House Works to Wiggle Out from Under Unfunded Liability Mandate
UPDATED Hawaii Gov. David Ige and senators oppose the plan to return to a pay-as-you-go approach for health benefits, setting up a tough battle to reach a deal before session ends.
Story updated 5 p.m., 4/21/2015
Led by Rep. Romy Cachola, House lawmakers have pushed forward a plan that critics say would聽effectively undo a law passed in 2013 that forces Hawaii to finally get serious about paying down its massive unfunded liability in retiree health care benefits promised to thousands of public workers.
But Gov. David Ige and his former colleagues in the Senate are not too fond of the idea, setting up a tense next couple of weeks as legislators try to negotiate a deal before the session ends May 7.
鈥淓very time that I鈥檝e talked to the money committees, I鈥檝e made them aware that I have no intention of pulling the plug on prefunding,鈥 Ige told Civil Beat in an interview earlier this month.
, introduced in January, says the state and counties just can鈥檛 afford to fully pre-fund Other Post-Employment Benefits.
The state, which is responsible for roughly three-fourths of the $18聽billion OPEB liability, has put down $217 million over the past two years and plans to ramp up to an estimated $500 million annual pre-funding payment over the next three years. Between pre-funding payments and the pay-as-you-go payments, the聽state will be paying more than聽$1 billion a year in health benefits for retired public workers.
The House legislation proposes just taking a pay-as-you-go approach once the state has saved up $2 billion by聽pre-funding. It also also calls for putting the investment income interest from that account 鈥 projected at $140 million annually 鈥 into a new rate stabilization fund to cover any shortfalls and prevent frequent increases in premium contributions.
Cachola聽insists that his proposal does not amount to “pulling the plug” on the 2013 law. He told Civil Beat that the plan would continue the pay-as-you-go approach and聽pre-funding until聽the $2 billion stabilization fund is created at which point the pre-funding would stop.
鈥淭hese savings could be used to fund the Employees Retirement System, public and charter schools, the Hawaii Health Systems Corporation, or other funding needs of the state and counties, including rail transit,鈥 according to the the House passed last month in a 43-8 vote.
The Senate gutted and replaced the bill鈥檚 contents over the course of two committee hearings and sent it back to the House on Tuesday.
The legislation, in its new form, just allows the Hawaii Employer-Union Health Benefits Trust Fund to invest money with the same degree of flexibility as the ERS.
In January 2014, the EUTF board increased its projected return on investment from 6.5 percent to 7 percent, based on the presumption that the Legislature would pass a bill letting it take on a bit more risk while diversifying the investment portfolio, according to Sandra Yahiro, the health fund administrator.聽
If the EUTF can鈥檛 invest in new asset classes, it may have to bump its expected return back down, she said. That would add hundreds of millions of dollars to the unfunded liability and extra years to pay it off.
Conferees from each chamber were聽appointed Monday聽to serve on a joint committee tasked with resolving the differences between the two versions of the bill.
The lead negotiators are Cachola for the House and Sen.聽Jill Tokuda, who chairs the Ways and Means Committee, and Sen. Gil Keith-Agaran, who chairs Judiciary and Labory. The other conferees are Reps. Scott Nishimoto and Feki Pouha and Sens. Will Espero, Ron Kouchi and Sam Slom.
The聽House and Senate appear to be聽on different wavelengths when it comes to this bill.
Luke didn鈥檛 make any changes to the original draft when it came to her committee in early March, whereas Tokuda removed what was left of the original contents when Ways and Means heard it two weeks ago.
Cachola submitted written testimony in support of the bill when the 聽House Finance Committee heard it, a rare move for state聽lawmakers in Hawaii.
鈥淢y inspiration and motivation for coming up with this bill,鈥 he said, 鈥渂egins with my grandchildren by asking this question, 鈥榃hat will their future be with this heavy burden?鈥欌
Cachola said Hawaii residents who are homeowners may get hit twice by tax increases to pay for the pre-funding requirement, something he pointed out doesn鈥檛 have to be done under general accounting standards.
He foresees the state having to raise the general excise tax and the counties having to increase property taxes, something Honolulu has聽said聽it may聽have to do if required to pre-fund the health benefits.
The House聽draft of the bill says raising taxes for the health care needs of state and county employees places an unfair burden on the state鈥檚 general population.
鈥淩aising the general excise tax would be a regressive policy that would disproportionately impact those who can least afford it,鈥 the legislation says. 鈥淩aising property taxes at the county level would unfairly target property owners and landlords, the costs of which would likely pass down to property renters.鈥
The governor and his budget director, Wes Machida, have encouraged lawmakers to look farther down the road.
鈥淚f we talk about big picture, as we stand up that program and we begin to create that trust fund and accumulate resources 鈥 it鈥檒l be over $200 million by the end of this fiscal year and it will grow to almost $1 billion by the time we get to the fifth year 鈥 then you begin to improve bond ratings and hopefully reduce the cost of borrowing to the state, which would have significant long-term impact,鈥 Ige said.
Roughly 75 percent of聽the money Ige asked for in his proposed spending plan聽for the next two years above the current biennium budget goes聽toward pension and health benefit costs for some 120,000 public workers.
Ige was head of the Senate Ways and Means Committee when the Legislature passed the bill in 2013 that requires the state and all four counties to be making their full annual required contributions to the health fund starting in 2018.
Then-Gov. Neil Abercrombie signed it into law as Act 268. He told Civil Beat last July that it was the 鈥渟ingle most significant change in the EUTF liability during my administration.鈥
Yahiro said implementing聽Act 268 is one of the most, if not the most,聽聽important ways to reduce the unfunded liability,
鈥淚t is likely that credit rating agencies will look very unfavorably on such a聽鈥榬epeal鈥 of Act 268,” she added.
The Tax Foundation of Hawaii, headed by Tom Yamachika, said Cachola鈥檚 proposal tosses away the fiscal discipline of Act 268.
鈥淭he bill proposes to deal with the unfunded liabilities problem by denying that it鈥檚 a problem,鈥 Yamachika said in his testimony. 鈥溾楧on鈥檛 worry,鈥 it鈥檚 telling everyone. 鈥榃e can pay the current year鈥檚 costs of the post-employment benefit programs we created. There won鈥檛 be any rainy day. So just go about your business.鈥欌
Most of the support for聽the bill comes from the adult care home industry. Many care home operators live in Cachola鈥檚 district, which includes Kalihi, Kapalama, Mokuauea and Sand Island.聽
Twenty caregivers, nurse aides, foster home owners and others sent in the , much of it taken verbatim from Cachola鈥檚 own testimoy.
鈥淲e have come to understand that the State Unfunded Liability is estimated to reach $18B by 2016 and that Act 268 from 2013 mandated that the State and Counties contribute to pre-fund both the Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB) as well as the Monthly Premiums on an increasing schedule from $100M to $500M by 2019 and then for 30 years thereafter,鈥 the letter says. 鈥淭his is too heavy of a burden to pass along to our children.鈥
The House officially disagreed with the Senate amendments Thursday, paving the way for the bill to go to conference committee.
鈥 Read 鈥淧ension Promises,鈥 Civil Beat鈥檚 special report on Hawaii鈥檚 pension and retiree heath care systems, the financial problems they face and how that affects everyone in the state.
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .