fbpx
Connect with us

Mississippi Today

Senate committee kills bill to replace PERS Board

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Bobby Harrison – 2024-04-02 18:08:32

Senate committee kills bill to replace PERS Board

A House plan to dissolve the member-elected board that governs Mississippi’s massive public employee pension plan and replace it with a board dominated by political appointees died Tuesday in the Senate Structure Committee.

The bill’s angered House Speaker Jason White, who called the move “irresponsible.”

Sen. Chris Johnson, R-Hattiesburg, chairman of the committee, said Tuesday afternoon — hours before a deadline for action on the measure — that he would not call the bill up for consideration. Instead, he called for the current board to become more transparent by livestreaming all of its meetings.

Advertisement

He also urged the board to delay the start of its plan to increase by 5% the amount public entities, state and local governments, school districts and universities and colleges must contribute to the program.

The 5% increase is to begin with a 2% increase in July and be phased in over three years.

That planned increase, which board members said their financial experts reported was needed to ensure the long-term financial stability of the Public Employees Retirement System, caused controversy in the . It led to the House plan to replace the existing elected board. The House acted after many state agency heads and local said the increase would cause financial distress and a possible reduction in services.

As of now, the board’s plan to increase the amount governmental entities contribute to their employees’ paychecks for retirement benefits from 17.4% to 22.4% over a three-year period remains in effect.

Advertisement

Ray Higgins, executive director of PERS, did not say whether the PERS board would heed Johnson’s advice.

“We appreciate the committee’s focus on PERS and their suggestions,” Higgins said. “PERS is such a very important system, not just for our membership but for the entire state. We the continuation and sustainability of PERS and look forward to working with the Legislature in the future.”

Johnson said senators had received messages from “thousands and thousands of PERS members” who objected to dissolving the board. The current board is comprised primarily of people elected by PERS members. PERS has a massive impact on the state with about 360,000 members, retirees, current employees and former public sector employees who have not yet retired. Under the House plan that was killed in the Senate committee Tuesday, the new board would be comprised of people appointed by the governor and lieutenant governor.

Killing the legislation “was the right thing to do,” said LeGrand, past president of the Mississippi Retired Public Employee Association and a former member of the PERS board. He said he supported keeping the current board in place and had mixed emotions about recommendations to delay the increase in the employer contribution rate.

Advertisement

“That will be up to the current board to decide,” he said. Earlier, board members had voiced opposition to the House plan to dissolve the current PERS board.

Speaker White, R-, said in a statement he was disappointed the Senate killed the House bill. He criticized Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann specifically for the demise of the legislation.

“The lieutenant governor and Senate’s failure to address the long-term sustainability of our state’s retirement program is irresponsible to not only PERS retirees and participants in the system but Mississippi taxpayers,” White said.

Hosemann in a statement said: “The PERS system’s long-term viability continues to be a serious concern. The Senate and the House need to work together to find a solution. Transparency and trust, from both the Legislature and retirees and employees, will be critical for us to move forward. The Senate is committed to protecting retiree and current employee benefits while balancing the budget.”

Advertisement

The system has assets of about $32 , but debt of about $25 billion. But Johnson said that debt was “a snapshot” that would be reduced by strong performances from the stock market.

He stressed that no member of the Senate Government Structure Committee supported any change in the benefits that PERS members received. He said the system had assets to meet its obligations.

The system depends on the contributions from governmental entities, a 9% contribution from employees and its investment earnings for its revenue. Some senators said they believed the board overreacted by imposing the employer contribution increase. Whether the board will heed Johnson’s recommendation to postpone the increase in the employer contribution remains to be seen. Another option would be for the Legislature to infuse funds from its current revenue surplus into the system.

But White said, “Over the next three years, and the foreseeable future if no action is taken, the proposed 5%-10% increase requested to fund PERS will also have the effect of limiting government services, and eliminating state and local government employees.”

Advertisement

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1954

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-09-07 07:00:00

Sept. 7, 1954

First-graders recite the Pledge of Allegiance in 1955 at Gwynns Falls Elementary School in Baltimore, Maryland. Credit: Courtesy of Maryland Center for History and Culture. Credit: Richard Stacks

In compliance with the recent Brown v. Board of Education , schools in Baltimore and Washington, D.C., were desegregated. Baltimore was one of the first school to desegregate below the Mason-Dixon line. 

A month after a dozen Black began attending what had been an all-white school, demonstrations took place, one of them turning violent when 800 whites attacked four Black students. White began pulling their out of the schools, and by 1960, the district was majority Black.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Mississippi Today

USM admin say program cuts are necessary to afford future pay raises for faculty, staff

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Molly Minta – 2024-09-06 13:03:19

The of Southern Mississippi will look at cutting under-enrolled programs even though administrators say it is not facing a financial crisis.

The budget is balanced, despite a four-year period of decreasing revenue and increasing costs, and USM has adequate cash reserves.

The move is necessary, top leaders said at last month’s convocation, so the research institution in Hattiesburg can survive the increasingly competitive future facing higher education in Mississippi by becoming a “unicorn” among its peers, offering programs students want and the state needs.

Advertisement

“Colleagues, this is plain and simply the reality of where we are in higher education today, and progressive institutions all across the landscape are doing the same,” President Joe Paul told faculty on Aug. 19, according to a video the university has since taken off YouTube after faculty and staff had a to watch it. “We can no longer simply kick the can down the road and hope things can get better. We will instead take charge of our future and crease a uniquely positioned, distinctive public research universty of which we can all be proud and feel ownership.”

Paul added that cuts are also one of the few ways the university can afford more pay raises for its faculty and staff, some of whom will merit raises this fall for the first time in eight years. (After protesting, minimum wage workers at USM won a pay raise two years ago.)

“My goal for us is not to go another eight years before offering raises again, that accomplishes little,” Paul said. “If we are to develop a true salary increase plan that is competitive and sustainable, we simply must continue to do two things with discipline and consistency. One, we must all continue to grow the enrollment through recruitment and retention … while also continuing to find efficiencies and decrease spending as an institution.”

USM was able to afford the raises, which total about $4.4 million, through what Paul described as two years of systematic reductions in administrative spending. The university cut 22 unfilled and six filled positions at its Hattiesburg and Park campuses.

Advertisement

An increase in state appropriations also helped support the raise, but USM isn’t able to say how much because “the raises from the university’s operating budget and the amount is not broken down by revenue source,” Nicole Ruhnke, a spokesperson, wrote in an email.

The raises addressed a significant concern for faculty at USM who held a protest for fair pay earlier this year.

Low salaries are an issue across Mississippi’s higher education system, which has struggled to attract and retain talented faculty. In recent years, the governing board of Mississippi’s eight universities has repeatedly heard how Mississippi’s faculty and staff are paid well below the average salary of other Southern states.

In an effort to fix that, the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees asked the Legislature to $53 million in funding this year so that each university could afford a 6.4% raise.

Advertisement

IHL’s spokesperson John Sewell wrote in an email that the system ultimately received $27 million in unrestricted new funding, not enough for 6.4% increase.

That funding also needed to other inflationary costs facing the institutions, like PERS and insurance, Sewell wrote.

Therefore, IHL left the final decision on raises up to the institutions, so Sewell could not say how much each university spent. Plus, the system’s final appropriation bill, which IHL negotiates on behalf of the eight institutions, did not include specific language regarding raises.

“IHL did not prescribe a fixed amount of new funding to be dedicated to raises as the individual institutions needed the flexibility to balance the increased costs for PERS and health insurance along with other inflationary costs before considering the amount for possible raises,” Sewell wrote.

Advertisement

Those costs are also driving USM administrators’ of under-enrolled programs, which comprise a minority of USM’s programs.

Lance Nail, the provost, is leading that effort. In response to questions from , Nail and Paul did not participate in an interview but provided statements.

Nail wrote that details about the program review will be worked out in the coming weeks in consultation with faculty, staff and administration.

“We will look at each under-enrolled academic program individually in collaboration with the deans, school directors and faculty, and determine what has led to low enrollment, student and market demand, as well as other contributions the program provides within the academy.” Nail noted. “These include the program’s contributions to the general education core, pre-major requirements, research and service.”

Advertisement

Last fall, USM deleted three degrees after IHL’s academic productivity review, which is triggered when a program is deemed to have too few graduates in a three-year period. Those degrees were a bachelors in international studies, and doctoral degrees in music education and criminal justice.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Continue Reading

Mississippi Today

Richard Lake joins Mississippi Today as audience engagement specialist

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Mississippi – 2024-09-06 07:00:00

is pleased to announce that Richard Lake has joined the Mississippi Today team as Audience Engagement Specialist. 

In this role, Lake will work directly with journalists, editors and to ensure Mississippi Today’s Pulitzer Prize-winning journalism reaches every corner of the state and beyond.

“Richard has developed into a respected member of the journalism community here in Mississippi,” said managing editor Michael Guidry. “He brings such an invaluable variety of skills to our newsroom that will us further enhance how we engage with our members and growing audience.”

Advertisement

Born in San Antonio, , Lake graduated from Mississippi State in 2022, earning a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a minor in political science. Richard to Mississippi Today after over two years as WJTV Channel 12 ‘ Senior Political Correspondent. A former Mississippi Today intern, Lake previously worked on the audience team. He also completed an internship with MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell Reports, working as a production assistant.

While at WJTV, Lake was named a finalist for TV Rookie of the Year at the 2023 Mississippi Association of Broadcasters . Lake was also a part of WJTV’s award winning reporting on Mississippi’s 2023 gubernatorial election.

“Finding creative ways to our audience with the journalism they expect and deserve is more important now than ever,” said Lake. “I’m excited to apply innovative strategies and work alongside this incredible team in furthering the impact of our reporting.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending