Senators rejected a House lawmaker鈥檚 last-ditch effort Friday to fundamentally change a 2013 law requiring the state and counties to pay down the multi-billion-dollar unfunded liability in retiree health care benefits promised to thousands of public workers.
Sens. Jill Tokuda and Gil Keith-Agaran rejected the pleas of Rep. Romy Cachola to pass his version聽of , a measure he believed would have freed聽up billions of taxpayer dollars that could be put toward other programs and projects, such as聽education and rail transit.
The conference committee ultimately deferred the bill until at least next year,聽which means the part the Senate did support 鈥 allowing the Hawaii Employer-Union Health Benefits Trust Fund to invest money with the same degree of flexibility as the Employees’ Retirement System 鈥 won’t happen either.聽
Friday marked the deadline for conference committees to pass bills on to聽the full House and Senate to vote on聽next week.
Gov. David Ige supported the Senate keeping the current pre-funding plan in place, something he voted on himself when he was a state senator two years ago.
Supporters of the current plan point聽at how credit agencies look favorably upon聽pre-funding聽health benefits instead of taking a strictly pay-as-you-go approach as聽the state had done until 2013. If the state鈥檚 credit ratings go up, money can be borrowed at better interest rates, which saves taxpayers money.
The state, which is responsible for roughly three-fourths of the unfunded liability for Other Post-Employment Benefits, has put down $217 million over the past two years and expects to ramp up to an estimated $500 million annual pre-funding payment by 2018, the point at which the state and counties must be making 100 percent of their required pre-funding contributions.聽
Cachola doesn’t believe the state can afford the 2013 mandate. His聽proposal involved saving up to $2 billion through聽pre-funding payments and putting the investment income interest generated from that account 鈥 projected at $140 million annually 鈥 into a new rate stabilization fund that would聽cover any shortfalls and prevent frequent increases in premium contributions.
His version of the bill聽eliminated the requirement for the state and counties to pre-fund retiree health care benefits as long as there was聽at least a combined $2 billion in the separate public employer OPEB accounts. Cachola said accounting rules don鈥檛 require pre-funding and just taking a pay-as-you-go approach at that point would meet the state鈥檚 needs.
Cachola maintained that the state and counties will have to raise taxes or cut services to afford the pre-funding requirement. But Ige said it鈥檚 built into the six-year financial plan and is something Hawaii must do.
Wes Machida, the state聽budget director and former head of the ERS, told lawmakers in April that Cachola’s proposal聽would not reduce the amount of time it will take to pay down the unfunded liability, which is already expected to take almost three decades.
The conference committee working to reach an agreement on House Bill 1356 started meeting at 10 a.m. Friday. They reconvened through the day, eventually deferring the bill at 5:30 p.m., just a half hour before the deadline.
Keith-Agaran had given聽Cachola a strong sense of that inevitability when the committee met at 3 p.m. but Cachola held out for a “miracle” that didn’t come.
Carl Campagna, Cachola’s session manager, said Friday evening that they will work on the bill in the interim and try again next year.
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 .