Maryland Gov.-Elect Pulls Plug on Retirement Savings Panel

board room chair

Maryland Gov.-elect Larry Hogan says he is pulling the plug on a retirement savings task force set up under his predecessor, Gov. O’Malley.

The panel’s purpose was to study and issue findings on how to get middle-class residents to save more for retirement.

Politics may have played a role in Hogan’s decision to shut the panel down.

More from the Baltimore Sun:

What makes Mr. Hogan’s decision notable is that the 14-member task force created by Gov. Martin O’Malley less than one year ago only began what was supposed to be a two-year study this past summer. It has met only three times and has yet to issue any findings. In other words, it was just getting warmed up but will expire in mid-February under terms of the executive order unless renewed by Mr. Hogan, which he says he won’t do.

It’s not hard to guess why. One of the key proposals being explored by the group and its chair, former Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, is requiring businesses to offer a retirement savings plan or, as an alternative, enroll employees in a state-managed savings plan. There has also been discussion of making such a program an “opt out” for employees, meaning that workers would automatically be enrolled in the retirement savings plan through a deduction in their paychecks unless they took steps to remove themselves from participation.

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But some in the business community bristle at the notion that government might mandate a retirement benefit (even if it carries no fiduciary obligation to the employer), and Mr. Hogan, who spoke often during the campaign for governor about the need to lift government mandates, may be especially sensitive to that criticism. Meanwhile, refusing to maintain the task force doesn’t come with much political cost to someone who never signed the executive order creating it in the first place.

For more on the panel and its demise, click here.

Public Retirement Plans For Private-Sector Workers Gain Momentum In States

401k sack filled with one hundred dollar billsThe federal government has been throwing around ideas lately to create a publicly run retirement system that would cover private sector workers who don’t have access to retirement plans through their employers.

But states, including California, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota and a dozen others, are developing and implanting similar ideas, as well. A breakdown of some of these programs from Investopedia:

California is looking to enact a plan that is still awaiting approval from the Internal Revenue Service. The law allows for the introduction of a retirement savings plan for the employees of small non-profit organizations. The plan would offer several investment options to its participants and allows for contributions to be made by employees or employers. (For more, see: Retirement Planning: An Introduction.)

Also in 2012, California’s governor Jerry Brown signed into law the California Secure Choice Retirement Savings Trust Act. The law allows for the launching of individual retirement accounts for employees who work at businesses that do not offer them a plan. The plan calls for employees to be automatically enrolled in the plan through a payroll deduction of 3%, while also giving them the option to opt out of the plan.

In Indiana:

State Senator Greg Walker introduced a bill that would establish a retirement savings plan for state workers who don’t have access to one. The bill is currently pending in the state’s Senate Tax and Fiscal Committee. Indiana Retirement Savings Board would run the program, and the plan, which includes a tax credit of up to $250 for participants, would allow both employees and employers to take part in the plan.

And in Minnesota:

The Minnesota Secure Choice Retirement Savings Plan Establishment was introduced by State Senator Sandra Pappas earlier this year. The bill requires the state to develop a retirement-savings program for state private-sector employees who work at companies that don’t offer them. Approved by two Senate committees, the bill is now awaiting action in a third one.

The Investopedia article also covers similar legislation in Illinois and West Virginia.

 

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