Guardian Alert: Special Session Letter to the Governor and Legislature

April 30, 2025

Dear Governor Reeves,
The purpose of this letter is to request that you make provisions in the call for the
upcoming special session as may be necessary for the Legislature to consider funding
needs of the Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS). I have included a copy of MRPEA’s special session letter to the Mississippi Legislature for your reference.


The Mississippi Retired Public Employees’ Association (MRPEA) has requested that an
ongoing multi-year commitment to reducing the unfunded liability of the system be made
now. The PERS Board has recommended that the employer contribution rate be moved
to 25.92% based on recommendations from three separate actuaries. Based on this
year’s estimates, the difference to increase to 25.92% of payroll from the current 17.9%
equates to roughly $600 million annually.


PERS 368,000 members and their families are counting on elected leaders in our state
to protect their retirement system. Thank you for consideration of this request.


Sincerely,

Bonnie Granger, MRPEA President


Dear Members of the Mississippi Legislature,

House Bill 1 has now passed the House and Senate and has been signed into law by the Governor. The bill over time eliminates the state income tax, which makes up approximately 28% of the state's general fund revenue. Elimination of the individual income tax could lead to shortfalls in general fund revenues, which would negatively impact the state’s ability to fund PERS and other essential government services. This action was taken despite lagging general fund revenues for the current fiscal year and impending federal budget cuts that will negatively impact Mississippi. While the ultimate depth of budget cuts at the federal level is not known at this time, they will cause significant job losses and funding reductions in our state, which will impact our state's economy. I remind you that a significant portion of funding for employee positions in the PERS system comes from the federal government.


Last year, the Legislature removed the authority of the PERS board to increase rates that member agencies pay to fund the system, instead giving the final authority to implement rate increases to itself. The Legislature has received two advisory letters from the PERS board confirming the actuary's recommended employer contribution rate of 25.92% on December 23, 2024, and March 28, 2025. This is based on the PERS actuary's (CavMac) annual actuarial valuation report dated November 17, 2024, which states: "We recommend that the Board and Legislature consider increasing the Fixed Contribution Rate to the Actuarially Determined Contribution (ADC). This recommendation would remove the phase-in approach altogether, and the contribution rate for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2026, would be equal to the ADC of 25.92% of annual compensation." This increase in employer contribution rate equates to roughly $600 million annually. The two additional actuarial firms required by the Legislature agree in substance with the proposed rate and the need for significantly more funding. It should be noted that this recommendation was made before recent declines in the stock market.


Fund PERS. There is currently no funding for PERS in House Bill 1 or elsewhere. The Tier 5 hybrid plan contained in House Bill 1 is not a solution in and of itself to PERS funding needs because it does not begin reducing the unfunded liability for decades. An ongoing multi-year commitment to reducing the unfunded liability of the system must be made now, whether it comes in the form of annual cash infusions from a dedicated source, increases in the employer contribution rate beyond those passed during the 2024 legislative session, or a combination of both. Any funding plan should be constructed in accordance with actuarial recommendations.

Support the Defined Benefit (DB)Tier 5 Plan Option. 
The PERS Tier 5 hybrid plan contained in House Bill 1 will provide significantly lower benefits to future members with no guarantee that projected benefits will be achieved. It does not include a guaranteed cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). The Tier 5 DB plan alternative to the Tier 5 hybrid plan, is comparable to the hybrid plan in terms of its impact on system funding, but it provides substantially higher benefits to future PERS members, including a 1% COLA, and benefits are guaranteed. We believe that the DB plan will assist in attracting and retaining Mississippi's public sector workforce of the future. Charts comparing the two plans are attached.

PERS has 368,000 members. They and their families are counting on you to protect their retirement system. Please honor your promise to pay retirement benefits for active employees and retirees who are members of the system now by funding the system. Support the DB Tier 5 plan for future members of the system.



Sincerely,

Bonnie P. Granger, MRPEA President

Updates

By Emily Pote April 3, 2026
Friday, April 3 Update The House and Senate adjourned Sine Die a little before 10 AM on Friday, April 3. At the end of the session, NO FUNDS WERE SENT TO FUND PERS. Not only were they unable to fund the system as they had planned, but they were also unable to fund the system as the actuaries had recommended at this time. The legislature has been repeatedly told by PERS staff, the PERS actuary, the PERS board, and MRPEA that additional funding is needed to sustain benefits for current and future retirees. The actuary recommends funding at the Actuarially Determined Contribution (ADC) level, which is estimated to bring the system to a 99% funded ratio by 2047. In contrast, legislative proposals like SB 2004 only projected a 68.7% funded ratio by 2047, creating a concerning 30% differential from what the actuary actually recommends. MRPEA will continue to urge the House and Senate to collaborate with the PERS Board, staff, and actuary to arrive at a funding plan that will truly stabilize PERS for its 373,393 members. This must include real solutions, such as cash infusions, dedicated revenue streams, and the continuation of incremental increases in the employer contribution rate. As before, please call the Lt. Governor, the Speaker, and your local legislators, and ask them to honor their commitment to PERS 373,393 members and fund the system based on what the actuary has said the system needs!  Lt. Governor Delbert Hosemann - (601) 359-3200 Speaker of the House Jason White - (601) 359-3300 Leave a message for your local legislator with the Capitol switchboard - (601) 359-3770
By Emily Pote March 25, 2026
Guardian Alert
By Emily Pote March 6, 2026
MRPEA Member Alert! As you may have heard, all PERS funding bills “officially” died on Tuesday, March 2. While this is disappointing, we want to express our appreciation to both the House and the Senate for actively working to fund PERS this year. We anticipate these efforts will continue during this year’s legislative session. We also extend our sincere gratitude to Senator Blount for his dedicated work to rectify Tier 5. However, we must stress that ultimately, neither the House nor the Senate plans funded the system in the way the actuaries have stressed the system needs to be funded. The legislature has been told repeatedly by the PERS staff, the PERS actuary, the PERS board, and MRPEA that additional funding is needed to sustain benefits for current and future retirees. The actuary recommends funding at the Actuarially Determined Contribution (ADC) level, which is estimated to bring the system to a 99% funded ratio by 2047. In contrast, legislative proposals like SB 2004 only projected a 68.7% funded ratio by 2047, creating a concerning 30% differential from what the actuary actually recommends. To this point, the plans of both the House and the Senate leave the system highly vulnerable. At a recent PERS board meeting, it was noted that, on average, PERS investments experience negative annual returns in two years out of every ten-year period. If the system experiences just a single 8% negative return in 2027, PERS's funded status under SB 2004 is projected to plummet from 56.7% at the end of 2025 down to just 40% in 2047. MRPEA will continue to urge the House and Senate to collaborate with the PERS Board, staff, and actuary to arrive at a funding plan that will truly stabilize PERS for its 373,393 members. This must include real solutions, such as cash infusions, dedicated revenue streams, and the continuation of incremental increases in the employer contribution rate. We need your help NOW! Please call your legislators and ask them to honor their commitment to PERS 373,393 members and fund the system based on what the actuary has said the system needs! Lt. Governor Delbert Hosemann - (601) 359-3200 Speaker of the House Jason White - (601) 359-3300 Leave a message for any legislator with the Capitol switchboard - (601) 359-3770 Thank you for your consideration of this request.  Dr. Kathy Clayton MRPEA President