17 States Cut COLAs for Public Pensions
May 22, 2014
Market Watch - One
of the more surprising responses of public plan sponsors to the
financial crisis and the ensuing recession was their reduction,
suspension, or elimination of cost-of-living adjustments (COLA) for
current workers and, in a number of cases, current retirees. The
response was surprising because it has often been assumed that public
plan participants have greater benefit protections than their private
sector counterparts.
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA), which governs private pensions,
protects accrued benefits but
allows employers to change the terms going forward. In contrast,
most
states have legal provisions that constrain sponsors’ ability to make
changes to future benefits for current workers. Yet they were
able to change the COLA for current workers and often for people already
receiving it.
Between 2010 and 2013, seventeen states (with a total of 30 plans)
enacted legislation that reduced, suspended, or eliminated COLAs for
current workers and often for current retirees.
The cuts fell into
three groups:
- Three states with seriously underfunded plans – New Jersey, Rhode
Island and Oklahoma – essentially eliminated the COLA for the
foreseeable future.
- Eight states that provided a guaranteed fixed percentage increase
each year regardless of inflation – Colorado, Florida, Illinois,
Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, Ohio and South Dakota – either reduced
or temporarily suspended the guarantee or shifted to a Consumer Price Index (CPI)-linked COLA.
- Six states with CPI-linked COLAs – Connecticut, Maine, Maryland,
Oregon, Washington and Wyoming – made changes, mainly by reducing
minimum or maximum adjustments or linking COLAs to the plan’s funded
status or the participant’s benefit level.
Four states that cut their COLA – Colorado, Illinois, Maine, and Ohio
– have plans where workers are not covered by Social Security. If
inflation rises to 3% or 4%, participants in all four states will see
the real value of their entire retirement income erode.
Of the 17 states that changed their COLA, 12 have been challenged in
court. The courts have ruled in nine states and in all but one case have
upheld the cut. The Rhode Island proposals to cut the COLA withstood
the mediation process with only minor changes but police union members
subsequently rejected the mediation agreement. The table below
summarizes the status of these suits. Suits have been filed in Illinois
and Oregon, but no decisions have been reached.
The main rationale for allowing the COLA cut is that COLAs are not
considered to be a contractual right. For example, in Colorado, where
the decision is currently under appeal, the judge found that the
plaintiffs had no vested contract right to a specific COLA amount for
life without change and that the plaintiffs could have no reasonable
expectation to a specific COLA amount for life, given that the General
Assembly changed the COLA formula numerous times over the past 40 years.
In Minnesota, the judge ruled both that the COLA was not a protected
core benefit and that the COLA modification was necessary to prevent the
long-term fiscal deterioration of the pension plan.
The courts clearly view COLAs very differently than core benefits. At
this point, the legal hurdles to cutting COLAs appear to be quite low.
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