Telephone Town Halls and Community Outreach Tour Announced

Colorado PERA is embarking on an effort to inform and listen to members, retirees, employers, and taxpayers about reducing PERA’s risk profile while maintaining a sustainable retirement for Colorado’s public employees and strengthening the Colorado economy. Two telephone town hall meetings have been scheduled for members and retirees, followed by 12 community meetings statewide.

This engagement effort follows the regular and rigorous review process of PERA’s actuarial assumptions started last year, when the PERA Board adopted new mortality tables to reflect longer life expectancies, and lowered the expected investment rate of return to better reflect anticipated market conditions. Although PERA remains stable and solvent, able to pay all benefits in perpetuity, these changing economic and demographic conditions have extended the period until PERA reaches full-funded status, increasing the risk facing members, taxpayers, and Colorado.

Additional information:

Telephone Town Hall

To ensure PERA remains resilient and built for future generations of Colorado public employees, the telephone town hall will start the conversation about PERA’s funded status and how demographic and economic changes influence overall risk. Greg Smith, PERA Executive Director, will hold an interactive telephone town hall meeting to talk about:

  • The external conditions influencing PERA’s funded status
  • The community outreach tour
  • Ways to join the conversation

On April 27, retirees (at 2:00 p.m.) and active members (at 7:00 p.m.) will automatically be called and able to participate in the town hall. More information is available here. A recording of both calls will be available following the telephone town halls.

Community Outreach Tour

Beginning in May and into June, PERA will conduct a statewide community outreach tour to engage all stakeholders in conversations about the issues and gather input on options to adapt PERA to a growing Colorado and changing environment. No reservation is required and everyone is invited to attend.

Aurora

June 1 | 6:00 p.m.

Summit Event Center, 411 Sable Boulevard

Boulder

May 31 | 6:00 p.m.

Boulder JCC, 6007 Oreg Avenue

Colorado Springs

May 4 | 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.

Colorado Springs Marriott, 5580 Tech Center Drive

Denver

May 15 | 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.

PPA Event Center, 2105 Decatur Street

Durango

June 7 | 6:00 p.m.

Holiday Inn & Suites, 21636 Highway 160 West

Fort Collins

May 18 | 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.

Lincoln Center, 417 W Magnolia Street

Grand Junction

June 5 | 6:00 p.m.

Clarion Inn, 755 Horizon Drive

Greeley

May 8 | 6:00 p.m.

Island Grove Event Center, 421 N 15th Avenue

Pueblo

May 11 | 6:00 p.m.

Pueblo Convention Center, 320 Central Main Street

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Colorado PERA Drives $6.1 Billion in Economic Output and Helps Sustain 32,800 Jobs

Distributions from Colorado PERA translate to $6.1 billion in economic output and help to sustain more than 32,800 Colorado jobs annually. These figures represent increases over the 2014 data from Pacey Economics. In just two years, the economic impact of PERA retirement payments increased by nearly $1 billion and supported an additional 3,800 jobs in Colorado.

PERA distributions, a sustainable source of reliable, predictable income for not just PERA retirees but for communities across Colorado, add critical value and stimulus to the Colorado economy. That’s according to a new report released by Colorado PERA, “Colorado PERA Economic and Fiscal Impacts.”

With these retirement distributions going to PERA retirees as well as disabled members or survivors upon a member’s death, dollars are pumped back into the economy, whether it is for purchasing groceries, buying clothes or paying for gas.

The report, prepared by economic and business analysis firm Pacey Economics, shows that the $3.83 billion paid in PERA distributions to more than 98,000 Colorado residents has a dramatic benefit to local economies in every corner of the state, from Metro Denver to the Southwest Mountains to the Eastern Plains.

PERA distributions “provide reliable, predictable income allowing for an ‘automatic stabilizing effect’ on state, regional and local economies, especially in economic downturns,” according to the report. Evidence of the importance of this economic impact is especially felt in rural Colorado, where PERA retirement distributions amount to 14.8 and 13.7 percent of area payroll in the Pueblo-Southern Mountain and San Louis Valley regions.

The report notes that PERA provides a significant return on investment, turning employer contributions of $1.32 billion into more than $4.1 billion in retirement payments in 2016. These employer contributions represent 20 percent of the additions to the PERA trust funds, with the majority (63 percent) of source dollars from investment income, and the remaining 17 percent coming from employee contributions.

Households with stable incomes, such as those receiving a regular PERA distribution, spend their money on basic needs and other purchases as well as paying taxes and fees that provide revenue for state and local governments.

That chain of economic activity – of buying groceries from a store, for example, that then pays its employees who in turn spend their income on gas to get to work – is known as the “multiplier effect.”

Colorado’s state and local governments see a total impact of $271 million in revenue from tax payments that result from PERA distributions to retired teachers, snowplow drivers, game wardens and other public workers. These tax payments continue to be directed to paying for our schools, roads, and other community services.

Recipients pay income taxes in addition to taxes on goods and services, such as sales, use and property taxes as well as government fees, licenses and permits. Their spending generates the multiplier effect, which in turn results in another layer of taxes and fees. The report measures fiscal impact, including income and property taxes on that first round of spending as well as other taxes and fees paid on subsequent rounds of spending. That spending generates revenue for state and local government budgets.

The report also finds that fewer than 1 percent of PERA members participate in Social Security, and “therefore, the PERA retirement distribution is designed and funded to provide total retirement moneys consistent with the private sector where retirement is based on a combination of a private plan and Social Security.”

Positively Impacting Colorado’s Economy