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Latest News > Latest PERA News
PERA News Archives > 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001

PERA News Archives (former Latest News items for 2005)

Proposed Colorado PERA Legislation for the 2006 Session (12/19/05)
PlanSponsor Magazine Article on Trustee Travel (12/02/05)
Colorado PERA Announces Settlement of Royal Ahold N.V. Securities Litigation (11/28/05)
Colorado PERA Concludes "Shareholder" Meetings (11/04/05)
Colorado PERA and Denver Public Schools Retirement System Merger Called Off (10/12/05)
Work Continues on Proposed DPSRS / PERA Merger (09/30/05)
401(k) Plan Investment Fund Update–GMO Fund (09/16/05)
Treasurer's Commission Report Released (09/14/05)
Colorado PERA “Shareholder” Meetings Scheduled (09/09/05)
Saturday Drop Off for Service Credit Purchase Documentation (09/09/05)
Results of the Colorado PERA Performance Audit (08/30/05)
Colorado PERA's Personnel Policies (08/15/05)
Colorado PERA Board of Trustees Information  (08/15/05)
A Message from Colorado PERA's Executive Director (08/12/05)
Colorado PERA's Funded Status in the News (07/27/05)
Colorado PERA Hires Baillie Gifford (07/11/05)
Colorado PERA Wins 2nd Place in National Communications Competition (07/05/05)
Electronic Delivery of PERA Publications (06/24/05)
CitiStreet to Conduct 401(k) Plan Survey (06/17/05)
Colorado PERA Board Election Results Announced (06/14/05)
Colorado PERA Election Update (05/12/05)
Election Ballots Mailed  (05/06/05)
Summary of Changes to Colorado PERA Rules  (04/29/05)
Life Insurance Program Open Enrollment Starts April 1  (04/01/05)
Colorado PERA Recognized for Commitment to Accurate Financial Reporting  (03/18/05)
Information About Your Retirement Fund  (02/11/05)
Working After Retirement Legislation  (updated 02/24/05)
Colorado PERA Mails 1099-Rs  (01/27/05)
Board of Trustees Election Slated - Candidates Sought  (01/03/05)

Proposed Colorado PERA Legislation for the 2006 Session

The Colorado PERA Board of Trustees has directed PERA staff to seek legislative sponsorship for several proposals for the 2006 legislative session.

Proposed Legislation for the 2006 Session

 

PlanSponsor Magazine Article on Trustee Travel

Colorado PERA Trustee travel was the subject of extensive media coverage earlier this year. The story below ran in the November 2005 issue of PlanSponsor magazine and was critical of the negative coverage PERA received on the topic.

Public Fund Trustee Education: Damned if They Do, Damned if They Don't

By Elayne Demby

In the late 1980s, the Jacksonville Police and Fire Pension Fund in Jacksonville, Florida, invested in a real estate investment fund managed by a bank. In 1990, however, board members became concerned about the investment after attending a conference in Canada sponsored by the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans. Conference speakers stated that real estate fund managers often inflated underlying real estate values to inflate fees. Speakers impressed on trustees the need to monitor real estate portfolios closely, and warned of a potential crisis in the American banking industry, says John Keane, executive director/administrator for the Jacksonville Police and Fire Pension Fund, who was at one time a trustee to the plan. Later in 1990, Jacksonville board members heard the same warnings when they attended a National Conference of Public Employee Retirement Systems (NCPERS) conference.

The warnings led to a board review of the investment that led to a vote to withdraw from the fund, says Keane. Good thing. The board had invested $18 million, got back $24 million, and almost immediately after Jacksonville exited, the real estate fund went illiquid. Had it not been for board members attending conferences, says Keane, the fund would have lost $18 million. Furthermore, this was not the only time Jacksonville pension fund assets were saved due to trustee conference attendance. "There have been other investment losses we avoided based on information we learned at conferences," says Keane.

While it would seem that public fund trustees attending educational conferences would be a good thing, the practice is receiving a growing amount of negative press. On August 15, 2005, the Rocky Mountain News ran a story criticizing the 16-member board of trustees of the Colorado Public Employees' Retirement Association (COPERA). Stating that COPERA board members lived the "life of a jet-setting retiree," it implied that the cash-strapped fund was in trouble, in part, because board members attended conferences in places like New Orleans, San Francisco, Miami Beach, and Honolulu, as well as international destinations such as Madrid, China, Spain, and Paris. The article also stated that trustees typically stayed in hotel rooms costing $200 to $300 a night. The criticisms over this spending seem to be predicated, at least in part, on the fact that the fund currently is experiencing shortfalls. Last July, COPERA reported that its funding ratio had slipped from 105.2% in 2000 to 70%. Nor is COPERA’s situation unique. Trustees of Pennsylvania’s employee pension fund recently also came under scrutiny. The Patriot News of Harrisburg reported just last month that trustees had spent more than $207,000 over a seven-year period traveling to out of state conferences.

As often happens in journalism, the accusations were more spin than truth. “People who are critics of these programs lose sight of the fact that trustees are fiduciaries, and it is their responsibility to keep up with what’s going on,” says Keane. The Rocky Mountain News article noted that the fund spent a total of $350,000 over the four-year period of 2000 to 2004 on educational conferences and programs—which breaks down to $5,468.75 per trustee per year. “$350,000 over four years for 16 members is not high, it’s peanuts,” says Fred Nesbitt, executive director and legislative counsel at the NCPERS. Attendance at an NCPERS educational conference can easily hit $2,000 to $2,500 per conferee, he says, and the NCPERS conferences are some of the least expensive around. When you look at what COPERA spent on trustee education, versus the $33 billion in assets the trustees are responsible for investing, $350,000 is not extravagant, he says.

Furthermore, public fund trustees—who are not compensated for their service—actually have continuing education requirements. Most states have statutes requiring public fund trustees and senior staff to attend conferences for continuing education credits. For example, in Colorado, trustees with two or more years of service must undergo 24 hours of continuing education every two years.

Even if not required by statute, pension trustees and senior staff at every public fund in the country are required to participate in continuing education as an essential element of their fiduciary responsibility, says Robert D Klausner, an attorney with Klausner & Kaufman, PA, in Plantation, Florida. Klausner’s law firm puts on an annual educational conference for public fund trustees and staff.

“If you have investments in Europe, sometimes you have to go see them; it’s part of a trustee’s fiduciary duty,” says Klausner. “If you buy timber in British Columbia, you better go see it to make sure the trees are actually there. Sometimes trustees have to put their feet on the ground at the location and eyeball the project or investment themselves.” Even though it may sound extravagant, going to China to learn firsthand about investment opportunities in the world’s fastest growing economy can actually be prudent, he adds. Moreover, if a fund has direct ownership in any real estate, fund trustees have an obligation to go and physically see that investment. Klausner says that, in the past, there have been frauds that have occurred when trustees did not go to make sure that what they invested in was really there. Nor can this obligation be avoided by simply avoiding these types of assets. Klausner says that, in today’s economic environment, stocks and bonds alone do not return enough money to meet the funds’ actuarial needs.

“These people are responsible for billions of dollars in pension assets. Do you really want someone managing billions in assets not getting continuing education?” asks Nesbitt. Furthermore, like Keane, Nesbitt says that many trustees apply what they learned at conferences. “I often heard ‘We learned this and then went back and applied it, and we saved the pension fund $1 million,’” he says.

As to the “exotic” locales of the conferences, conference organizers argue that they simply go where the conference facilities are located. Conference locations tend to be in tourist-friendly places because that is where the hotel space to house the conferees is generally located. “You can’t organize a conference for a large group of people unless there’s enough hotel space,” Klausner points out. “The fact that conferences are held in ‘glitzy’ cities is because they are the ones that have the facilities to have conferences,” agrees Nesbitt. Nesbitt and Klausner also both point out that it is generally easier and less expensive to fly to large cities or tourist-friendly destinations.

However, all agree that the educational content of some conferences is suspect. “Are some of these things junkets versus legitimate education? There are some conferences that are questionable,” says Klausner. “Many are nothing more than marketing devices for money managers. They’re just vendor showcases, just one money manager after another hawking their wares,” says Edward Siedle, president of the Benchmark Companies in Ocean Ridge, Florida. “[NCPERS] conferences are educational as opposed to some of the for-profit conferences that are more geared to marketing,” says Nesbitt, who, however, defends the marketing seminars. “Trustees still have to hear what’s going on, and keep up with the latest financial products.”

Public funds generally take steps to make sure that the money is spent wisely, Nesbitt says. Public funds should have procedures in place to approve which conferences trustees attend, education budgets to which trustees must adhere, and procedures to evaluate the educational value of conferences. Every public fund should have board policies in place on trustee education. The educational policy should encourage trustees to seek out continuing education and go to conferences, Nesbitt says. However, the educational policies should not be a license to travel at will. Trustees should be required to report on what they learned at the conference, he says, and policies should detail what is an appropriate educational expenditure and what is not.

Most public funds do have educational policies, and most must approve conferences that trustees attend. Funds do this in different ways, Klausner says. Some funds review and approve every conference prior to a trustee attending, while others publish lists of acceptable and unacceptable conferences. Others have restrictions on how many conferences trustees can attend, or limits on what can be spent. Other funds limit international travel.

For example, the Jacksonville fund has a list of conferences that meet the fund’s business objectives, says Keane. Conferences are approved a long time in advance, sometimes six to seven months. “We monitor course content for its value to our ongoing program,” says Keane. The fund has 5,000 members and retirees. COPERA maintains a database of conferences to see if they are worth the fund’s time and expense for trustees to attend, says a spokesperson. When trustees return from a conference, they also have to complete an evaluation form of the conference for the fund. COPERA trustees must rate conferences for educational value, and the fund has dropped conferences from its approved list that were judged to be more vendor-oriented than educational.

Funds also should set strict budgets for trustee educational expenses, says Nesbitt. For example, COPERA allows board members to spend up to $15,000 for travel and conferences in the first two years on the board, and $12,000 every two years after that. Jacksonville has budgeted $70,000 for conferences for the 2005-2006 plan year for its five trustees and seven-member pension advisory committee and staff.

In the end, say the experts, the funding problems public funds are experiencing have nothing to do with trustees attending conferences, though they may well be contributing to the public concern about such expenses. “Where we get problems is not because trustees have been derelict in their duties, it’s because employers have not made contributions to the plans or increased pension benefits without increasing pension funds, or they allow other abuses to go on like spiking,” says Nesbitt. “Much of this issue about trustee attendance at conferences is a tempest in a teapot,” says Klausner. “The real problem is trustees accepting gifts, creating the perception of impropriety.”

 

Colorado PERA Announces Settlement of Royal Ahold N.V. Securities Litigation

Royal Ahold N.V. (Ahold) has agreed to pay a total of $1.1 billion to settle all securities law claims asserted against Ahold and certain other defendants in the securities litigation pending in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, Gregory W. Smith, General Counsel of Lead Plaintiff, the Public Employees’ Retirement Association of Colorado (Colorado PERA) announced today. The settlement resolves all securities law claims against Ahold, and all other defendants, other than Deloitte & Touche entities. The settlement is global in nature and is designed to provide a recovery to all persons who purchased Ahold common stock and/or American Depository Receipts from July 30, 1999, through February 23, 2003, regardless of where such persons live or purchased their Ahold shares.

“This settlement is an extraordinary recovery for Ahold shareholders, and a good result for the company. We are extremely pleased that the settlement will provide a recovery for persons in the United States as well as in Europe and in other areas outside the United States. The result that we have achieved in this litigation underscores the importance of having institutional investors like Colorado PERA lead securities class actions while working side-by-side with their selected Lead Counsel, Entwistle & Cappucci, LLP. We look forward to presenting the settlement to the Court for the Court’s consideration and approval,” said Gregory W. Smith, Colorado PERA’s General Counsel.

Lead Plaintiffs will seek the Court’s preliminary approval of the settlement in January 2006. If the Court grants preliminary approval, Lead Plaintiffs will disseminate a Court-approved form of notice to all persons who purchased Ahold common stock and/or American Depository Receipts from July 30, 1999, through February 23, 2003 (the “Class”), regardless of where such persons live or purchased their Ahold shares. The notice documents approved by the Court and sent to Class members will include all documents that must be reviewed and completed by persons who wish to participate in the settlement. These documents will also be available at www.royalaholdsecuritieslitigation.com, and at Lead Counsel’s website, www.entwistle-law.com.

Ahold will fund two-thirds of the $1.1 billon settlement amount upon the Court’s preliminary approval of the settlement, and Ahold will fund the remaining one-third of the settlement amount within six months of the Court’s final approval of the settlement. Interest will be earned on the settlement proceeds immediately upon funding. Lead Plaintiffs anticipate obtaining the Court’s final approval of the settlement approximately 120 days after the Court’s preliminary approval of the settlement. Distributions of the settlement amount will be made pursuant to a Court-approved plan of allocation of settlement proceeds. The amount of the settlement fund available for distribution will exclude fees, costs, and expenses incurred in prosecuting this litigation. Distributions to members of the Class will be made approximately 12 months after the Court’s final approval of the settlement.

Colorado PERA and Generic Trading of Philadelphia, LLC, are the Court-appointed Lead Plaintiffs in the consolidated securities class action, In re Royal Ahold N.V. Securities & ERISA Litigation, which is pending before Judge Catherine C. Blake in Federal Court in Maryland. This settlement was arrived at after extensive negotiation between the parties under the supervision of retired United States District Court Judge, Nicholas Politan.

Colorado PERA and the investor class are represented by the law firm of Entwistle & Cappucci, LLP, which was appointed as Lead Counsel by Judge Blake in November 2003. Colorado PERA’s role as Lead Plaintiff was endorsed by the District of Columbia Retirement Board, the City of Philadelphia Board of Pensions and Retirement, the State Retirement and Pension System of Maryland, the Office of the Maryland Attorney General, and the State Universities Retirement System of Illinois.

If you wish to receive a direct mailing (or e-mail) of the materials needed to make a claim, please e-mail your contact information to Lead Counsel at: Royalaholdclaims@entwistle-law.com. Please direct all such inquiries to Lead Counsel.

 

Colorado PERA Concludes "Shareholder" Meetings

More than 1,000 Colorado PERA members and retirees attended one of the 27 PERA Shareholder meetings held around the state this fall. If you were unable to attend one of the meetings, you can view the presentation given by PERA at these meetings.

2005 Shareholders' Presentation

 

Colorado PERA and Denver Public Schools Retirement System Merger Called Off

Colorado PERA is disappointed that the Denver Public Schools (DPS) Board of Education voted earlier today to terminate the proposed merger of the DPS Retirement System (DPSRS) into Colorado PERA. The legislation passed during the 2005 Legislative Session that enabled the merger of the two retirement systems would ensure that the members of both systems would be protected through a cost-neutral combining of the two plans. The legislation also provided a framework for a workable actuarial methodology guaranteeing that Colorado PERA members and benefit recipients would not subsidize the absorption of DPSRS.

Colorado PERA appreciates the diligent efforts by all parties involved; the Boards of DPS and DPSRS, as well as the consultants and actuaries, who all worked hard toward the goal of uniting all school districts under one retirement system in Colorado.

 

Work Continues on Proposed DPSRS / PERA Merger

The Denver Public Schools (DPS), the Denver Public Schools Retirement System (DPSRS), and the Colorado Public Employees’ Retirement Association (PERA), as the three parties to the proposed merger of DPSRS into PERA, are continuing to work on finalizing a revised Merger Agreement as directed by the merger legislation (SB 05-171).

The legislation sets a target date of October 1, 2005, for the execution of the revised Merger Agreement and allows for termination of the merger by any party by October 15, 2005, if the Agreement is not executed. At this time, it is highly unlikely that the parties will be able to meet the October 1, 2005, target date for executing the revised Merger Agreement.

The parties agree that the legislation provides a period of time between October 1 and October 15 during which the parties may continue working on a revised Agreement without forfeiting any rights to termination. The parties believe that a revised Merger Agreement can be presented to the governing boards of each party in time for consideration and action within the next week.

 

401(k) Plan Investment Fund Update–GMO Fund

The GMO Growth Fund has been purchased, along with its investment history by John Hancock. This means that on September 16, 2005, all shares of the GMO Growth Fund Class M were exchanged for shares of the new GMO U.S. Growth Fund, a newly created series of the GMO Trust. Colorado PERA 401(k) Plan participants who previously were invested in the GMO Growth Fund were automatically transferred to the new fund.

The new fund’s objective and investment philosophy will remain the same as the old fund: to pursue long-term growth of capital. However, the ticker symbol has changed. The new fund does not have any performance history of its own as a newly created fund, but will be based on the former GMO Growth Fund. This change also reduced the expense ratio from 0.78 percent to 0.76 percent.

 

Treasurer's Commission Report Released

The Commission created by former State Treasurer Mike Coffman released its report on Wednesday, September 14. The Board of Trustees will be reviewing the report in the days to come. PERA will communicate the Board's position on the recommendations contained within the report after fully analyzing the contents. Any changes to PERA's governance or benefit structure would have to be accomplished through the legislative process when the Colorado General Assembly convenes in January of 2006.

 

Colorado PERA “Shareholder” Meetings Scheduled

Whether you're a teacher, a wildlife officer, or maintain Colorado's roads, as a PERA member you are also a "shareholder" of PERA, which means you need to know about the state of your retirement plan. To help you learn and understand more about your retirement plan, PERA will again travel throughout Colorado this fall to inform the membership about some of the issues facing PERA.

PERA members and retirees are encouraged to attend and hear firsthand information about recent legislation and PERA's financial condition as well as the legislative landscape heading into the 2006 session.

Schedule of “Shareholder” meetings

 

Saturday Drop Off for Service Credit Purchase Documentation

Date: October 1, 2005
Time: 8:00 a.m. to Noon
Locations: PERA Main Office, 1300 Logan Street, Denver
PERA North Office (The Pointe), 1120 W. 122nd Avenue, Westminster

PERA staff will be available to review and accept documentation for purchase of service credit on Saturday, October 1, 2005, from 8:00 a.m. until noon. No appointment is necessary. Members may drop off documentation in order to qualify for service credit purchase rates that are in effect until 4:30 p.m. on Monday, October 31. PERA staff will review applications for completeness, but will be unable to generate new Purchase Agreements or provide individual member counseling during this time.

On November 1, 2005, the cost to purchase service credit will increase to the actuarial cost, or the cost to PERA of adding this time to a member’s service credit. To purchase service credit under the provisions in effect before November 1, 2005, a member must be eligible to purchase service credit and must provide a complete Service Credit Purchase Application and supporting documentation on or before close of business at 4:30 p.m. on Monday, October 31, 2005. All required documentation must be received at PERA by 4:30 p.m. on October 31, 2005. A postmark of October 31 is not sufficient.

 

Results of the Colorado PERA Performance Audit

Read the performance audit report and PERA's responses.

 

Colorado PERA's Personnel Policies

The series of articles that have been written in a Denver newspaper about Colorado PERA’s personnel policies have presented the “perks” and “payouts” Colorado PERA employees have received in the past. The articles are a resurrection of old items previously addressed by the Board of Trustees in 2003 and 2004. Appropriate actions have occurred. It is important to note that all the policies mentioned in the articles related to PERA’s employees were addressed and modified before the articles were published. New policies exist for leave accumulation and payout, executive automobile allowances and longevity payments. Health care payments to retired former executives will be terminated with the beginning of the next plan year in 2006.

