File #: ID-321-19    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Ordinance Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 10/8/2019 In control: City Council
On agenda: 11/5/2019 Final action:
Title: AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BRIGHTON, COLORADO, AMENDING SECTION 2-64-110 OF THE BRIGHTON MUNICIPAL CODE REGARDING ELIMINATION OF THE VESTING PERIOD FOR PARTICIPANTS’ INTERESTS IN THE EMPLOYEE’S PENSION PLAN AND TRUST AGREEMENT
Attachments: 1. Ordinance amending Section 2-64-110 Vesting of participants' interests.pdf
Department of Administrative Services
Reference: Elimination of Vesting Requirement for ICMA-RC participants

To: Mayor Kenneth J. Kreutzer and Members of City Council
Through: Marv Falconburg, Acting City Manager
Prepared By: Karen Borkowski Surine, Administrative Services Director
Date Prepared: 10/8/2019
PURPOSE

To update the vesting requirement for employees under ICMA-RC.

STRATEGIC FOCUS AREA

Financially Responsible

BACKGROUND

The City of Brighton's retirement program is through ICMA and is a defined retirement contribution program. In the 1980's the City elected not to participate in Social Security. The Medicare portion was added back into the program in the early 1990's. This means City of Brighton employees are not eligible for Social Security at retirement unless they have worked elsewhere in their career. If they have Social Security benefits from a prior employer, this benefit is reduced by a provision called the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP). This provision reduces retirement benefits for workers who also collect a "non-covered" pension from a job in which they didn't pay Social Security taxes. The provision affects about 1.8 million Social Security beneficiaries, most of them veterans of federal, state or local government service.

This WEP defines the time frame in which you become the sole owner of all your benefits in the plan. Some plans allow you to become 100% vested in the plan immediately. This means all the money in your account including any money put there by your employer belongs to you at all times. The City would like its' employees to be vested 100% as soon as they receive their first pay. This would serve as a recruitment tool, particularly in a tight job market.

Additionally, terminated employees who have not achieved 100% vesting could perceive that the City's action was discriminatory.

The Pension Board approves this request.

FINANCIAL IMPACT

This change does not cost the City anything. In the past...

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