California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2493 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Amended IN Senate August 17, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2493Introduced by Assembly Member ChenFebruary 17, 2022An act to amend Section 31461 of, and to add Section 31541.2 to to, the Government Code, relating to county employees retirement.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2493, as amended, Chen. County employees retirement: disallowed compensation: benefit adjustments. adjustments and calculations.(1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible. This bill would require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating a process, as defined, to recalculate compensation. The bill would require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment to be made by the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.(2) CERL defines compensation earnable by a member, for the purpose of calculating benefits, to mean the average compensation, as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and the same rate of pay, subject to certain exceptions.This bill would authorize a retirement system, to the extent it has not defined grade, in the above-described circumstances, to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping.(2)(3) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.(3)The(4) This bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. 1032, and would make additional related findings and declarations.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 31461 of the Government Code is amended to read:31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping. (b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation. (5)(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6)(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.SEC. 2.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 2 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.SEC. 3.SEC. 4. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
1+Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2493Introduced by Assembly Member ChenFebruary 17, 2022An act toadd to add Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, relating to county employees retirement.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2493, as amended, Chen. County employees retirement: disallowed compensation: benefit adjustments.(1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible. This bill would similarly authorize a county retirement system to adjust retirement payments based on disallowed compensation for sworn peace officers and firefighters of that system. The bill would provide that if the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, as defined, the system would require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would apply this to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the applicable member, retired member, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies. require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, that all contribution the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, be returned to the member by the employer or agency, as specified. that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating compensation. The bill would require, require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, that contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and would require the system to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would specify establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment of a penalty to be made by the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation. compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.(2) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.(3) The bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iv)(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation. (ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (5)The(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.SEC. 3. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
22
3- Amended IN Senate August 17, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2493Introduced by Assembly Member ChenFebruary 17, 2022An act to amend Section 31461 of, and to add Section 31541.2 to to, the Government Code, relating to county employees retirement.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2493, as amended, Chen. County employees retirement: disallowed compensation: benefit adjustments. adjustments and calculations.(1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible. This bill would require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating a process, as defined, to recalculate compensation. The bill would require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment to be made by the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.(2) CERL defines compensation earnable by a member, for the purpose of calculating benefits, to mean the average compensation, as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and the same rate of pay, subject to certain exceptions.This bill would authorize a retirement system, to the extent it has not defined grade, in the above-described circumstances, to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping.(2)(3) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.(3)The(4) This bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. 1032, and would make additional related findings and declarations.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2493Introduced by Assembly Member ChenFebruary 17, 2022An act toadd to add Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, relating to county employees retirement.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2493, as amended, Chen. County employees retirement: disallowed compensation: benefit adjustments.(1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible. This bill would similarly authorize a county retirement system to adjust retirement payments based on disallowed compensation for sworn peace officers and firefighters of that system. The bill would provide that if the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, as defined, the system would require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would apply this to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the applicable member, retired member, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies. require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, that all contribution the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, be returned to the member by the employer or agency, as specified. that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating compensation. The bill would require, require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, that contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and would require the system to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would specify establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment of a penalty to be made by the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation. compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.(2) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.(3) The bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Senate August 17, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022
5+ Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022
66
7-Amended IN Senate August 17, 2022
87 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022
98 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2022
109 Amended IN Assembly March 24, 2022
1110
1211 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
1312
1413 Assembly Bill
1514
1615 No. 2493
1716
1817 Introduced by Assembly Member ChenFebruary 17, 2022
1918
2019 Introduced by Assembly Member Chen
2120 February 17, 2022
2221
23-An act to amend Section 31461 of, and to add Section 31541.2 to to, the Government Code, relating to county employees retirement.
22+An act toadd to add Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, relating to county employees retirement.
2423
2524 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
2726 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2827
29-AB 2493, as amended, Chen. County employees retirement: disallowed compensation: benefit adjustments. adjustments and calculations.
28+AB 2493, as amended, Chen. County employees retirement: disallowed compensation: benefit adjustments.