The stories used comments that were taken out of context and placed in the articles where they would enhance the reporter’s opinion. Additionally, the e-mail sent to Trustees as a reminder of Board policy on official communications was sent for the benefit of the five new Trustees on the Board, and not as a discouragement to talk to any reporter. It is curious that the e-mail was not directly sent to the reporter, and yet it was published in its original format.

Colorado PERA remains a bargain for the state’s taxpayers. Investments fund the majority of benefits provided to members (65 cents on the dollar), and the remaining 35 cents comes from employer and member contributions. The benefits paid (nearly $2 billion in 2004) create an economic boost to the Colorado economy since almost 90 percent of all retirees and benefit recipients reside in Colorado. In fact, in 2004, Colorado PERA paid $3.43 in retirement benefits for every dollar of employer (taxpayer) contributions. Colorado PERA also invests in Colorado businesses and owns Colorado real estate. When you consider the alternative–member dollars going to private investment companies with higher fee structures that are headquartered in other states–the importance of the state’s largest financial institution is obvious.

Colorado PERA has 232 employees who invest money and deliver benefits on the behalf of over 360,000 former and current public employees. That’s the same number of employees PERA had three years ago, even as the assets these employees manage and the number of members they serve has grown. PERA is able to do more with less because of its employees. They are the essential element in PERA’s business. In addition to the retirement benefit program, PERA employees also administer a $1 billion 401(k) plan, a health care program for members and benefit recipients, and other insurance programs. Comparisons to other governmental entities do not take into consideration the complex and varied programs offered to the Colorado PERA membership.

The stories in the newspaper have tried to frame PERA as a wasteful organization that has squandered its members’ retirements and will have to depend on the taxpayers of Colorado for a “bailout.” The fact is that PERA has evolved, and is still evolving, to survive in a competitive environment in which circumstances are very different than they were just five years ago. The articles reference policies that were in place at a very different time, and highlight PERA current and former employees unjustly. To aggregate costs over 10 years and suggest that there is largess or mismanagement is dishonest and disingenuous. We all know things have changed since the 1990s, and PERA’s Board of Trustees and staff continue to work to address PERA compensation practices and policies, along with the funded status of the plan.

Briefly, the Board and senior management at PERA have implemented policies that cut in half the amount of accrued leave employees are allowed to save and the way in which leave is accumulated. They have eliminated the vehicles used by senior management, and the longevity pay program for the three remaining eligible members of this group will end in mid-2006. Retired executives will begin paying for their health care in 2006. These are changes that reflect the current environment in which PERA operates and the desire for PERA to be transparent.

In 2004, outside human resources consultants reviewed PERA’s compensation policies and recommended changes to ensure PERA’s competitiveness in the market place. These adjustments were implemented starting in 2005. The PERA Board and staff will continue to review and evaluate PERA’s personnel policies to ensure that they are competitive and attract and retain the very best talent available in the market place.

Facts Omitted from the Articles

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PERA is a low-cost provider of an excellent array of retirement and ancillary benefits.

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Administrative expenses in 2004 totaled $33,483,000.

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Per member cost is $93 a year, or $7.78 a month, or 0.1% (one-tenth of one percent), equaling 10 cents for every $100 under management.

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Investment expenses in 2004 were $126,320,000.

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Investment costs are 0.39% of assets of $32,286,110,000, or 39 cents for every $100 under management. (Vanguard, which is considered one of the lowest cost investment companies, has indexed funds which have fees of 0.40 percent, or 40 cents for every $100 invested.)

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PERA is an extremely efficient operation – even with the addition of over 60,000 members in the last three years, PERA has 232 employees, the same number of staff that it had three years ago.

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PERA is committed to providing unrivaled customer service.

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PERA is never satisfied with status quo, and is in a mode of constant evaluation of its operations. PERA continues to make changes to its processes where necessary to gain additional efficiencies.

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PERA is unique in the public pension arena when the variety of benefit plan offerings are considered, the manner in which investments are made, and the way in which fiduciary oversight is provided by an elected Board and the Legislature.

 

Colorado PERA Board of Trustees Information

The PERA Board of Trustees are fiduciaries to PERA’s members and beneficiaries. A fiduciary is a person, company, or association holding assets in trust for a beneficiary. The Colorado PERA Board of Trustees is responsible for the management of over $32 billion in trust fund monies on behalf of 360,000 current and future public sector retirees in the state of Colorado. Colorado law requires PERA Trustees to act with care, skill, prudence, loyalty, and diligence in light of the circumstances that a prudent person acting in similar circumstances would use. This standard of conduct requires that PERA Trustees act in the best interest of the entire PERA membership regardless of the Division from which the Trustee is elected.

The Board is composed of 16 members. Fourteen of those members are elected by the PERA membership, and two serve as ex-officio members with voting privileges. The two ex-officio members are the State Treasurer and the State Auditor. Trustees serve four-year terms and are not compensated for their service on the Board. For details on the current PERA Board, see the Board Directory page.

Trustees come from a variety of employers and have a range of management and financial experience. The Board’s 14 elected Trustees hold a total of 26 degrees with eight earning master’s degrees, two with Ph.D.’s, and two more having law degrees. Half of the Trustees hold degrees in economics, finance, or mathematics. In addition to this formal education, Trustees have additional real-world work experience through serving on credit union boards and faculty committees at Colorado’s colleges and universities. Some Trustees possess relevant work experience in jobs such as business officer, cash manager, and computer information officer. One Trustee is a Colorado Appellate Court judge and another is the City Attorney of one of Colorado’s largest cities.

Because Trustees come from many backgrounds, the Board has a policy that was adopted in 2001 and revised in 2003 that outlines the importance of evaluating and addressing the specific educational requirements of Board members. Board Education Policy

In order to fulfill the mandate for understanding their fiduciary responsibilities, Trustees are required to obtain education that includes new Trustee orientation and attendance at approved industry-recognized workshops and training programs. Within two years of their election or appointment to the Board, Trustees are also required to attend the Pension Fund and Investment Management program at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. In addition to external training, internal workshops and formal education sessions are periodically provided to the Trustees on topics ranging from fiduciary responsibility, to actuarial principles, to investment risk management. The minimum threshold for continuing education for Trustees is also outlined in the Board Education Policy. Oversight of these educational requirements is provided by the Board’s Audit Committee.

A mechanism is in place for Trustees to evaluate educational programs they have attended. This information is a valuable resource for other Trustees seeking to fulfill their educational requirements as fiduciaries.

Each Trustee is given a two-year budget so that they may attend educational workshops. The Board recognizes that newer Trustees may require more education than those Trustees with longer tenure, and the budget amounts for new Trustees are higher than those budgets for experienced Trustees. The current educational two-year budget for a new Trustee is $15,000. Trustees with more tenure on the Board have a $12,000 two-year budget for educational purposes.

The guidelines for reimbursement for the costs associated with the conduct of official duties as a Trustee are outlined in the Board Expense Reimbursement Policy. This policy, adopted in 2001, details what expenses are reimbursable. This policy includes reimbursement requirements for transportation, food, accommodations, parking, and other travel-related expenses. The policy also includes items that are non-reimbursable such as personal travel expenses, entertainment expenses, athletic and exercise facility costs, and alcohol. Requests for reimbursement must be submitted to PERA’s administration with supporting receipts within 30 days.

Colorado PERA believes it is important for Trustees to seek and obtain the best education available so that they can perform their duties as fiduciaries. Both the Board Education Policy and the Board Expense Reimbursement Policy provide a framework to achieve this goal and are contained in the Board’s Governance Manual.

 

A Message from Colorado PERA's Executive Director

Divide and Conquer

Those of you who have read my articles in Colorado PERA publications and on the Web site over the past five years since I became the Executive Director know that I am a big fan of public service. You know that I believe in letting our members and benefit recipients know the facts behind stories that have appeared in the media about PERA’s funded status, sometimes in person as I travel around our great state. You also know that the PERA Board of Trustees and PERA staff have worked diligently to ensure the stability of the PERA trust funds and to deliver exceptional customer service and retirement benefits to our membership.

On August 1, Colorado PERA celebrated its 74th birthday. As I reflect on PERA’s history, I am honored to work at the helm of the largest financial institution in Colorado, overseeing the management of $33 billion (that’s billion with a “b”) invested on behalf of over 365,000 of Colorado’s current and former public employees. I am proud that we excelled at delivering nearly $2 billion in benefits to retirees last year–efficiently, accurately, and on time. I cannot stress more that this would not have been possible without the dedication of PERA employees who give you their best every day. PERA has a culture of continuous process improvement that permeates your retirement system, from the person who assists you when you call in, to those who manage your money, to senior management, and finally, to the Board of Trustees.

The reason that I am lauding the efforts of the PERA Board and staff is because we have come under attack. In the past few months, we have received and responded to over two dozen requests for information from one reporter at a Denver newspaper. We have delivered salary and benefit information on current and former PERA employees. We have explained our leave policies, our incentive pay system, provided information on PERA’s vehicles used for business purposes, handed over credit card and expense reports for staff and Trustees, given photos, explained purchased service credit, detailed administrative expenses, and outlined hiring practices for senior management. We have participated in interviews, and responded to additional seemingly endless follow-up questions to provide accuracy and clarity related to PERA’s business decisions for this reporter.

We know that this reporter has contacted other state retirement systems and requested information about their compensation practices and Board structure. We welcome the comparisons. We know we are efficient and cost-effective. The trouble is that your retirement system is unique among its peers. Colorado PERA, in addition to investing billions of dollars using internal staff, also has a $1 billion 401(k) Plan and administers a health care program, PERACare. I know of no other public pension system that is structured like PERA, let alone one that provides the products and services that PERA does.

It is because of this uniqueness that I have written about before, that PERA contracted with external human resource consultants to make sure that PERA is a competitive employer. We want to continue to be the best, and attract and retain the most important element of our success–our employees.

In the days to come, you may read or hear about PERA employee compensation that is deemed excessive. You may also hear about the Trustees’ pursuit of education to fulfill their fiduciary responsibilities. These stories may be framed in terms that are designed to provoke PERA members and benefit recipients into questioning the reasonableness of these practices. These stories may call in to question the trust you have for Colorado PERA. These news articles and editorials could call for change–in how PERA is governed, managed, and even question the existence of your earned retirement benefit.

I urge you to view this information through the lenses of reality and reasonableness. Is it important that PERA’s staff is paid competitively to manage your retirement investments and deliver your benefit? Is it reasonable to want to attract and retain the very best employees when the fact is PERA competes for employees with the private sector? Is it critical that Trustees seek education to further their knowledge of investments to fulfill their fiduciary responsibility to PERA’s membership? I think reasonable people would say, “Yes.”

The environment in which we all work as public servants has changed. We know that some may believe that your retirement plan ought to be a 401(k) with Social Security. The fact remains, Colorado PERA provides Colorado’s public employers and their employees retirement and health care benefits at a low cost to the Colorado taxpayer.

I wanted you to know that Colorado PERA is committed to providing retirement benefits for Colorado’s public employees. Do not let those who are envious of the structure of your retirement system diminish the trust you have placed in Colorado PERA. Do not let them divide and conquer.

As these stories are published in the days ahead, please check the Latest News link for more information.

–Meredith Williams

 

Colorado PERA’s Funded Status in the News

As a result of Colorado PERA’s presentation to the Legislative Audit Committee (LAC) on Tuesday, July 26, Colorado media have reported about the funded status of the plan. PERA meets every year with the LAC, as we do with other entities of the General Assembly such as the Joint Budget Committee and the House and Senate Finance Committees.

The meeting with the LAC is the Legislature’s annual review of PERA’s financial statements and financial audit. As a Colorado PERA member or benefit recipient, you received a summary of PERA’s annual report earlier this month. The summary is also available on the Web site. The entire Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for 2004 is also available on the Web site.

The facts remain:

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PERA paid nearly $2 billion in benefits to retirees last year

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With $33 billion in assets, even if PERA received no investment return or contributions from employers or members, benefits could be paid for 15 years

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Of course, members and employers will continue to contribute to PERA, which means benefits can be paid for several decades

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Increasing the member contribution rate, as suggested by Senator Anderson, has been researched by PERA’s actuaries and reviewed by PERA’s Board and staff. An increase in the amount members pay may subject PERA to legal challenges for increasing the amount members contribute without improving benefits

Regarding the audit recommendation that PERA perform employee background checks, PERA’s response to the audit is below. PERA agreed to bring this to the Board’s attention and potentially seek legislative action to allow this.

