Arizona 2023 2023 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1500 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 02/06/2023

                    Assigned to GOV 	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Fifth Legislature, Second Regular Session 
 
FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1500 
 
government investments; fiduciaries; pecuniary benefit 
Purpose 
Requires a fiduciary to take into account only pecuniary factors when evaluating an 
investment or discharging the fiduciary's duties with respect to a plan and outlines plan voting of 
ownership interests and proxy voting. Prescribes requirements and prohibitions relating to the State 
Treasurer's investments. 
Background 
The State Treasurer is responsible for the safekeeping of all securities for which the State 
Treasurer is the lawful custodian. Securities may be deposited for safekeeping with any bank 
eligible to be the state servicing bank or any trust company or trust department of any bank 
qualified to do business in Arizona. The State Treasurer must invest and reinvest trust and treasury 
monies in outlined obligations, bonds and other permitted investments.  
The State Treasurer may enter into an agreement with investment managers to invest 
treasury monies. An agreement must require the investment manager to regularly account for, 
itemize and inventory all securities under management consistent with statutory requirements and 
report the findings to the State Treasurer at least monthly or on demand (A.R.S. Title 35,  
Chapter 2, Article 2). The State Board of Investment reviews investments of state treasury monies, 
serves as trustees of permanent funds and provides management of the assets of the funds 
consistent with outlined conditions (Ariz. Const. art. 10 ยง 7).  
Arizona offers four retirement programs, including: 1) the Arizona State Retirement 
System for all employees and officers of Arizona and political subdivisions; 2) the Corrections 
Officer Retirement Plan for correctional officers; 3) the Elected Officials' Retirement Plan for 
eligible elected officials; and 4) the Public Safety Personnel Retirement System for public safety 
employees. 
 Statute requires the Arizona Department of Administration to establish group health and 
accident coverage for former state employees who opt on retirement to enroll or continue 
enrollment in the group health and accident coverage and who are receiving either income from a 
state retirement program or long-term disability income benefits.  
Statute allows the governing body of any political subdivision to adopt, by appropriate 
legislation, a supplemental retirement plan for employees and officers of the political subdivision 
(A.R.S. Title 38). 
There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this 
legislation.  FACT SHEET 
S.B. 1500 
Page 2 
 
 
Provisions 
Fiduciary Requirements 
1. Requires a fiduciary to discharge the fiduciary's duties with respect to a plan solely in the 
interest of the participants and beneficiaries of the plan for the exclusive purpose of providing 
pecuniary benefits to the participants and their beneficiaries, defraying reasonable expenses of 
administering the plan and earning a return on the investment. 
2. Defines fiduciary as a person who does any of the following: 
a) exercises any discretionary authority or control with respect to a plan or exercises any 
authority or control managing or disposing of the plan's assets; 
b) renders investment advice for a fee or other compensation, directly or indirectly, with respect 
to any monies or other property of a plan or has the authority or responsibility to render 
investment advice; or 
c) has any discretionary authority or responsibility in administering a plan. 
3. Defines plan as any plan, fund or program established or maintained by the state or a political 
subdivision to do any of the following: 
a) provide retirement income or other retirement benefits to employees or former employees; 
b) defer income by employees for a period of time extending to the termination of covered 
employment or beyond; or 
c) invest taxpayer monies for any purpose. 
4. Requires a fiduciary to take into account only pecuniary factors when evaluating an investment 
or discharging the fiduciary's duties with respect to a plan. 
5. Prohibits a fiduciary from taking into account any nonpecuniary or other factors when 
evaluating an investment. 
6. Allows only the governmental entity that establishes or maintains a plan to vote the shares held 
by the plan. 
7. Prohibits a governmental entity from granting any proxy voting authority to any person who 
is not a part of the governmental entity unless that person follows guidelines consistent with 
the governmental entity's obligation to act based only on pecuniary factors. 
8. Requires the direct or indirect plan shares to be voted only in the pecuniary interest of the plan. 
9. Prohibits the shares from being voted to further nonpecuniary, environmental, social, political, 
ideological or other benefits or goals. 
10. Prohibits a plan from entrusting any plan assets to a fiduciary that has a practice of: 
a) engaging with, or commits to engage with, a company based on nonpecuniary factors; or 
b) voting shares based on nonpecuniary factors. 
   FACT SHEET 
S.B. 1500 
Page 3 
 
 
11. Prohibits a fiduciary from adopting a practice of following the recommendations of a proxy 
advisory firm or other service provided unless the proxy advisory firm's or the service 
provider's proxy voting guidelines are consistent with the fiduciary's obligation to act based 
only on pecuniary factors. 
State Treasurer 
12. Requires the State Treasurer to post a current list of investment managers and state investments 
by name on their publicly accessible website and to update any changes within a reasonable 
time period. 
13. Requires all state investments to be made in the sole interest of the beneficiary taxpayer. 
14. Requires the State Treasurer's evaluation of an investment to be based on prescribed pecuniary 
factors. 
15. Prohibits the State Treasurer from taking unnecessary investments risks or promoting 
nonpecuniary benefits or other nonpecuniary social goals. 
Miscellaneous 
16. Defines pecuniary factor as a factor that has a material effect on the financial risk or the 
financial return of an investment based on appropriate investment horizons consistent with a 
plan's investment objectives and funding policy.  
17. Defines boycott of an energy company as engaging in a refusal to deal, terminating business 
activities or performing other actions that are intended to penalize, inflict economic harm or 
limit commercial relations with an entity if those actions are taken without a reasonable 
business purpose because the entity:  
a) engages in exploring, producing, using, transporting, selling or manufacturing fossil-fuel 
based or nuclear-based energy; 
b) engages in exploring, producing, using, transporting, selling or manufacturing fossil-fuel 
based or nuclear-based energy and does not commit or pledge to meet environmental 
standards beyond applicable federal and state law; or 
c) does business with an entity that engages in exploring, producing, using, transporting, 
selling or manufacturing fossil fuel-based or nuclear-based energy.  
18. Defines nonpecuniary factor as any factor that is intended to further or is branded, advertised 
or otherwise publicly described by the offeror or fiduciary as furthering: 
a) international, domestic or industry agreements relating to environmental or social goals; 
b) corporate governance structures based on social characteristics; 
c) social or environmental goals; or 
d) a boycott of an energy company.  
19. Contains a statement of legislative findings. 
20. Becomes effective on the general effective date. 
Prepared by Senate Research 
February 6, 2023 
AN/slp