Legislative Committees Focus on Higher Education Bills

This morning the House Ways & Means Committee and the Senate Ways & Means Committee each focused on legislation that would impact higher education.

House Ways & Means
The House Ways & Means Committee held a public hearing on Senate Bill 5182 which would eliminate the HECB and establish the Council of Higher Education and the Office of Student Financial Assistance. 

The  Council membership would include the six four-year institution presidents, one private nonprofit president, the Executive Director of the SBCTC, and a representative from the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, or their designees. The purpose of the Council would be to develop performance-based measures and goals for each four-year institution and a strategic plan for the institutions of higher education benchmarks.

In addition the Council would perform essential state governance functions previously assigned to the HECB, including approving new programs, mission changes, new colleges, recognizing accreditation, and provides the interface to meet federal requirements.

The Office of Student Financial Assistance would administer all state and federal financial aid and the advanced college tuition payment program. The Office is created as a separate agency of the state.

Senate Ways & Means Committee
The Senate Ways & Means Committee took action on HB 1981 (Higher Education Pension Legislation) passed unanimously with amendments.

The bill would:

  • The HERP Supplemental Benefit for employees that enter the plan after July 1, 2011 is eliminated
  • Employees offered participation in HERP on or after July 1, 2011, have the option of joining the TRS Plan 3 or PERS Plan 3.
  • The PERS and TRS Plan 1 provisions permitting retirees to receive benefits while employed in retirement system-covered positions for up to 1500 hours per year are limited to members who retire before September 1, 2011. (Members of PERS and TERS Plans 1 who retire on or after September 1, 2011, may continue to work up to 867 hours per year without a reduction in pension benefits.) Positions covered by the HERP are added to those included in the postretirement employment pension restrictions for the PERS, TRS, School Employees’ Retirement System (SERS), and PSERS.
  • Higher education institutions responsible for payment of HERP Supplemental Benefits are required to contract with and provide data to the Office of the State Actuary for actuarial valuations every two years beginning June 30, 2013, and experience studies of the HERPs at least once in every six-year period, with the first being due by June 30, 2013. A 0.5 percent of pay employer contribution rate is initiated for HERP-covered employees beginning January 1, 2014, to a new supplemental benefit fund. This fund is invested by the State Investment Board. Upon completion of the first actuarial valuation by the State Actuary (no later than June 30, 2013), the Pension Funding Council (PFC) may make changes to the 0.5 percent contribution rate, including the adoption of separate rates appropriate to the liabilities of each institution. The PFC is authorized to recommend legislation, upon accumulation of sufficient funding in the Supplemental Benefit Fund, to transfer responsibility for benefit payments to the new fund and adjust contribution rates to reflect the transfer of responsibility.

The bill now goes to the Senate floor for further consideration.