News You Should Know: Lawmakers Reintroduce Federal Auto-IRA Bill

Federal Automatic IRA Bill Introduced in the House | TheStreet

Lawmakers in Congress have reintroduced a bill that aims to boost retirement savings for the millions of Americans who don’t have access to a retirement plan at work. The Automatic IRA Act of 2024 would create a system for automatically enrolling workers in individual retirement accounts (IRAs) similar to the auto-enrollment plans that several states, including Colorado, have set up in recent years.

Limiting Retirement Plan Tax Perks May Help Social Security, Experts Say | CNBC

A new research paper from the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College is making a splash for its controversial proposal for shoring up Social Security’s finances. The paper promotes the idea of eliminating tax incentives for defined contribution plans like 401(k)s. That means workers would pay tax on their retirement plan contributions, and that tax revenue could be put toward improving Social Security’s funding. The paper has received pushback from those who argue workers will be less likely to save for retirement without tax incentives.

Why the 1960s Can Help Us Understand Our Confusing Economic Mood | Yahoo! Finance

Despite a growing economy, public sentiment remains stubbornly low, baffling some economists and political experts. In some ways, our current economic mood mirrors the 1960s, a decade marked by a booming economy but also social upheaval and, toward the end of the decade, rising inflation.

Caring for Your Aging Parents: A Seven-Step Guide | Kiplinger

Finding yourself responsible for the care of people who used to care for you can be an overwhelming experience. Here are a few key considerations and tips for tackling them, from finances and logistics to remembering your own needs and capabilities.


News You Should Know is a digest of news from publications around the nation about finance, investing, and retirement.

Q&A With the PERA Board’s New Vice Chair, Taylor McLemore

Gov. Jared Polis appointed Taylor McLemore to the PERA Board of Trustees in 2021, and in January McLemore was elected by his Trustee colleagues to fill the Vice Chair seat vacated by Suzanne Kubec.

We recently sat down with McLemore to talk about his background and his new role on the Board.


Tell us about yourself and the experience you bring to the Board.

I am an entrepreneur, and my career has spanned across a variety of industries and sectors, everything from starting in the investment banking and capital markets world, to founding companies, to helping grow and scale companies, and now I’m a venture capital investor. I’ve also spent time in the nonprofit world, founding and building nonprofits focused on education and economic mobility.

I believe every organization, for-profit business or nonprofit has the opportunity to truly influence their community. I approach the Board’s work from that ecosystem perspective, and I hope that’s something that makes me a productive and contributing Board member. PERA exists to serve its members, but PERA also has a critical relationship with the broader State of Colorado, our Legislature, the partners that we invest in and so on. My varied experience provides me with open-mindedness to be listening and be thoughtful as we balance input from lots of parties to figure out how we achieve the most important thing—a stable PERA that serves its members.

The term “fiduciary” comes up a lot in Board discussions. How do you view that duty with regard to the Board’s work?

Our role as fiduciaries is very clear. It’s articulated in both state and federal law what that means and how we need to prioritize the interests of the organization above all other interests. It’s our duty of loyalty and a duty of care, putting PERA’s priorities first and managing any conflicts of interest. It is important that the Board do the work within the mandate of our charter by the State of Colorado and the laws established by our state Legislature. The Board focuses on governance and policy for PERA as an organization. The Executive Director is responsible to the Board to lead PERA and drive outcomes aligned with PERA’s strategic plan. PERA’s management team leads and runs PERA. It is critical that the Board operate from its clearly defined role. Additionally, we, the Board, utilize a set of highly skilled and intelligent consultants and service providers to serve the Board. It is our responsibility that PERA has a competent and aligned Executive Director, and for the Board consultants that we have the professional and capable firms and consultants supporting all of the functions of the Board.

You’ve been leading the Board’s Ad Hoc Committee that’s searching for PERA’s next Executive Director. How has that experience prepared you for a larger leadership role on the Board?

PERA is a large organization with a fair amount of complexity, so it takes some time to really understand the organization well enough to be able to support from a governance perspective the executive team that’s operating and leading PERA. In addition to serving on the Board for three years, chairing the Ad Hoc Committee for the Executive Director Search has been a great additional layer of experience because our committee had to ask some really specific questions about what skills, competencies, and lived experience PERA’s future leader needs to have. That profile that we have developed to guide the Executive Director search process is a reflection of what we have learned as a Board and the critical areas of focus going into the future. This embodies my approach to leadership on the Board. We have a valuable diversity of experience and knowledge across the Trustees, and we need to operate in a manner that leverages our collective wisdom, channeling it into action and then outcomes.

Do you have any updates on the Executive Director search?

Our search firm has contacted over 400 people in the search process, which is one of the things we really prioritized—casting a broad net. We know there are some candidates already in the public pension space who are probably highly qualified candidates, but we really saw value in seeking out a diversity of candidates, with diversity defined a lot of different ways, including lived experience and professional experience. We received over 200 applications and have narrowed those candidates down to a smaller pool that the Ad Hoc Committee will be interviewing. We’ll then recommend an even smaller subset of candidates to the full Board, which will select and hire the next Executive Director.

Do you have any advice for PERA members interested in running for one of the four open seats on the Board?

I think serving on the PERA Board of Trustees is a really meaningful form of service. I really think of PERA as a critical set of community members in Colorado. There’s nothing more important than people who are teaching our children, the state troopers keeping us safe, the people in the judicial branch that are administering justice, and that’s just a subset of our membership. This state doesn’t run without the people of PERA, and even when they’re retired, we know that PERA members continue to be amazing leaders in their communities. And so if someone is running for election, it’s probably because they’re already a meaningful public servant in how they are pursuing their career, and running to join as a PERA Trustee is a great way to extend that service and impact.

News You Should Know: Medicare Begins Drug Price Negotiations

Medicare Drug Price Negotiations Kick Off with Price Offers on These 10 Drugs | USA Today

The federal government’s long-awaited drug price negotiations are now underway. The government isn’t releasing its initial offers, but it has released the initial list of drugs in question. The final negotiated prices will take effect in 2026.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell Shares Why Fed Hasn’t Yet Cut Interest Rates | CBS News

Many experts expect the Federal Reserve to begin cutting interest rates this year, but Chair Jerome Powell say the Fed isn’t ready to do so just yet. While prices aren’t rising as quickly as they had been, Powell says he wants to see more evidence that inflation is down and staying down.

Alaska Senate Advances Public-Sector Pension Plan to Address Recruitment and Retention Crisis | Anchorage Daily News

Alaska closed its public employee pension plan in 2006, and since then the state has struggled to attract and retain workers in important roles like teachers, firefighters, and police officers. A bill that would create a new pension plan is now making its way through the state legislature. It has passed the Senate and how heads to the House for further deliberation.

Loud Budgeting is In, Quiet Luxury is Out. Meet the TikToker Who Started the Financial Trend | CNN Business

You may have heard the term “quiet luxury,” but younger generations are starting to embrace its opposite—loud budgeting. It started out with a joke on TikTok, but creating a budget and being vocal about it with your friends is the new trend among those looking to get their finances in order.


News You Should Know is a digest of news from publications around the nation about finance, investing, and retirement.

Understanding the Financial Impact of Working After Retirement

Two bills making their way through the Colorado Legislature would expand the number of PERA retirees who can return to work in school districts without facing a reduction in their benefits.

While the bills are intended to address an important staffing shortage in school districts across the state, there are potential financial implications to the trust funds that provide benefits for PERA members.

Why limit how much retirees can work?

Public pension plans like Colorado PERA place limits on working after retirement in order to balance two competing priorities: The staffing needs of employers and the financial health of the retirement plan.

Generally speaking, allowing retirees to return to work, either for the same employer or a different employer covered by the same retirement plan, can encourage workers to retire earlier than they otherwise would have, since they can collect a salary in addition to receiving a monthly retirement benefit. Because plans project their finances based on factors such as workers’ expected retirement age, early retirements add to the plan’s cost due to a longer-than-expected period of benefit payments. Even if those retirees continue to contribute to their plan, like PERA retirees do, the contributions aren’t always enough to make up for the member’s extended retirement.

In most cases, PERA retirees can work for a PERA-affiliated employer for up to 110 days or 720 hours per calendar year without affecting their benefit. School districts and colleges/universities can designate a limited number of workers who are allowed to work up to 140 days or 916 hours per year, and some school districts can hire retirees to fill certain positions for which there is a critical need for qualified workers, and those “critical shortage” hires are not subject to working after retirement limits.

PERA regularly reports on the impact of working after retirement exemptions for rural school districts and boards of cooperative services (BOCES) to the Legislature.

Estimating the financial impact

Calculating how much it would cost to expand working after retirement provisions is difficult because it ultimately depends on how many workers take advantage of the proposed new rules.

As it’s currently written, SB24-099 would add superintendents and principals to the list of qualified positions under “critical shortage” provisions. HB24-1044 would allow larger school districts to hire more retirees under the 140-day/916-hour rules. To estimate the bills’ cost, PERA’s actuaries modeled several scenarios in which different percentages of eligible workers retire early and return to work. The models showed that if eligible employees retired two years early, it could result in millions of dollars in added costs and potentially extend the amount of time it would take PERA to reach full funding.

The PERA Board of Trustees is committed to protecting the integrity of PERA’s trust funds for the benefit of all members. It has taken an “amend” position on the above bills, encouraging lawmakers to include provisions that would offset the potentially negative effects on PERA’s funding.

PERA On The Issues will continue to track these and other PERA-related bills throughout the session and post any updates here.