BILL NUMBER: S9276
SPONSOR: SEPULVEDA
 
TITLE OF BILL:
An act to amend the retirement and social security law, in relation to
death benefits for the beneficiaries of certain members of the retire-
ment system
 
PURPOSE:
To ensure state-paid judges and justices receive death benefits even if
they were not retired by their time of death.
 
SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:
Sections 1-3: Includes new sections 63-j, 508-d, and 606-d, which
declare that state-paid judges and justices are eligible for death bene-
fits, and that they would have been entitled for a service retirement
benefit by the time of death. Beneficiaries may elect to receive in a
lump sum; an amount payable, which shall be equal to the pension reserve
that would have been established, had the member retired on the date of
his or her death, or the value of the death benefit and the reserve-for-
increased-take-home-pay, if 'any, whichever is greater.
Section 4: All past service costs associated with implementing the
provisions of this act shall be borne by the state of New York and may
be amortized over a period of ten years.
Section 5: Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary,
none of the provisions of this act shall be subject to the appropriation
requirement of section 25 of the retirement and social security law.
Section 6: This act shall take effect immediately
 
JUSTIFICATION:
The Death Gamble is a draconian flaw within the retirement system for
our state-paid judges. It dictates that the beneficiaries of a judge
who, either dies in office, or before his or her retirement becomes
effective receive a death benefit equal to three times the judge's aver-
age salary during his or her final three years in office. However, once
a judge reaches 60 years of age, his or her death benefit is reduced by
4% per annum up to a maximum of 40%.3 In other words, the death benefit
of a judge who dies in office at the age of 70 is reduced to only 60% of
three times the judge's average salary during their final three years in
office. Neither the full, nor the reduced death benefits are as generous
as the more substantial pension benefits the judge's beneficiaries would
have received had the judge passed away while retired.
As such, judges are forced to gamble that they can live long enough.to
retire so that when they die, their families will be entitled to receive
an adequate pension. Unfortunately, if a judge loses the Death Gamble
and dies in office, it is the judge's family which suffers by receiving
the necessarily smaller lump sum death benefit instead of a pension. By
keeping this practice in place, we are effectively disincentivizing good
judges from continuing to deliver justice and opting fcr minimal cost-
saving at the expense of individuals who protect our democracy and the
integrity of the law.' Legislation enacted in 2000 removed Death Gamble
for thousands of police officers, fire fighters, and teachers, but
specifically excluded members of the judiciary. Many judges enter
service later in life and are therefore more prone to the Death Gamble.
New York State judges, who are the cornerstone of our state's justice
system, should not be excluded from the benefit options available to
most other state employees. It is counterintuitive that such a workforce
should not be able to die with dignity and justice.
This bill permits an eligible retirement system member to receive, in
lieu of an ordinary death benefit, a lump sum equal to the pension
reserve that would have been established had the judge retired on the
date of his or her death. This reform is supported by the entire justice
system of New York, including bar associations and non-profit legal
service providers. Nobody should have to gamble whether to continue to
work and risk an untimely death at the expense of their beneficiaries'
financial wellbeing, especially not workers who uphold our democracy.
 
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
2023: New Bill
2024: Vetoed by governor on grounds that the bill should be accounted
for in the budgetary process. Merits of the bill were left unchallenged.
2025: Vetoed by governor.
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
Immediately.