CS for SB 246                                    First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       2014246e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to local government pension reform;
    3         amending s. 175.021, F.S.; revising the legislative
    4         declaration to require that all firefighter pension
    5         plans meet the requirements of ch. 175, F.S., in order
    6         to receive insurance premium tax revenues; amending s.
    7         175.032, F.S.; revising definitions to conform to
    8         changes made by the act and providing new definitions;
    9         amending s. 175.071, F.S.; conforming a cross
   10         reference; amending s. 175.091, F.S.; revising the
   11         method of creating and maintaining a firefighters’
   12         pension trust fund; amending s. 175.162, F.S.;
   13         deleting a provision basing the availability of
   14         additional benefits in a firefighter pension plan upon
   15         state funding; revising the calculation of monthly
   16         retirement income for a full-time firefighter;
   17         providing that certain firefighter pension plans must
   18         maintain a certain minimum percentage of average final
   19         compensation by a specified date; amending s. 175.351,
   20         F.S., relating to municipalities and special fire
   21         control districts that have their own pension plans
   22         and want to participate in the distribution of a tax
   23         fund; redesignating the term “pension plan” as
   24         “retirement plan”; revising criteria governing the use
   25         of revenues from the premium tax; authorizing a
   26         retirement plan to reduce certain excess benefits if
   27         the plan continues to meet certain minimum benefits
   28         and standards; providing that the use of premium tax
   29         revenues may deviate from the requirements of ch. 175,
   30         F.S., under certain circumstances; requiring plan
   31         sponsors to have a defined contribution plan in place
   32         by a certain date; authorizing a municipality to
   33         implement certain changes to a local law plan which
   34         are contrary to ch. 175, F.S., for a limited time;
   35         amending s. 185.01, F.S.; revising the legislative
   36         declaration to require that all police officer pension
   37         plans meet the requirements of ch. 185, F.S., in order
   38         to receive insurance premium tax revenues; amending s.
   39         185.02, F.S.; revising definitions to conform to
   40         changes made by the act and adding new definitions;
   41         revising applicability of the limitation on the amount
   42         of overtime payments that may be used for retirement
   43         benefit calculations; amending s. 185.06, F.S.;
   44         conforming a cross-reference; amending s. 185.07,
   45         F.S.; revising the method of creating and maintaining
   46         a police officers’ retirement trust fund; amending s.
   47         185.16, F.S.; deleting a provision basing the
   48         availability of additional benefits in a police
   49         officer pension plan upon state funding; revising the
   50         calculation of monthly retirement income for a police
   51         officer; providing that certain police officer pension
   52         plans must maintain a certain minimum percentage of
   53         average final compensation after a specified date;
   54         amending s. 185.35, F.S., relating to municipalities
   55         that have their own pension plans for police officers
   56         and want to participate in the distribution of a tax
   57         fund; conforming a cross-reference; redesignating the
   58         term “pension plan” as “retirement plan”; revising
   59         criteria governing the use of revenues from the
   60         premium tax; authorizing a plan to reduce certain
   61         excess benefits if the plan continues to meet certain
   62         minimum benefits and minimum standards; providing that
   63         the use of premium tax revenues may deviate from the
   64         requirements of ch. 185, F.S., under specified
   65         circumstances; requiring plan sponsors to have a
   66         defined contribution plan in place by a certain date;
   67         authorizing a municipality to implement certain
   68         changes to a local law plan which are contrary to ch.
   69         185, F.S., for a limited time; providing a declaration
   70         of important state interest; providing an effective
   71         date.
   72          
   73  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   74  
   75         Section 1. Subsection (2) of section 175.021, Florida
   76  Statutes, is amended to read:
   77         175.021 Legislative declaration.—
   78         (2) This chapter hereby establishes, for all municipal and
   79  special district pension plans existing now or hereafter under
   80  this chapter, including chapter plans and local law plans,
   81  minimum benefits and minimum standards for the operation and
   82  funding of such plans, hereinafter referred to as firefighters’
   83  pension trust funds, which must be met as a condition precedent
   84  to the plan or plan sponsor receiving a distribution of
   85  insurance premium tax revenues under s. 175.121. The minimum
   86  benefits and minimum standards for each plan as set forth in
   87  this chapter may not be diminished by local charter, ordinance,
   88  or resolution or by special act of the Legislature and may not,
   89  nor may the minimum benefits or minimum standards be reduced or
   90  offset by any other local, state, or federal law that includes
   91  may include firefighters in its operation, except as provided
   92  under s. 112.65.
   93         Section 2. Section 175.032, Florida Statutes, is amended to
   94  read:
   95         175.032 Definitions.—For any municipality, special fire
   96  control district, chapter plan, local law municipality, local
   97  law special fire control district, or local law plan under this
   98  chapter, the term following words and phrases have the following
   99  meanings:
  100         (1) “Additional premium tax revenues” means revenues
  101  received by a municipality or special fire control district
  102  pursuant to s. 175.121 which exceed base premium tax revenues.
  103         (2)(1)(a) “Average final compensation” for:
  104         (a) A full-time firefighter means one-twelfth of the
  105  average annual compensation of the 5 best years of the last 10
  106  years of creditable service before prior to retirement,
  107  termination, or death, or the career average as a full-time
  108  firefighter since July 1, 1953, whichever is greater. A year is
  109  shall be 12 consecutive months or such other consecutive period
  110  of time as is used and consistently applied.
  111         (b) “Average final compensation” for A volunteer
  112  firefighter means the average salary of the 5 best years of the
  113  last 10 best contributing years before prior to change in status
  114  to a permanent full-time firefighter or retirement as a
  115  volunteer firefighter or the career average of a volunteer
  116  firefighter, since July 1, 1953, whichever is greater.
  117         (3) “Base premium tax revenues” means:
  118         (a) For a local law plan in effect on October 1, 1998, the
  119  revenues received by a municipality or special fire control
  120  district pursuant to s. 175.121 for calendar year 1997.
  121         (b) For a local law plan created between October 1, 1998,
  122  and March 1, 2014, inclusive, the revenues received by a
  123  municipality or special fire control district pursuant to s.
  124  175.121 based upon the tax collections during the second
  125  calendar year of participation.
  126         (4)(2) “Chapter plan” means a separate defined benefit
  127  pension plan for firefighters which incorporates by reference
  128  the provisions of this chapter and has been adopted by the
  129  governing body of a municipality or special district. Except as
  130  may be specifically authorized in this chapter, the provisions
  131  of a chapter plan may not differ from the plan provisions set
  132  forth in ss. 175.021-175.341 and ss. 175.361-175.401. Actuarial
  133  valuations of chapter plans shall be conducted by the division
  134  as provided by s. 175.261(1).
  135         (5)(3) “Compensation” or “salary” means, for
  136  noncollectively bargained service earned before July 1, 2011, or
  137  for service earned under collective bargaining agreements in
  138  place before July 1, 2011, the fixed monthly remuneration paid a
  139  firefighter. If remuneration is based on actual services
  140  rendered, as in the case of a volunteer firefighter, the term
  141  means the total cash remuneration received yearly for such
  142  services, prorated on a monthly basis. For noncollectively
  143  bargained service earned on or after July 1, 2011, or for
  144  service earned under collective bargaining agreements entered
  145  into on or after July 1, 2011, the term has the same meaning
  146  except that when calculating retirement benefits, up to 300
  147  hours per year in overtime compensation may be included as
  148  specified in the plan or collective bargaining agreement, but
  149  payments for accrued unused sick or annual leave may not be
  150  included.
  151         (a) Any retirement trust fund or plan that meets the
  152  requirements of this chapter does not, solely by virtue of this
  153  subsection, reduce or diminish the monthly retirement income
  154  otherwise payable to each firefighter covered by the retirement
  155  trust fund or plan.
  156         (b) The member’s compensation or salary contributed as
  157  employee-elective salary reductions or deferrals to any salary
  158  reduction, deferred compensation, or tax-sheltered annuity
  159  program authorized under the Internal Revenue Code shall be
  160  deemed to be the compensation or salary the member would receive
  161  if he or she were not participating in such program and shall be
  162  treated as compensation for retirement purposes under this
  163  chapter.
  164         (c) For any person who first becomes a member in any plan
  165  year beginning on or after January 1, 1996, compensation for
  166  that plan year may not include any amounts in excess of the
  167  Internal Revenue Code s. 401(a)(17) limitation, as amended by
  168  the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, which limitation
  169  of $150,000 shall be adjusted as required by federal law for
  170  qualified government plans and shall be further adjusted for
  171  changes in the cost of living in the manner provided by Internal
  172  Revenue Code s. 401(a)(17)(B). For any person who first became a
  173  member before the first plan year beginning on or after January
  174  1, 1996, the limitation on compensation may not be less than the
  175  maximum compensation amount that was allowed to be taken into
  176  account under the plan in effect on July 1, 1993, which
  177  limitation shall be adjusted for changes in the cost of living
  178  since 1989 in the manner provided by Internal Revenue Code s.
  179  401(a)(17)(1991).
  180         (6)(4) “Creditable service” or “credited service” means the
  181  aggregate number of years of service, and fractional parts of
  182  years of service, of any firefighter, omitting intervening years
  183  and fractional parts of years when such firefighter may not have
  184  been employed by the municipality or special fire control
  185  district, subject to the following conditions:
  186         (a) A No firefighter may not will receive credit for years
  187  or fractional parts of years of service if he or she has
  188  withdrawn his or her contributions to the fund for those years
  189  or fractional parts of years of service, unless the firefighter
  190  repays into the fund the amount he or she has withdrawn, plus
  191  interest determined by the board. The member shall have at least
  192  90 days after his or her reemployment to make repayment.
  193         (b) A firefighter may voluntarily leave his or her
  194  contributions in the fund for a period of 5 years after leaving
  195  the employ of the fire department, pending the possibility of
  196  being rehired by the same department, without losing credit for
  197  the time he or she has participated actively as a firefighter.
  198  If the firefighter is not reemployed as a firefighter, with the
  199  same department, within 5 years, his or her contributions shall
  200  be returned without interest.
  201         (c) Credited service under this chapter shall be provided
  202  only for service as a firefighter, as defined in subsection (8),
  203  or for military service and does not include credit for any
  204  other type of service. A municipality may, by local ordinance,
  205  or a special fire control district may, by resolution, may
  206  provide for the purchase of credit for military service prior to
  207  employment as well as for prior service as a firefighter for
  208  some other employer as long as a firefighter is not entitled to
  209  receive a benefit for such prior service as a firefighter. For
  210  purposes of determining credit for prior service as a
  211  firefighter, in addition to service as a firefighter in this
  212  state, credit may be given for federal, other state, or county
  213  service if the prior service is recognized by the Division of
  214  State Fire Marshal as provided in under chapter 633, or the
  215  firefighter provides proof to the board of trustees that his or
  216  her service is equivalent to the service required to meet the
  217  definition of a firefighter under subsection (11) (8).
  218         (d) In determining the creditable service of any
  219  firefighter, credit for up to 5 years of the time spent in the
  220  military service of the Armed Forces of the United States shall
  221  be added to the years of actual service if:
  222         1. The firefighter is in the active employ of an employer
  223  immediately prior to such service and leaves a position, other
  224  than a temporary position, for the purpose of voluntary or
  225  involuntary service in the Armed Forces of the United States.
  226         2. The firefighter is entitled to reemployment under the
  227  provisions of the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment
  228  Rights Act.
  229         3. The firefighter returns to his or her employment as a
  230  firefighter of the municipality or special fire control district
  231  within 1 year from the date of release from such active service.
  232         (7)(5) “Deferred Retirement Option Plan” or “DROP” means a
  233  local law plan retirement option in which a firefighter may
  234  elect to participate. A firefighter may retire for all purposes
  235  of the plan and defer receipt of retirement benefits into a DROP
  236  account while continuing employment with his or her employer.
  237  However, a firefighter who enters the DROP and who is otherwise
  238  eligible to participate may shall not thereby be precluded from
  239  participation or continued participation participating, or
  240  continuing to participate, in a supplemental plan in existence
  241  on, or created after, March 12, 1999 the effective date of this
  242  act.
  243         (8) “Defined contribution plan” means the component of a
  244  local law plan, as provided in s. 175.351(1), to which deposits,
  245  if any, are made to provide benefits for firefighters, or for
  246  firefighters and police officers if both are included. Such
  247  component is an element of a local law plan and exists in
  248  conjunction with the defined benefit component that meets the
  249  minimum benefits and minimum standards of this chapter. The
  250  retirement benefits, if any, of the defined contribution plan
  251  shall be provided through individual member accounts in
  252  accordance with the applicable provisions of the Internal
  253  Revenue Code and related regulations and are limited to the
  254  contributions, if any, made into each member’s account and the
  255  actual accumulated earnings, net of expenses, earned on the
  256  member’s account.
  257         (9)(6) “Division” means the Division of Retirement of the
  258  Department of Management Services.
  259         (10)(7) “Enrolled actuary” means an actuary who is enrolled
  260  under Subtitle C of Title III of the Employee Retirement Income
  261  Security Act of 1974 and who is a member of the Society of
  262  Actuaries or the American Academy of Actuaries.
  263         (11)(8)(a) “Firefighter” means a person employed solely by
  264  a constituted fire department of any municipality or special
  265  fire control district who is certified as a firefighter as a
  266  condition of employment in accordance with s. 633.408 and whose
  267  duty it is to extinguish fires, to protect life, or to protect
  268  property. The term includes all certified, supervisory, and
  269  command personnel whose duties include, in whole or in part, the
  270  supervision, training, guidance, and management responsibilities
  271  of full-time firefighters, part-time firefighters, or auxiliary
  272  firefighters but does not include part-time firefighters or
  273  auxiliary firefighters. However, for purposes of this chapter
  274  only, the term also includes public safety officers who are
  275  responsible for performing both police and fire services, who
  276  are certified as police officers or firefighters, and who are
  277  certified by their employers to the Chief Financial Officer as
  278  participating in this chapter before October 1, 1979. Effective
  279  October 1, 1979, public safety officers who have not been
  280  certified as participating in this chapter are considered police
  281  officers for retirement purposes and are eligible to participate
  282  in chapter 185. Any plan may provide that the fire chief has an
  283  option to participate, or not, in that plan.
  284         (b) “Volunteer firefighter” means any person whose name is
  285  carried on the active membership roll of a constituted volunteer
  286  fire department or a combination of a paid and volunteer fire
  287  department of any municipality or special fire control district
  288  and whose duty it is to extinguish fires, to protect life, and
  289  to protect property. Compensation for services rendered by a
  290  volunteer firefighter does shall not disqualify him or her as a
  291  volunteer. A person may shall not be disqualified as a volunteer
  292  firefighter solely because he or she has other gainful
  293  employment. Any person who volunteers assistance at a fire but
  294  is not an active member of a department described herein is not
  295  a volunteer firefighter within the meaning of this paragraph.
  296         (12)(9) “Firefighters’ Pension Trust Fund” means a trust
  297  fund, by whatever name known, as provided under s. 175.041, for
  298  the purpose of assisting municipalities and special fire control
  299  districts in establishing and maintaining a retirement plan for
  300  firefighters.
  301         (13)(10) “Local law municipality” is any municipality in
  302  which there exists a local law plan exists.
  303         (14)(11) “Local law plan” means a retirement defined
  304  benefit pension plan, that includes both a defined benefit plan
  305  component and a defined contribution plan component, for
  306  firefighters, or for firefighters and or police officers if both
  307  are where included, as described in s. 175.351, established by
  308  municipal ordinance, special district resolution, or special act
  309  of the Legislature, which enactment sets forth all plan
  310  provisions. Local law plan provisions may vary from the
  311  provisions of this chapter if the, provided that required
  312  minimum benefits and minimum standards of this chapter are met.
