 75088.3 GOV, 75502 GOV, 75506.6 GOV, 75506.7 GOV, 75521 GOV, 75522.5 GOV, 75523 GOV, 75553 GOV, 75570 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV
03/14/23 - Introduced: 20537 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV
04/17/23 - Amended Senate: 20537 GOV, 31462 GOV, 31462 GOV, 31462.05 GOV, 31462.05 GOV, 31462.2 GOV, 31462.2 GOV, 31593 GOV, 31593 GOV, 31706 GOV, 31706 GOV, 31725.7 GOV, 31725.7 GOV, 31726 GOV, 31726 GOV, 31776.3 GOV, 31776.3 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV
06/06/23 - Amended Assembly: 7513.74 GOV, 7513.74 GOV, 20537 GOV, 20731 GOV, 20731 GOV, 22970.85 GOV, 22970.85 GOV, 31462 GOV, 31462.05 GOV, 31462.2 GOV, 31593 GOV, 31706 GOV, 31725.7 GOV, 31726 GOV, 31776.3 GOV, 75088.3 GOV, 75088.3 GOV, 75502 GOV, 75502 GOV, 75506.6 GOV, 75506.6 GOV, 75506.7 GOV, 75506.7 GOV, 75521 GOV, 75521 GOV, 75522.5 GOV, 75522.5 GOV, 75523 GOV, 75523 GOV, 75553 GOV, 75553 GOV, 75570 GOV, 75570 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV
08/18/23 - Enrolled: 7513.74 GOV, 20537 GOV, 20731 GOV, 22970.85 GOV, 31462 GOV, 31462.05 GOV, 31462.2 GOV, 31593 GOV, 31706 GOV, 31725.7 GOV, 31726 GOV, 31776.3 GOV, 75088.3 GOV, 75502 GOV, 75506.6 GOV, 75506.7 GOV, 75521 GOV, 75522.5 GOV, 75523 GOV, 75553 GOV, 75570 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV
09/01/23 - Chaptered: 7513.74 GOV, 20537 GOV, 20731 GOV, 22970.85 GOV, 31462 GOV, 31462.05 GOV, 31462.2 GOV, 31593 GOV, 31706 GOV, 31725.7 GOV, 31726 GOV, 31776.3 GOV, 75088.3 GOV, 75502 GOV, 75506.6 GOV, 75506.7 GOV, 75521 GOV, 75522.5 GOV, 75523 GOV, 75553 GOV, 75570 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV
SB 885: 20537 GOV, 75571 GOV, 75571.5 GOV