3029
31-(1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible. This bill would require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating a process, as defined, to recalculate compensation. The bill would require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment to be made by the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.(2) CERL defines compensation earnable by a member, for the purpose of calculating benefits, to mean the average compensation, as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and the same rate of pay, subject to certain exceptions.This bill would authorize a retirement system, to the extent it has not defined grade, in the above-described circumstances, to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping.(2)(3) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.(3)The(4) This bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. 1032, and would make additional related findings and declarations.
30+(1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible. This bill would similarly authorize a county retirement system to adjust retirement payments based on disallowed compensation for sworn peace officers and firefighters of that system. The bill would provide that if the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, as defined, the system would require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would apply this to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the applicable member, retired member, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies. require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, that all contribution the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, be returned to the member by the employer or agency, as specified. that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating compensation. The bill would require, require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, that contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and would require the system to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would specify establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment of a penalty to be made by the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation. compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.(2) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.(3) The bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032.
3231
3332 (1) Existing law, the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA), generally requires a public retirement system, as defined, to modify its plan or plans to comply with the act. PEPRA, among other things, establishes new defined benefit formulas and caps on pensionable compensation.
3433
35-The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.
34+The County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (CERL) authorizes counties to establish retirement systems pursuant to its provisions in order to provide pension benefits to their employees. CERL generally vests management of each retirement system in a board of retirement. CERL authorizes a board of retirement to correct errors in the calculation of a retired members monthly allowances or other benefits under CERL in certain circumstances, including if the member caused their final compensation to be improperly increased or otherwise overstated at the time of retirement retirement, and the system applied that overstated amount as the basis for calculating the members monthly retirement allowance or benefits under CERL, subject to certain limitations.
3635
3736 The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) also authorizes its board of administration to adjust retirement payments due to errors or omissions, including for cases in which the retirement systems that the benefits of a member or annuitant are, or would be, based on disallowed compensation that conflicts with PEPRA and other specified laws and is thus impermissible.
3837
39-This bill would require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating a process, as defined, to recalculate compensation. The bill would require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment to be made by the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.
38+This bill would similarly authorize a county retirement system to adjust retirement payments based on disallowed compensation for sworn peace officers and firefighters of that system. The bill would provide that if the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, as defined, the system would require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would apply this to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the applicable member, retired member, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies. require a retirement system established under CERL, upon determining that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, to require the employer, as defined, to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. The bill would require, for an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, that all contribution the retirement system to credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, be returned to the member by the employer or agency, as specified. that reported the disallowed compensation, except in certain circumstances in which a system has already initiated recalculating compensation. The bill would require, require the system, for a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, that contributions made on the disallowed compensation be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and would require the system to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. to credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. The bill would specify establish other conditions required to be satisfied with respect to a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose when final compensation was predicated upon disallowed compensation, including, among others, requiring a specified payment of a penalty to be made by the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation. compensation to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate. The bill would authorize a retirement system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation to use that system in lieu of specified provisions that the bill would enact. The bill would also require certain information regarding the relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary needed for purposes of these provisions to be kept confidential by the recipient.
4039
4140 The bill would authorize an employer to submit to a retirement system for review a compensation item proposed to be included in an agreement, as specified, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation and would require the system to provide guidance on the matter. The bill would prescribe a process in this regard. The bill would specify that it does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2022.
4241
43-(2) CERL defines compensation earnable by a member, for the purpose of calculating benefits, to mean the average compensation, as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and the same rate of pay, subject to certain exceptions.
44-
45-This bill would authorize a retirement system, to the extent it has not defined grade, in the above-described circumstances, to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping.
46-
47-(2)
48-
49-
50-
51-(3) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
42+(2) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
5243
5344 This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
5445
55-(3)The
56-
57-
58-
59-(4) This bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. 1032, and would make additional related findings and declarations.
46+(3) The bill would specify that its provisions are not to be interpreted to alter certain existing laws, including PEPRA and the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032.
6047
6148 ## Digest Key
6249
6350 ## Bill Text
6451
65-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 31461 of the Government Code is amended to read:31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping. (b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation. (5)(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6)(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.SEC. 2.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 2 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.SEC. 3.SEC. 4. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
52+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iv)(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation. (ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (5)The(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.SEC. 3. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
6653
6754 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6855
6956 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
7057
71-SECTION 1. Section 31461 of the Government Code is amended to read:31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping. (b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.
58+SECTION 1. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iv)(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation. (ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (5)The(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.
7259
73-SECTION 1. Section 31461 of the Government Code is amended to read:
60+SECTION 1. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:
7461
7562 ### SECTION 1.
7663
77-31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping. (b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.
64+31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iv)(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation. (ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (5)The(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.
7865
79-31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping. (b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.
66+31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iv)(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation. (ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (5)The(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.
8067
81-31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping. (b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.
82-
83-
84-
85-31461. (a) (1) Compensation earnable by a member means the average compensation as determined by the board, for the period under consideration upon the basis of the average number of days ordinarily worked by persons in the same grade or class of positions during the period, and at the same rate of pay. The computation for any absence shall be based on the compensation of the position held by the member at the beginning of the absence. Compensation, as defined in Section 31460, that has been deferred shall be deemed compensation earnable when earned, rather than when paid.
86-
87-(2) To the extent a retirement system has not defined grade, it may define grade, as described in paragraph (1), to mean a number of employees considered together because they share similarities in job duties, schedules, unit recruitment requirements, work location, collective bargaining unit, or other logical work-related grouping.
88-
89-(b) Compensation earnable does not include, in any case, the following:
90-
91-(1) Any compensation determined by the board to have been paid to enhance a members retirement benefit under that system. That compensation may include:
92-
93-(A) Compensation that had previously been provided in kind to the member by the employer or paid directly by the employer to a third party other than the retirement system for the benefit of the member, and which was converted to and received by the member in the form of a cash payment in the final average salary period.
94-
95-(B) Any one-time or ad hoc payment made to a member, but not to all similarly situated members in the members grade or class.
96-
97-(C) Any payment that is made solely due to the termination of the members employment, but is received by the member while employed, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period regardless of when reported or paid.
98-
99-(2) Payments for unused vacation, annual leave, personal leave, sick leave, or compensatory time off, however denominated, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise, in an amount that exceeds that which may be earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.
100-
101-(3) Payments for additional services rendered outside of normal working hours, whether paid in a lump sum or otherwise.
102-
103-(4) Payments made at the termination of employment, except those payments that do not exceed what is earned and payable in each 12-month period during the final average salary period, regardless of when reported or paid.
104-
105-(c) The terms of subdivision (b) are intended to be consistent with and not in conflict with the holdings in Salus v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 734 and In re Retirement Cases (2003)110 Cal.App.4th 426.
106-
107-SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation. (5)(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6)(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.
108-
109-SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Section 31541.2 is added to the Government Code, to read:
110-
111-### SECTION 1.SEC. 2.
112-
113-31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation. (5)(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6)(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.
114-
115-31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation. (5)(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6)(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.
116-
117-31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation. (5)(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6)(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.
68+31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section. (b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:(1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.(2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter. (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.(ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.(iv)(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:(B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:(i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation. (ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.(5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda. (5)The(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.(d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.(3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.
11869
11970
12071
12172 31541.2. (a) The board of retirement or board of supervisors, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, may enter into any agreements as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions of this section.
12273
123-(b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
74+(b) For purposes of this section, disallowed compensation the following definitions apply:
12475
12576 (1) Agreement means a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement.
12677
12778 (2) Alameda means the Supreme Court case of Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032 or its holding.
12879
129-(3) Disallowed compensation. compensation means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter.
80+(3) Disallowed compensation. means compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the retirement system that the system subsequently determines is not in compliance with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, or the systems administrative regulations of the retirement system, regulations, through no fault of the sworn peace officer or firefighter.
13081
13182 (4) Employer means the appropriate applicable county, agency, or district standing in relationship between the employee and the system.
13283
133-(5) Initiated a process means a system has begun collecting any portion of an overpayment from any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary or adjusted the retirement allowance of any affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary due to a determination of disallowed compensation.
84+(5) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).
13485
135-(5)
86+(6) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.
87+
88+(c) If the retirement system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter of the system is disallowed compensation, the system it shall require the county employer or agency to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation. This section shall also apply to determinations made on or after July 30, 2020, if an appeal has been filed and the sworn peace officer or firefighter, the retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary has not exhausted their administrative or legal remedies.
89+
90+(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, shall be returned to the member by the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation. compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).
91+
92+(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.
93+
94+(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the contributions made on the disallowed compensation shall be credited against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer or agency that reported the disallowed compensation and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation. system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.
95+
96+(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:
97+
98+(i)The compensation was reported to the system and contributions were made on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed.
13699
137100
138101
139-(6) PEPRA means the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1).
140-
141-(6)
102+(ii)The compensation was agreed to in a memorandum of understanding or collective bargaining agreement between the employer and the recognized employee organization as compensation for pension purposes and the employer and the recognized employee organization did not knowingly agree to compensation that was disallowed.
142103
143104
144105
145-(7) System means a retirement association or system established by this act.
106+(iii)The determination by the system that compensation was disallowed was made after the date of retirement.
146107
147-(c) If the system determines that the compensation reported for a sworn peace officer or firefighter is disallowed compensation, it shall require the employer to discontinue reporting the disallowed compensation.
148108
149-(1) (A) In the case of an active sworn peace officer or firefighter, the system shall credit all contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and shall return any contribution paid by, or on behalf of, that member, to the member by the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, except as provided by subparagraph (B).
150109
151-(B) A system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to recalculate an active sworn peace officer officers or firefighters reportable compensation to exclude disallowed compensation and return contributions, either directly to the member, indirectly through the employer, or by some other reasonable manner, may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.
152-
153-(2) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation, the system shall credit the contributions made on the disallowed compensation against future contributions, to the benefit of the employer that reported the disallowed compensation, and the system shall permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation.
154-
155-(3) (A) In the case of a retired sworn peace officer or firefighter, survivor, or beneficiary whose final compensation at the time of retirement was predicated upon the disallowed compensation as described in paragraph (2), the repayment and notice requirements described in this paragraph and paragraph (4) shall apply only if all of the following conditions are met:
156-
157-(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three two years prior to the members final compensation.
110+(i) The employer reported the compensation to the system and made contributions on that compensation while the sworn peace officer or firefighter was actively employed for at least three years prior to the members final compensation.
158111
159112 (ii) The system determined after the date of retirement that the compensation was disallowed.
160113
161-(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time the employer reported it.
114+(iv)
115+
116+
117+
118+(iii) The sworn peace officer or firefighter was not aware that the compensation was disallowed at the time it was reported. the employer reported it.
119+
120+(B)If the conditions of subparagraph (A) are met, the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation shall do all of the following:
121+
122+
162123
163124 (B) If the disallowed compensation meets the conditions of subparagraph (A), the employer that reported contributions on it shall do all of the following:
164125
165126 (i) Pay to the system, as a direct payment, the full cost of any overpayment of the prior paid benefit made to an affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary resulting from the disallowed compensation.
166127
167-(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three four years to complete the payment.
128+(ii)Pay a penalty, as described in clause (iii), equal to 20 percent of the amount calculated as a lump sum of the actuarial equivalent present value representing the difference between the monthly allowance that was based on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration that allowance is projected to be paid by the system to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary.
168129
169-(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:
170130
171-(A) The overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).
172131
173-(B) The actuarial equivalent present value that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.
132+(iii)One hundred percent of the penalty to be paid under clause (ii) shall be paid by the employer or agency as restitution to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary who was impacted by disallowed compensation.
174133
175-(C) Written disclosure of the employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.
134+
135+
136+(ii) Pay to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, as appropriate, 20 percent of the amount calculated by the system representing the actuarial equivalent present value of the difference between the monthly allowance that was predicated on the disallowed compensation and the adjusted monthly allowance calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) for the duration the system projects to pay that allowance to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary. The employer shall begin payment within six months of notice from the system as prescribed in paragraph (4) and may have up to three years to complete the payment.
137+
138+(4) The system shall provide a written notice to the employer or agency that reported contributions on the disallowed compensation and to the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary, including, at a minimum, all of the following:
139+
140+(A) The amount of the overpayment to be paid by the employer or agency overpayment amount that the employer shall pay to the system as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3).
