The state聽 filed a lawsuit Tuesday against the state of Hawaii and the to stop the implementation of a law that offers聽special retirement benefits to certain state employees.

The law, called , gives cash severance payments or early retirement benefits to unionized public workers at three hospitals in Maui County that are being privatized by Kaiser Permanente.

鈥淎s the steward of all the State and county employees鈥櫬爎etirement, the ERS must do everything it can to protect its beneficiaries and the fund,” ERS Executive Director Thomas Williams said in a release. “All we want is to make聽sure this statute does not have the unintended consequence of jeopardizing the ERS plan.鈥

The state Employees' Retirement System sued the state and HHSC over a law targeted at Maui hospital workers.
The state Employees’ Retirement System sued the state and HHSC over a law connected with Maui hospital workers. Nanea Kalani/Civil Beat

The ERS news release describes the law as unconstitutional because it impairs the retirement benefits of all state and county employees and retirees. The Internal Revenue Code does not allow the ERS plan to offer employees the choice prescribed in the law, which could result in the ERS losing its status as a tax-qualified defined benefit pension plan, the release says.

Losing this status would be “catastrophic” to all state and county employees, the release says, because the employees would no longer be able to defer the payment of taxes on employee retirement contributions.

“The contributions would be included in the employees鈥 income and taxed as normal wages when contributed,” the release says. “Further, the employees would be subject to federal income taxes on the portion of their benefits funded by the聽employer at the time that the benefits vest, instead of when they actually receive the benefits. Additionally, the聽employees would lose their right to the tax deferred rollover of their retirement contributions to other retirement聽vehicles, such as IRAs.”

This is one of the biggest reasons that Gov. David Ige vetoed in July. But the Legislature came back in special session later last month to override the veto.

Governor David Ige veto presser3. 12 july 2016
Gov. David Ige vetoed the bill to provide special benefits to the hospital workers, but lawmakers聽overrode the veto. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Ige has said his administration鈥檚 concerns over the bill remain unchanged: it聽jeopardizes the ERS鈥檚 tax-exempt status, does not appropriate funds for lump-sum cash payments for affected employees and adds an additional unfunded liability of about $17.2 million to the ERS and $18.4 million to the Employer-Union Health Benefits Trust Fund, which puts the state鈥檚 long-term financial position, along with its bond ratings in jeopardy. Bond ratings determine what the state pays in interest on borrowed funds.

The issue has聽pitted聽public-worker unions against the governor while pressuring lawmakers 鈥 most of whom are up for re-election 鈥 to act.

sued the state to stop the privatization, arguing that the union members鈥 contracts were still in effect until next June. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the state to temporarily stop its transition activities in May, but later allowed them to continue as negotiations were moving forward toward a settlement.

The had threatened to sue as well, but backed off after the Legislature overrode the veto.

The ERS聽has taken no position on the privatization of聽Maui Memorial Medical Center, Kula Hospital &聽Clinic and Lanai Community Hospital, and the lawsuit does not seek to stop the transfer of the three HHSC hospitals to Kaiser.

The lawsuit is asking a state court to temporarily stay the effect of Act 1 so the ERS can seek guidance from the IRS, the release says, adding that if the IRS determines any portion of the law would disqualify the ERS plan then the court should declare those provisions unconstitutional.

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