PERA’s response to the audit recommendation:

PERA agrees that it would be beneficial to obtain criminal histories on potential employees at the time of hire. However, the associated risk of having the information in light of the clear language of C.R.S. 24- 5-101 outweighs the potential benefits. PERA believes that under the current statutory language, the risk is best managed, with regard to internal employees, through the procedures currently in place. It should be noted that in addition to the procedures outlined, PERA also obtains driving records of all persons authorized to operate PERA motor vehicles on an annual basis. Further, the employment application required from every applicant for employment requires an affirmative representation as to whether he or she has any felony convictions which can form the basis for termination of employment if not answered honestly.

Unquestionably, “an applicant’s prior felony conviction for identity theft would be important for a prospective employer that handles sensitive financial information to be aware of and consider when making an employment decision.” However, the statutory language prohibits PERA from considering that type of information under circumstances where the applicant is otherwise qualified to be hired. Review of the legislative history of this statute reveals that in an earlier version, language was included that would allow consideration of an applicant’s criminal history where it related to the particular position in question and that language was deleted by the legislature. In considering this recommendation, the question arises regarding how PERA would prepare a policy for the official use of these criminal histories that does not evidence a violation of C.R.S. 24-5-101. To be of any use the policy would have to identify certain types of convictions that either disqualify the applicant (which violates the statute) or it would have to provide a process whereby an applicant found to have a criminal history would be scrutinized differently than other applicants for the purpose of finding some other pretence on which to base a decision not to hire (likely an actionable violation of the statute). PERA believes that a statutory change would be required to alleviate the associated risk presented by this issue and will present the matter to the Board to develop a legislative position this fall.

View the entire Legislative Audit Committee Report on PERA.

 

Colorado PERA Hires Baillie Gifford

Colorado PERA has hired Baillie Gifford to manage an emerging markets portfolio with assets totaling roughly 4 percent of PERA’s $5.1 billion international equity portfolio.

Baillie Gifford is the UK’s largest independent asset management company structured as a partnership and is based in Edinburgh, Scotland. The funding of this portfolio came from PERA’s cash holdings. Investment consultant Ennis Knupp assisted PERA with the search.

 

Colorado PERA Wins 2nd Place in National Communications Competition

The National Association of Government Communicators (NAGC) awarded Colorado PERA their 2nd Place Blue Pencil prize for an article entitled “Colorado PERA’s Funded Status Continues to Make News” that appeared in the October 2004 Retiree Report and the January 2005 Member Report. Colorado PERA’s Communications staff entered the article for consideration in the 2005 competition that took place in Austin, Texas, in May. NAGC received over 600 entries in 30 categories from communication professionals at all levels of government.

Previously, Colorado PERA received an Honorable Mention from NAGC for the revamped Colorado Investment Report in the Most Improved Publication category in 2002.

 

Electronic Delivery of PERA Publications

Colorado PERA members and benefit recipients are now able to select to receive PERA newsletters via e-mail rather than the printed versions that are mailed to your home address. You’ll get your PERA news faster than if we mailed it to you, and you’ll be helping PERA reduce the operating costs associated with printing and mailing.

To sign up for this feature, go to Account Access. After entering your Social Security number and PERA PIN, select Electronic Delivery from the Online Services drop-down menu. Under User Settings, you will need to verify the information listed is correct and make sure to enter your e-mail address. Next, select which publications you’d like to receive electronically and then Submit your request.

You will receive your specified publications by e-mail the next time they are distributed. The CAFR Summary is published in late June; the Member Report newsletters are published three times a year—January, May, and September; the Retiree Report newsletters are published twice a year—October and April; and the Retiree Update is published in December.

If you later decide that you prefer to receive your copies of these PERA publications in the mail, you would follow the same steps listed above, except uncheck the boxes next to the publication names you originally selected to receive via e-mail.

Colorado PERA is committed to protecting your privacy—we will not provide your e-mail address to any other person or company.

Please inform Colorado PERA any time your e-mail address changes to ensure you continue receiving these publications electronically. Updates to your e-mail address may only be made online by logging on to the secured pages of PERA’s Web site using your Social Security number and PERA PIN.

 

CitiStreet to Conduct 401(k) Plan Survey

CitiStreet, the service provider for Colorado PERA's 401(k) Plan, will be conducting a survey to gauge participant satisfaction with the 401(k) Plan. Beginning in late June, you may be contacted by TNS Intersearch, an independent research firm, hired to collect and measure feedback regarding your satisfaction with the services provided by CitiStreet. The phone interviews will be brief and calls will be directed to your home phone number, occurring in the evening or on Saturday. CitiStreet values your feedback and encourages you to respond to this confidential and important survey.

If you have any questions about the survey or your 401(k) account, please contact the 401(k) Plan by calling 1-800-759-7372 and selecting the 401(k) option.

 

Colorado PERA Board Election Results Announced

Colorado PERA members elected incumbent Scott Noller, Susan Beeman, and Scott Murphy to the three School Category seats, and Maryann Motza to the State Category seat of the 16-member Board of Trustees. Retirees elected Carole Wright to the Retiree seat on the Board.

All the newly elected Trustees will serve four-year terms except Murphy who will serve for one year, filling a Board vacancy. A recount was performed between School Category candidates Beeman and Murphy as required by election rules because the margin between the two candidates was less than 1 percent of the total votes cast. The recount confirmed that Beeman would serve the four-year term and Murphy would serve the one-year term.

In the School Category, a total of 35,005 votes were cast. Noller received 8,317 or 23.76 percent of the votes, Beeman had 8,129 or 23.22 percent, and Murphy received 8,084 or 23.09 percent.

In the State Category, a total of 6,249 votes were cast. Motza received 2,755 or 44.09 percent of votes. Runner-up incumbent Douglas Windes received 2,282 votes, or 36.52 percent of votes cast.

Of the 15,831 votes cast for the Retiree seat, Wright received 6,469 or 40.86 percent of votes. Runner-up Richard Lansford, the incumbent, received 5,268 votes, or 33.28 percent of votes cast.

Noller is a Business/Computer Education teacher in School District 11 in Colorado Springs. He has served on the Colorado PERA Board of Trustees since 2001. Beeman is a teacher on special assignment for Exceptional Student Services and the coach for school-wide Positive Behavior Supports for School District 60. Murphy is the Assistant Superintendent of Business Services/Chief Financial Officer with Littleton Public Schools.

Motza is the Social Security Administrator for the State.

Wright is a retired teacher from Aurora Public Schools. She previously served on the PERA Board from 1993-2000.

By state law, the management of the Public Employees’ retirement Association is vested in the Board of Trustees. The Board is composed of 16 Trustees, including the State Auditor and the State Treasurer who serve as voting ex-officio members of the Board. Fourteen Trustees are elected by mail ballot by their respective Division/Category members and serve on the Board for four-year terms. Five members are elected from the School Category and four from the State Category in the State and School Division, two from the Municipal Division, and one from the Judicial Division. Two members are elected by retirees.

 

Colorado PERA Election Update

PERA Members and Retirees:

Members and retirees are currently voting for candidates to fill five seats on the PERA Board of Trustees. The mail ballot process will continue through May. Once again, the PERA Board has hired an independent certified public accounting firm to oversee the entire balloting process, including the tabulation of the ballots.

Several members have contacted PERA this week to indicate that they received unsolicited campaign phone messages on their home phones during the weekend of May 7-8. Those contacting PERA were quite concerned that PERA had made their home phone numbers available to one or more candidates. Moreover, in at least one instance, the member’s "Caller ID" equipment identified the campaign message as coming from “PERA.”

Colorado law provides for the confidentiality of individual PERA records. The PERA Board and staff take this obligation very seriously. Additionally, the Board and staff are committed to the sanctity of the Board election process. PERA staff are not permitted to assist or facilitate the campaign of any Board candidate.

PERA has very sophisticated software to track and maintain member records and transactions. We have determined that neither the campaign calls nor the home phone number lists originated with PERA. A total of 292 phone transactions passed through the PERA phone system for the 48-hour period ending at midnight, Sunday, May 8, 2005. The vast majority of those calls, 211, were incoming calls or faxes. Three calls were interoffice calls from one PERA location to another. Seventy-eight calls or faxes originated in the PERA offices. We have researched the destination of each of the outgoing calls and determined that none of them were directed to those PERA members or retirees reporting that they had received the campaign phone message.

I am confident that PERA records have not been compromised and I am confident that PERA staff have not been inappropriately participating in the election process. Your trust is one of PERA’s most valued assets. Please let me know if you have any further questions or thoughts on this matter.

--Meredith Williams, Colorado PERA Executive Director

 

Election Ballots Mailed

Ballots for the 2005 Colorado PERA Board of Trustees election were mailed on May 2, 2005, to active PERA members working for School and State employers as well as School, Municipal, and Judicial retirees.

If you have lost or not received a ballot, the deadline for requesting a duplicate ballot is May 23, 2005. Such requests must be in writing and directed to the Colorado PERA Internal Auditor at 1300 Logan Street, Denver, CO 80203. Written requests must include name, address, Social Security number, and reason for the request.

Ballots must be postmarked by May 31, 2005.

 

Life Insurance Program Open Enrollment Starts April 1

Open enrollment for the Colorado PERA life insurance program is April 1, 2005, through May 31, 2005. The PERA Board of Trustees selected UnumProvident as the new vendor for the PERA life insurance program effective April 1, 2005. PERA members may enroll in group life insurance and accidental death and dismemberment coverages without evidence of insurability during this enrollment period. (More information about the PERA life insurance program.)

 

Colorado PERA Recognized for Commitment to Accurate Financial Reporting

In recognition of dedication to accurate financial reporting, the Colorado Public Employees’ Retirement Association (Colorado PERA) has been awarded the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting by the Government Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada (GFOA) for its 2003 comprehensive annual financial report (CAFR).

PERA also received the GFOA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Popular Annual Financial Reporting for its 2003 popular annual financial report (PAFR), a summary of the CAFR that is mailed to members and benefit recipients. To receive the award for the PAFR, the content had to meet program standards of creativity, presentation, understandability, and reader appeal.

This is the 19th straight year PERA has won the award for its CAFR. The Certificate of Achievement is the highest form of recognition in the area of public employee retirement system accounting and financial reporting.

Meredith Williams, Colorado PERA’s executive director who accepted the award, said “The Certificate of Achievement acknowledges PERA’s continued pursuit of excellence in financial reporting. The organization’s steadfast commitment to accountability illustrates its dedication to excellence in all aspects of serving our membership. It is just one of the many reasons that we have been able to provide such comprehensive benefits to our members.”

In order to win the award for its CAFR, PERA’s 2003 report was judged by an impartial panel and found to meet the high standards of the program including demonstrating a constructive “spirit of full disclosure” to clearly communicate its financial story and motivate potential users and user groups to read the CAFR.

The GFOA is a nonprofit professional association serving approximately 14,000 government finance professionals with offices in Chicago and Washington, D.C.

News Release (PDF)

 

Information About Your Retirement Fund

Operating a public pension fund is a complicated process. Colorado PERA is entrusted with an investment portfolio in excess of $32 billion to provide benefits to over 360,000 participants. PERA employs a qualified, professional staff of 232 individuals and deals on a daily basis with difficult issues. The staff is mindful of minimizing the operational costs of PERA as indicated by its long-standing commitment to internal management of assets, development of information systems, and delivery of benefits.

The PERA staff is very mindful of minimizing the total costs of operation at PERA. In the last four years, the total membership in PERA grew by 60,000 people, while at the same time, the total staff size administering the plan stayed constant at 232. We believe this demonstrates the effectiveness of productivity improvements that have been implemented over time. The level of service delivered by PERA employees has improved in all areas of customer contact, employer relations, and communication. The PERA staff is doing more with less, as we know many of our public sector members are. PERA continues to evaluate other areas for future efficiency improvements.

Recent media stories have covered many areas of PERA's business operations. Information on policies related to each of the areas that have been reported on is included below.

Incentive Pay
PERA uses a comprehensive compensation plan that is a pay-for-performance system. Over the past four years, incentive pay has ranged from 5.9 percent to 7.5 percent of total compensation. PERA incentive pay for 2004 performance represents 6.6 percent of salaries paid. These incentives are paid when performance benchmarks in all areas of PERA’s operation are met. PERA believes that it is important to attract and retain the best employees and this philosophy is not based solely on the investment returns to the PERA portfolio, but rather on the job market in which PERA competes for employees.

PERA remains the low cost provider of retirement services in Colorado and the surrounding region. (Less than one-tenth of one percent of assets is used for administrative costs, which is far lower than private sector mutual funds.)

Note: A $100 incentive paid to a PERA employee who managed a stock portfolio generated an additional $250,000 for the PERA trust funds.

Alcohol Expenses
In the past, Board members have been honored with retirement dinners as an expression of appreciation for dedicated service as volunteer Trustees. Alcohol was offered at these dinners. However, that policy has evolved over time to eliminate alcohol. PERA has also discontinued the practice of having retirement dinners for staff. These changes were made far in advance of any media inquiries about PERA's expenditures.

Hotel Expenses
Because PERA has investments around the world, PERA staff members are required to attend conferences and industry seminars around the country, and to travel on business outside the United States. It would not be prudent to restrict travel for PERA staff who perform “due diligence” for investments made on behalf of PERA’s membership.

When PERA staff does choose lodging, the costs are reasonable for the market. For example, Field Education staff, when conducting PERA business around the state, routinely stay at La Quinta Inns, the Hampton Inn, Best Western Inns, Microtel, Holiday Inn Express, and Sleep Inns.

Use of PR Consultant
Colorado PERA uses consultants in a variety of areas, not just public relations. Consultants provide alternative viewpoints that are valuable when making decisions about the administration of PERA.

Working Lunch Expenses
Business lunches are often with external vendors who perform various services for PERA. The meal is not the reason for the meeting and is incidental to the work performed during that time. Sometimes, the noon hour is the only time to get people together. PERA pays for these lunches so as to avoid the notion that vendors are purchasing PERA's "favor."

Comparing PERA to Social Security
References and comparisons of PERA to Social Security are careless, and are designed to liken PERA to a system that is widely regarded as one in "crisis." PERA is not in a crisis, and to suggest that the two systems are even remotely similar, either in the benefits they provide or in their financial situations, is irresponsible.

Some facts about Social Security and PERA:

Solvency

Social Security - 2003

PERA -2003

Assets (Government Securities): $1.5 trillion
(The securities earn a government bond rate)

Assets (Diversified Portfolio): $30.6 billion
(The portfolio has earned over 10 percent on average for the last 25 years and is projected to earn 8.5 percent in the future)

Actuarial Liabilities: $5.2 trillion

Actuarial Liabilities: $40.5 billion

Funding Ratio: 29%

Funding Ratio: 76%

Benefits and Payouts

Social Security

PERA

Average benefit in 2005 is $955 and maximum retiree benefit is $1,939.

Average benefit in 2004 is $2,260 per month.

2003 Total annual benefits: $470 billion

2003 Total annual benefits, refunds, payments: $1.8 billion

Ratio of assets to annual benefits: 3

Ratio of assets to annual benefits: 17

Audits
The State Auditor’s Office currently conducts an annual audit of Colorado PERA. These audits have always proven helpful in PERA’s continuing effort to improve its operations. Should the Legislative Audit Committee and the State Auditor’s Office direct an expansion in the scope of the current audit engagement or undertake a new audit, the PERA Board and staff will do everything possible to facilitate the conduct of the audit work. PERA will wait for the results of this audit and take timely and appropriate action regarding their findings and recommendations.

Annual presentations of the audit results have been made, and will continue to be made, to the PERA Board of Trustees Audit Committee and the Legislative Audit Committee. The management letter accompanying these reports contains recommendations made by the auditors to improve PERA's systems of internal controls. PERA has consistently implemented all suggestions made over multiple decades and plans to continue the effort to improve when issues are noted.

 

Working After Retirement Legislation

Legislation has been introduced that would change the working after retirement restrictions. Senate Bill 05-73, Work After Retirement by PERA Retirees for PERA Employers, is sponsored by Sen. Dave Owen (Greeley) and Rep. Cheri Jahn (Wheat Ridge). It was amended by the Senate Finance Committee on February 8. The Committee deleted the provision that would have added the member rate to the rate that employers will contribute beginning this July on salaries paid to PERA retirees. The bill now has three provisions:

  1. Apply the AED (employer contribution increases) on contributions paid by PERA employers on salaries paid to PERA retirees
  2. Require each PERA employer to provide PERA a copy of any agreement, contract, letter of understanding, or other arrangement whereby the employer will receive services in any form
  3. Count work after retirement for a PERA employer under any arrangement toward the 110 day per calendar year limit, as well as for employer contributions. This would make it clear that work by a PERA retiree for a PERA employer as an independent contractor would count, and so would work for any entity owned or operated by the retiree or an affiliated party, if engaged by a PERA employer. Employment for a company not owned or operated by the retiree or an affiliated party would not be subject to the 110 day limit or employer contributions.

The Senate passed SB 73 unanimously on February 12, and the bill has been referred to the House Finance Committee.

Employers will begin paying the employer contribution on salaries paid to retirees beginning on July 1, 2005, under legislation that was passed last year.

For more information on working after retirement, please review the Working After Retirement brochure.

Additional information on the bills that PERA is monitoring can be found here.

 

Colorado PERA Mails 1099-Rs

Colorado PERA mailed 1099-Rs to benefit recipients and to those individuals who withdrew their PERA accounts in 2004 on January 26. Our Understanding Your 1099-R  overview can help you to better understand the information on your 1099-R.

 

Board of Trustees Election Slated - Candidates Sought

In May 2005, Colorado PERA will hold an election for seats on the Board of Trustees for the following positions:

Three School Category positions

One State Category position

One Retiree position (According to state law, both retiree positions on the Board cannot be held by retirees who retired from the same category of employer. The 2005 retiree vacancy can only be filled by a retiree who retired from a School, Judicial, or Municipal employer.)

PERA members and retirees from a School, Judicial or Municipal employer will be sent ballots in early May to elect representatives in the above categories.

Terms expire on June 30, 2005, for School Category Trustees Scott Noller, Gloria Santistevan-Feeback, and David Williamson; State Category Trustee Douglas Windes; and Retiree Trustee Richard Lansford.

Any PERA member who works for an employer in the State or School Category is eligible to run for a Trustee position on the Board if he or she completes a candidacy packet. Any retiree, except those retired from a State Category employer, may run for the Retiree position. Incumbents may run for re-election.

To be placed on the ballot, a candidate must fulfill the requirements explained in the candidacy packet, including the submission of a petition form signed by 100 PERA members, or 50 retirees for those seeking the Retiree seat, along with a biographical sketch that must be returned to PERA by March 1, 2005.

Candidacy packets will be available January 3, 2005, by writing to:

Deputy Executive Director, Support Services
Colorado PERA
1300 Logan Street
Denver, CO 80203-2386

Candidacy packet requests should include the name, Social Security number, PERA Category/Division, mailing address, daytime telephone number, and signature of the candidate.

The Board of Trustees meets monthly (except in May, August, and December in 2005) and is responsible for adopting the rules and policies for the administration of PERA. Board members serve without pay, but are reimbursed for necessary expenses.

News Release (PDF)

 

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