The Guardian: Fall 2025
Emily Pote • December 16, 2025
2025 Fall Edition of the Guardian is Here!
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Updates
Dear MRPEA Members, The 2026 Legislative Session has started with a bang. We want to provide you with an immediate update regarding the Senate's action on PERS funding, the facts regarding the numbers, and what we need you to do next. The Good News: Senate Passes $1 Billion Funding Package First, we must acknowledge a positive step forward. The Senate has passed Senate Bill 2004 , the "Mississippi PERS Stability Act." This bill demonstrates that the legislature is listening to our concerns. The plan includes: • A $500 million upfront transfer from the Capital Expense Fund to PERS on July 1, 2026. • An additional commitment of $50 million annually for the next 10 years . • Combined with recent employer contribution increases, this represents a significant step in addressing system funding needs. We thank the Senate for taking this action early in the session. The Facts: We Are Not Out of the Woods While we appreciate the Senate’s swift action, MRPEA believes in full transparency regarding the math. Our analysis compares the Senate’s plan against what the actuaries—the financial experts—recommend to ensure your promised retirement benefits are safe forever. • The Goal: The actuary’s funding policy recommends a path that would get PERS to 99% funding by 2047 . • The Senate Plan : Based on PERS projections, the current Senate proposal would only move the system to approximately 68.8% funding by 2047 . While the Senate bill is a positive move, there is a significant gap between 68.8% and the 99% recommendation. PERS members should request that any final legislation address system funding needs based on actuarial recommendations so that we aren't fighting this same battle again in future years. Call to Action: Contact Your Legislators Now It is early in the session, and this bill must still go through the House. We need you to contact your personal Senator and Representative immediately.  The Message: 1. Thank them for addressing PERS funding early in the session—positivity goes a long way. 2. Share the facts : Respectfully remind them that while the $1 billion is a great start, the numbers show it falls short of the actuarial recommendation for true long-term solvency. 3. Urge them to finish the job : Ask them to support a solution that closes the gap closer to the actuary's recommendation to protect the system for all retirees and current employees. Please make these calls or send emails this week . We must keep this issue in front of them. We are stronger together. Sincerely, MRPEA

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