141+
142+(B) The actuarial equivalent present value owed that the employer owes to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary as described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), if applicable.
143+
144+(C) Written disclosure of the employer or agencys employers obligations to the retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section.
176145
177146 (5) In lieu of the process described in paragraphs (3) and (4), a system that has initiated a process prior to July 1, 2022, to permanently adjust the benefit of the affected retired member, survivor, or beneficiary to reflect the exclusion of the disallowed compensation pursuant to paragraph (2) may continue to use that process provided that it is consistent with PEPRA as it read on July 1, 2022, and with Alameda.
178147
179-(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall provide the employer with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.
148+(5)The
149+
150+
151+
152+(6) Upon the employers request, the system shall, upon request, shall provide the employer or agency with contact information data in its possession of a relevant retired member, survivor, or beneficiary in order for the employer or agency to fulfill their obligations to that retired member, survivor, or beneficiary pursuant to this section. The recipient of this contact information data shall keep it confidential.
153+
154+(d)(1)The employer or agency, as applicable, may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that is proposed to be included, or is contained, in a memorandum of understanding adopted, or a collective bargaining agreement entered into, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1), Section 31461, the retirement system, and the administrative regulations of the system.
155+
156+
180157
181158 (d) (1) An employer may submit to the system for review an additional compensation item that a party to a proposed agreement requests be included, contained, adopted, or a entered into that agreement, on and after January 1, 2022, that is intended to form the basis of a pension benefit calculation, in order for the system to review consistency of the proposal with PEPRA, Alameda, Section 31461, and the systems administrative regulations.
182159
183-(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.
160+(2) A submission to the system for review under paragraph (1) shall include only the compensation item language and a description of how it meets the criteria listed in subdivision (a) of Section 571 or subdivision (b) of Section 571.1 of Title 2 of the California Code of Regulations, along with any other all supporting documents or requirements the system deems necessary to complete its review.
184161
185162 (3) The system shall provide guidance regarding the submission within 90 days of the receipt of all information required to make a review.
186163
187-(e) The system may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance it provided.
164+(e) The system shall may periodically publish a notice of the proposed compensation language submitted to the system pursuant to this section for review and the guidance provided by the system. it provided.
188165
189-(f) This section does not alter or abrogate an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.
166+(f) This section does not alter or abrogate any responsibility of the retirement system, an employer, or an agency an employers responsibility to meet and confer in good faith with the employee organization regarding the impact of the disallowed compensation or the effect of any disallowed compensation on the rights of the employees and the obligations of the employer to its employees, including any employees who, due to the passage of time and promotion, may have become exempt from inclusion in a bargaining unit, but whose benefit was the product of collective bargaining.
190167
191-(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system after July 30, 2020.
168+(g) This section does not affect or otherwise alter a partys right to appeal any determination regarding disallowed compensation made by the system. system after July 30, 2020.
192169
193-SEC. 2.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 2 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.
170+SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.
194171
195-SEC. 2.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 2 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.
172+SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.
196173
197-SEC. 2.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 2 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:
174+SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 31541.2 to the Government Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:
198175
199-### SEC. 2.SEC. 3.
176+### SEC. 2.
200177
201178 In order to appropriately maintain the current confidentiality of personal contact information held by a county retirement system regarding retired members of the system, and their survivors and beneficiaries, it is necessary to limit access to this information if it is provided to other public entities for purposes of Section 31541.2 of the Government Code.
202179
203-SEC. 3.SEC. 4. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
180+SEC. 3. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
204181
205-SEC. 3.SEC. 4. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
182+SEC. 3. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
206183
207-SEC. 3.SEC. 4. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
184+SEC. 3. This act shall not be interpreted to alter the Legislatures intent in enacting the California Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2013 (Article 4 (commencing with Section 7522) of Chapter 21 of Division 7 of Title 1) of, and Section 31461 of, the Government Code, to alter a retirement systems corresponding implementing administrative regulations, or to alter the holding in Alameda County Deputy Sheriffs Association v. Alameda County Employees Retirement Association (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1032. Rather, the Legislature intends this act to be consistent, not in conflict, with those laws, regulations, and the Alameda holding.
208185
209-### SEC. 3.SEC. 4.
186+### SEC. 3.