  313  However, any such variance must shall provide a greater benefit
  314  for firefighters. Actuarial valuations of local law plans shall
  315  be conducted by an enrolled actuary as provided in s.
  316  175.261(2).
  317         (15)(12) “Local law special fire control district” means is
  318  any special fire control district in which there exists a local
  319  law plan exists.
  320         (16) “Minimum benefits” means the benefits set forth in ss.
  321  175.021-175.341 and ss. 175.361-175.401.
  322         (17) “Minimum standards” means the standards set forth in
  323  ss. 175.021-175.401.
  324         (18)(13) “Property insurance” means property insurance as
  325  defined in s. 624.604 and covers real and personal property
  326  within the corporate limits of a any municipality, or within the
  327  boundaries of a any special fire control district, within the
  328  state. The term “multiple peril” means a combination or package
  329  policy that includes both property and casualty coverage for a
  330  single premium.
  331         (19)(14) “Retiree” or “retired firefighter” means a
  332  firefighter who has entered retirement status. For the purposes
  333  of a plan that includes a Deferred Retirement Option Plan
  334  (DROP), a firefighter who enters the DROP is shall be considered
  335  a retiree for all purposes of the plan. However, a firefighter
  336  who enters the DROP and who is otherwise eligible to participate
  337  may shall not thereby be precluded from participation or
  338  continued participation participating, or continuing to
  339  participate, in a supplemental plan in existence on, or created
  340  after, March 12, 1999 the effective date of this act.
  341         (20)(15) “Retirement” means a firefighter’s separation from
  342  municipal city or fire district employment as a firefighter with
  343  immediate eligibility for receipt of benefits under the plan.
  344  For purposes of a plan that includes a Deferred Retirement
  345  Option Plan (DROP), “retirement” means the date a firefighter
  346  enters the DROP.
  347         (21) “Special act plan” means a plan subject to the
  348  provisions of this chapter which was created by an act of the
  349  Legislature and continues to require an act of the Legislature
  350  to alter plan benefits.
  351         (22) “Special benefits” means benefits provided in a
  352  defined contribution plan for firefighters.
  353         (23)(16) “Special fire control district” means a special
  354  district, as defined in s. 189.403(1), established for the
  355  purposes of extinguishing fires, protecting life, and protecting
  356  property within the incorporated or unincorporated portions of a
  357  any county or combination of counties, or within any combination
  358  of incorporated and unincorporated portions of a any county or
  359  combination of counties. The term does not include any dependent
  360  or independent special district, as those terms are defined in
  361  s. 189.403, whose s. 189.403(2) and (3), respectively, the
  362  employees of which are members of the Florida Retirement System
  363  pursuant to s. 121.051(1) or (2).
  364         (24)(17) “Supplemental plan” means a plan to which deposits
  365  are made to provide special extra benefits for firefighters, or
  366  for firefighters and police officers if both are where included
  367  under this chapter. Such a plan is an element of a local law
  368  plan and exists in conjunction with a defined benefit component
  369  plan that meets the minimum benefits and minimum standards of
  370  this chapter. Any supplemental plan in existence on March 1,
  371  2014, shall be deemed to be a defined contribution plan in
  372  compliance with s. 175.351(6).
  373         (25)(18) “Supplemental plan municipality” means a any local
  374  law municipality in which any there existed a supplemental plan
  375  existed, of any type or nature, as of December 1, 2000.
  376         Section 3. Subsection (7) of section 175.071, Florida
  377  Statutes, is amended to read:
  378         175.071 General powers and duties of board of trustees.—For
  379  any municipality, special fire control district, chapter plan,
  380  local law municipality, local law special fire control district,
  381  or local law plan under this chapter:
  382         (7) To assist the board in meeting its responsibilities
  383  under this chapter, the board, if it so elects, may:
  384         (a) Employ independent legal counsel at the pension fund’s
  385  expense.
  386         (b) Employ an independent enrolled actuary, as defined in
  387  s. 175.032(7), at the pension fund’s expense.
  388         (c) Employ such independent professional, technical, or
  389  other advisers as it deems necessary at the pension fund’s
  390  expense.
  391  
  392  If the board chooses to use the municipality’s or special
  393  district’s legal counsel or actuary, or chooses to use any of
  394  the municipality’s or special district’s other professional,
  395  technical, or other advisers, it must do so only under terms and
  396  conditions acceptable to the board.
  397         Section 4. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
  398  175.091, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  399         175.091 Creation and maintenance of fund.—For any
  400  municipality, special fire control district, chapter plan, local
  401  law municipality, local law special fire control district, or
  402  local law plan under this chapter:
  403         (1) The firefighters’ pension trust fund in each
  404  municipality and in each special fire control district shall be
  405  created and maintained in the following manner:
  406         (d) By mandatory payment by the municipality or special
  407  fire control district of a sum equal to the normal cost of and
  408  the amount required to fund any actuarial deficiency shown by an
  409  actuarial valuation conducted under as provided in part VII of
  410  chapter 112 after taking into account the amounts described in
  411  paragraphs (b), (c), (e), (f), and (g) and the tax proceeds
  412  described in paragraph (a) which are used to fund defined
  413  benefit plan benefits.
  414  
  415  Nothing in this section shall be construed to require adjustment
  416  of member contribution rates in effect on the date this act
  417  becomes a law, including rates that exceed 5 percent of salary,
  418  provided that such rates are at least one-half of 1 percent of
  419  salary.
  420         Section 5. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
  421  175.162, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  422         175.162 Requirements for retirement.—For any municipality,
  423  special fire control district, chapter plan, local law
  424  municipality, local law special fire control district, or local
  425  law plan under this chapter, any firefighter who completes 10 or
  426  more years of creditable service as a firefighter and attains
  427  age 55, or completes 25 years of creditable service as a
  428  firefighter and attains age 52, and who for such minimum period
  429  has been a member of the firefighters’ pension trust fund
  430  operating under a chapter plan or local law plan, is eligible
  431  for normal retirement benefits. Normal retirement under the plan
  432  is retirement from the service of the municipality or special
  433  fire control district on or after the normal retirement date. In
  434  such event, payment of retirement income will be governed by the
  435  following provisions of this section:
  436         (2)(a)1. The amount of monthly retirement income payable to
  437  a full-time firefighter who retires on or after his or her
  438  normal retirement date shall be an amount equal to the number of
  439  his or her years of credited service multiplied by 2.75 2
  440  percent of his or her average final compensation as a full-time
  441  firefighter. However, if current state contributions pursuant to
  442  this chapter are not adequate to fund the additional benefits to
  443  meet the minimum requirements in this chapter, only such
  444  incremental increases shall be required as state moneys are
  445  adequate to provide. Such increments shall be provided as state
  446  moneys become available.
  447         2. Effective July 1, 2014, a plan that is in compliance
  448  with this chapter except that the plan provides a benefit that
  449  is less than 2.75 percent of the average final compensation of a
  450  full-time firefighter for all years of credited service, as
  451  provided in subparagraph 1., or provides an effective benefit
  452  that is below 2.75 percent as a result of a maximum benefit
  453  limitation, must maintain, at a minimum, the percentage amount
  454  or maximum benefit limitation in effect on July 1, 2014, and is
  455  not required to increase the benefit to 2.75 percent of the
  456  average final compensation of a full-time firefighter for all
  457  years of credited service.
  458         3. Effective July 1, 2014, a plan that is in compliance
  459  with this chapter except that the plan provides a benefit that
  460  is less than 2.75 percent of the average final compensation of a
  461  full-time firefighter for all years of credited service, as
  462  provided in subparagraph 1., or provides an effective benefit
  463  that is below 2.75 percent as a result of a maximum benefit
  464  limitation, and which changes the percentage amount or maximum
  465  benefit limitation to 2.75 percent, or greater, of the average
  466  final compensation of a full-time firefighter for all years of
  467  credited service, as provided in subparagraph 1., may not
  468  thereafter decrease the percentage amount or maximum benefit
  469  limitation to less than 2.75 percent of the average final
  470  compensation of a full-time firefighter for all years of
  471  credited service, as provided in subparagraph 1.
  472         Section 6. Section 175.351, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  473  read:
  474         175.351 Municipalities and special fire control districts
  475  that have having their own retirement pension plans for
  476  firefighters.—For any municipality, special fire control
  477  district, local law municipality, local law special fire control
  478  district, or local law plan under this chapter, In order for a
  479  municipality or municipalities and special fire control district
  480  that has its districts with their own retirement plan pension
  481  plans for firefighters, or for firefighters and police officers
  482  if both are included, to participate in the distribution of the
  483  tax fund established under pursuant to s. 175.101, a local law
  484  plan plans must meet the minimum benefits and minimum standards
  485  set forth in this chapter, except as provided in the mutual
  486  consent provisions in paragraph (1)(g) with respect to the
  487  minimum benefits not met as of October 1, 2012.
  488         (1) If a municipality has a retirement pension plan for
  489  firefighters, or a pension plan for firefighters and police
  490  officers if both are included, which in the opinion of the
  491  division meets the minimum benefits and minimum standards set
  492  forth in this chapter, the board of trustees of the pension plan
  493  must, as approved by a majority of firefighters of the
  494  municipality, may:
  495         (a) place the income from the premium tax in s. 175.101 in
  496  such pension plan for the sole and exclusive use of its
  497  firefighters, or for firefighters and police officers if both
  498  are included, where it shall become an integral part of that
  499  pension plan and shall be used to fund benefits as provided
  500  herein. Effective October 1, 2014, for noncollectively bargained
  501  service or upon entering into a collective bargaining agreement
  502  on or after July 1, 2014:
  503         (a) The base premium tax revenues must be used to fund
  504  minimum benefits or other retirement benefits in excess of the
  505  minimum benefits as determined by the municipality or special
  506  fire control district.
  507         (b) Of the additional premium tax revenues received which
  508  are in excess of the amount received for the 2012 calendar year,
  509  50 percent must be used to fund minimum benefits or other
  510  retirement benefits in excess of the minimum benefits as
  511  determined by the municipality or special fire control district,
  512  and 50 percent must be placed in a defined contribution plan to
  513  fund special benefits.
  514         (c) Additional premium tax revenues not described in
  515  paragraph (b) must be used to fund benefits that are not
  516  included in the minimum benefits. If the additional premium tax
  517  revenues subject to this paragraph exceed the full annual cost
  518  of benefits provided through the plan which are in excess of the
  519  minimum benefits, any amount in excess of the full annual cost
  520  must be used as provided in paragraph (b).
  521         (d) Of any accumulations of additional premium tax revenues
  522  which have not been allocated to fund benefits in excess of the
  523  minimum benefits, 50 percent of the amount of the accumulations
  524  must be used to fund special benefits, and 50 percent must be
  525  applied to fund any unfunded actuarial liabilities of the plan;
  526  provided that any amount of accumulations in excess of the
  527  amount required to fund the unfunded actuarial liabilities must
  528  be used to fund special benefits to pay extra benefits to the
  529  firefighters included in that pension plan; or
  530         (b) Place the income from the premium tax in s. 175.101 in
  531  a separate supplemental plan to pay extra benefits to
  532  firefighters, or to firefighters and police officers if
  533  included, participating in such separate supplemental plan.
  534         (e) For a plan created after March 1, 2014, 50 percent of
  535  the insurance premium tax revenues must be used to fund defined
  536  benefit plan component benefits, with the remainder used to fund
  537  defined contribution plan component benefits.
  538         (f) If a plan offers benefits in excess of the minimum
  539  benefits, such benefits, excluding supplemental plan benefits in
  540  effect as of September 30, 2013, may be reduced if the plan
  541  continues to meet the minimum benefits and the minimum standards
  542  set forth in this chapter. The amount of insurance premium tax
  543  revenues previously used to fund benefits in excess of minimum
  544  benefits, excluding the amount of any additional premium tax
  545  revenues distributed to a supplemental plan for calendar year
  546  2012, before the reduction must be used as provided in paragraph
  547  (b). However, benefits in excess of the minimum benefits may not
  548  be reduced if a plan does not meet the minimum percentage amount
  549  of 2.75 percent, or greater, of the average final compensation
  550  of a full-time firefighter, as provided in s. 175.162(2)(a)1.,
  551  or provides an effective benefit that is below 2.75 percent as a
  552  result of a maximum benefit limitation, as described in s.
  553  175.162(2)(a)2.
  554         (g) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a)-(f), the use of premium
  555  tax revenues, including any accumulations of additional premium
  556  tax revenues which have not been allocated to fund benefits in
  557  excess of the minimum benefits, may deviate from the provisions
  558  of this subsection by mutual consent of the members’ collective
  559  bargaining representative or, if none, by majority consent of
  560  the firefighter members of the fund, and by consent of the
  561  municipality or special fire control district, provided that the
  562  plan continues to meet the minimum benefits and minimum
  563  standards of this chapter; however, a plan that operates
  564  pursuant to this paragraph which does not meet the minimum
  565  benefits as of October 1, 2012, may continue to provide the
  566  benefits that do not meet the minimum benefits at the same level
  567  as was provided as of October 1, 2012, and all other benefit
  568  levels must continue to meet the minimum benefits. Such mutually
  569  agreed deviation shall continue until modified or revoked by
  570  subsequent mutual consent of the members’ collective bargaining
  571  representative or, if none, by a majority of the firefighter
  572  members of the fund, and the municipality or special fire
  573  control district. An existing arrangement for the use of premium
  574  tax revenues contained within a special act plan or a plan
  575  within a supplemental plan municipality is considered, as of
  576  July 1, 2014, to be a deviation for which mutual consent has
  577  been granted.
  578         (2) The premium tax provided by this chapter shall in all
  579  cases be used in its entirety to provide retirement extra
  580  benefits to firefighters, or to firefighters and police officers
  581  if both are included. However, local law plans in effect on
  582  October 1, 1998, must comply with the minimum benefit provisions
  583  of this chapter only to the extent that additional premium tax
  584  revenues become available to incrementally fund the cost of such
  585  compliance as provided in s. 175.162(2)(a). If a plan is in
  586  compliance with such minimum benefit provisions, as subsequent
  587  additional premium tax revenues become available, they must be
  588  used to provide extra benefits. Local law plans created by
  589  special act before May 27, 1939, are deemed to comply with this
  590  chapter. For the purpose of this chapter, the term:
  591         (a) “Additional premium tax revenues” means revenues
  592  received by a municipality or special fire control district
  593  pursuant to s. 175.121 which exceed that amount received for
  594  calendar year 1997.
  595         (b) “Extra benefits” means benefits in addition to or
  596  greater than those provided to general employees of the
  597  municipality and in addition to those in existence for
  598  firefighters on March 12, 1999.
  599         (3) A retirement plan or amendment to a retirement plan may
  600  not be proposed for adoption unless the proposed plan or
  601  amendment contains an actuarial estimate of the costs involved.
  602  Such proposed plan or proposed plan change may not be adopted
  603  without the approval of the municipality, special fire control
  604  district, or, where required permitted, the Legislature. Copies
  605  of the proposed plan or proposed plan change and the actuarial
  606  impact statement of the proposed plan or proposed plan change
  607  shall be furnished to the division before the last public
  608  hearing on the proposal is held thereon. Such statement must
  609  also indicate whether the proposed plan or proposed plan change
  610  is in compliance with s. 14, Art. X of the State Constitution
  611  and those provisions of part VII of chapter 112 which are not
  612  expressly provided in this chapter. Notwithstanding any other
  613  provision, only those local law plans created by special act of
  614  legislation before May 27, 1939, are deemed to meet the minimum
  615  benefits and minimum standards only in this chapter.
  616         (4) Notwithstanding any other provision, with respect to
  617  any supplemental plan municipality:
  618         (a) A local law plan and a supplemental plan may continue
  619  to use their definition of compensation or salary in existence
  620  on March 12, 1999.
  621         (b) Section 175.061(1)(b) does not apply, and a local law
  622  plan and a supplemental plan shall continue to be administered
  623  by a board or boards of trustees numbered, constituted, and
  624  selected as the board or boards were numbered, constituted, and
  625  selected on December 1, 2000.
  626         (c) The election set forth in paragraph (1)(b) is deemed to
  627  have been made.
  628         (5) The retirement plan setting forth the benefits and the
  629  trust agreement, if any, covering the duties and
  630  responsibilities of the trustees and the regulations of the
  631  investment of funds must be in writing, and copies made
  632  available to the participants and to the general public.
  633         (6) In addition to the defined benefit component of the
  634  local law plan, each plan sponsor must have a defined
  635  contribution plan component within the local law plan by October
  636  1, 2014, for noncollectively bargained service, upon entering
  637  into a collective bargaining agreement on or after July 1, 2014,
  638  or upon the creation date of a new participating plan. Depending
  639  upon the application of subsection (1), a defined contribution
  640  component may or may not receive any funding.
  641         (7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, a
  642  municipality or special fire control district that has
  643  implemented or proposed changes to a local law plan based on the
  644  municipality’s or district’s reliance on an interpretation of
  645  this chapter by the Department of Management Services on or
  646  after August 14, 2012, and before March 4, 2014, may continue
  647  the implemented changes or continue to implement proposed
  648  changes. Such reliance must be evidenced by a written collective
  649  bargaining proposal or agreement, or formal correspondence
  650  between the municipality or district and the Department of
  651  Management Services which describes the specific changes to the
  652  local law plan, with the initial proposal, agreement, or
  653  correspondence from the municipality or district dated before
  654  March 4, 2014. Changes to the local law plan which are otherwise
  655  contrary to the minimum benefits and minimum standards in this
  656  chapter may continue in effect until the earlier of October 1,
  657  2017, or the effective date of a collective bargaining agreement
  658  that is contrary to the changes to the local law plan.
  659         Section 7. Subsection (2) of section 185.01, Florida
  660  Statutes, is amended to read:
  661         185.01 Legislative declaration.—
  662         (2) This chapter hereby establishes, for all municipal
  663  pension plans now or hereinafter provided for under this
  664  chapter, including chapter plans and local law plans, minimum
  665  benefits and minimum standards for the operation and funding of
  666  such plans, hereinafter referred to as municipal police
  667  officers’ retirement trust funds, which must be met as
  668  conditions precedent to the plans or plan sponsors receiving a
  669  distribution of insurance premium tax revenues under s. 185.10.
  670  The minimum benefits and minimum standards for each plan as set
  671  forth in this chapter may not be diminished by local ordinance
  672  or by special act of the Legislature and may not, nor may the
  673  minimum benefits or minimum standards be reduced or offset by
  674  any other local, state, or federal plan that includes may
  675  include police officers in its operation, except as provided
  676  under s. 112.65.
  677         Section 8. Section 185.02, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  678  read:
  679         185.02 Definitions.—For any municipality, chapter plan,
  680  local law municipality, or local law plan under this chapter,
  681  the term following words and phrases as used in this chapter
  682  shall have the following meanings, unless a different meaning is
  683  plainly required by the context:
  684         (1) “Additional premium tax revenues” means revenues
  685  received by a municipality pursuant to s. 185.10 which exceed
  686  base premium tax revenues.
  687         (2)(1) “Average final compensation” means one-twelfth of
  688  the average annual compensation of the 5 best years of the last
  689  10 years of creditable service prior to retirement, termination,
  690  or death.
  691         (3) “Base premium tax revenues” means:
  692         (a) For a local law plan in effect on October 1, 1998, the
  693  revenues received by a municipality pursuant to s. 185.10 for
  694  the calendar year 1997.
  695         (b) For a local law plan created between October 1, 1998,
  696  and March 1, 2014, inclusive, the revenues received by a
  697  municipality pursuant to s. 185.10 based upon the tax
  698  collections during the second calendar year of participation.
  699         (4)(2) “Casualty insurance” means automobile public
  700  liability and property damage insurance to be applied at the
  701  place of residence of the owner, or if the subject is a
  702  commercial vehicle, to be applied at the place of business of
  703  the owner; automobile collision insurance; fidelity bonds;
  704  burglary and theft insurance; and plate glass insurance. The
  705  term “multiple peril” means a combination or package policy that
  706  includes both property coverage and casualty coverage for a
  707  single premium.
  708         (5)(3) “Chapter plan” means a separate defined benefit
  709  pension plan for police officers which incorporates by reference
  710  the provisions of this chapter and has been adopted by the
  711  governing body of a municipality as provided in s. 185.08.
  712  Except as may be specifically authorized in this chapter, the
  713  provisions of a chapter plan may not differ from the plan
  714  provisions set forth in ss. 185.01-185.341 and ss. 185.37
  715  185.39. Actuarial valuations of chapter plans shall be conducted
  716  by the division as provided by s. 185.221(1)(b).
  717         (6)(4) “Compensation” or “salary” means, for
  718  noncollectively bargained service earned before July 1, 2011, or
  719  for service earned under collective bargaining agreements in
  720  place before July 1, 2011, the total cash remuneration including
  721  “overtime” paid by the primary employer to a police officer for
  722  services rendered, but not including any payments for extra duty
  723  or special detail work performed on behalf of a second party
  724  employer. Overtime may be limited prior to July 1, 2011, in a
  725  local law plan by the plan provisions A local law plan may limit
  726  the amount of overtime payments which can be used for retirement
  727  benefit calculation purposes; however, such overtime limit may
  728  not be less than 300 hours per officer per calendar year. For
  729  noncollectively bargained service earned on or after July 1,
  730  2011, or for service earned under collective bargaining
  731  agreements entered into on or after July 1, 2011, the term has
  732  the same meaning except that when calculating retirement
  733  benefits, up to 300 hours per year in overtime compensation may
  734  be included as specified in the plan or collective bargaining
  735  agreement, but payments for accrued unused sick or annual leave
  736  may not be included.
  737         (a) Any retirement trust fund or plan that meets the
  738  requirements of this chapter does not, solely by virtue of this
  739  subsection, reduce or diminish the monthly retirement income
  740  otherwise payable to each police officer covered by the
  741  retirement trust fund or plan.
  742         (b) The member’s compensation or salary contributed as
  743  employee-elective salary reductions or deferrals to any salary
  744  reduction, deferred compensation, or tax-sheltered annuity
  745  program authorized under the Internal Revenue Code shall be
  746  deemed to be the compensation or salary the member would receive
  747  if he or she were not participating in such program and shall be
  748  treated as compensation for retirement purposes under this
  749  chapter.
  750         (c) For any person who first becomes a member in any plan
  751  year beginning on or after January 1, 1996, compensation for
  752  that plan year may not include any amounts in excess of the
  753  Internal Revenue Code s. 401(a)(17) limitation, as amended by
  754  the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, which limitation
  755  of $150,000 shall be adjusted as required by federal law for
  756  qualified government plans and shall be further adjusted for
  757  changes in the cost of living in the manner provided by Internal
  758  Revenue Code s. 401(a)(17)(B). For any person who first became a
  759  member before the first plan year beginning on or after January
  760  1, 1996, the limitation on compensation may not be less than the
  761  maximum compensation amount that was allowed to be taken into
  762  account under the plan as in effect on July 1, 1993, which
  763  limitation shall be adjusted for changes in the cost of living
  764  since 1989 in the manner provided by Internal Revenue Code s.
  765  401(a)(17)(1991).
  766         (7)(5) “Creditable service” or “credited service” means the
  767  aggregate number of years of service and fractional parts of
  768  years of service of any police officer, omitting intervening
  769  years and fractional parts of years when such police officer may
  770  not have been employed by the municipality subject to the
  771  following conditions:
  772         (a) A No police officer may not will receive credit for
  773  years or fractional parts of years of service if he or she has
  774  withdrawn his or her contributions to the fund for those years
  775  or fractional parts of years of service, unless the police
  776  officer repays into the fund the amount he or she has withdrawn,
  777  plus interest as determined by the board. The member has shall
  778  have at least 90 days after his or her reemployment to make
  779  repayment.
  780         (b) A police officer may voluntarily leave his or her
  781  contributions in the fund for a period of 5 years after leaving
  782  the employ of the police department, pending the possibility of
  783  his or her being rehired by the same department, without losing
  784  credit for the time he or she has participated actively as a
  785  police officer. If he or she is not reemployed as a police
  786  officer with the same department within 5 years, his or her
  787  contributions shall be returned to him or her without interest.
  788         (c) Credited service under this chapter shall be provided
  789  only for service as a police officer, as defined in subsection
  790  (11), or for military service and may not include credit for any
  791  other type of service. A municipality may, by local ordinance,
  792  may provide for the purchase of credit for military service
  793  occurring before employment as well as prior service as a police
  794  officer for some other employer as long as the police officer is
  795  not entitled to receive a benefit for such other prior service
  796  as a police officer. For purposes of determining credit for
  797  prior service, in addition to service as a police officer in
  798  this state, credit may be given for federal, other state, or
  799  county service as long as such service is recognized by the
  800  Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission within the
  801  Department of Law Enforcement as provided in under chapter 943
  802  or the police officer provides proof to the board of trustees
  803  that such service is equivalent to the service required to meet
  804  the definition of a police officer under subsection (16) (11).
  805         (d) In determining the creditable service of a any police
  806  officer, credit for up to 5 years of the time spent in the
  807  military service of the Armed Forces of the United States shall
  808  be added to the years of actual service, if:
  809         1. The police officer is in the active employ of the
  810  municipality before prior to such service and leaves a position,
  811  other than a temporary position, for the purpose of voluntary or
  812  involuntary service in the Armed Forces of the United States.
  813         2. The police officer is entitled to reemployment under the
  814  provisions of the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment
  815  Rights Act.
  816         3. The police officer returns to his or her employment as a
  817  police officer of the municipality within 1 year after from the
  818  date of his or her release from such active service.
  819         (8)(6) “Deferred Retirement Option Plan” or “DROP” means a
  820  local law plan retirement option in which a police officer may
  821  elect to participate. A police officer may retire for all
  822  purposes of the plan and defer receipt of retirement benefits
  823  into a DROP account while continuing employment with his or her
  824  employer. However, a police officer who enters the DROP and who
  825  is otherwise eligible to participate may shall not thereby be
  826  precluded from participation or continued participation
  827  participating, or continuing to participate, in a supplemental
  828  plan in existence on, or created after, March 12, 1999 the
  829  effective date of this act.
  830         (9) “Defined contribution plan” means the component of a
  831  local law plan, as provided in s. 185.35(1), to which deposits,
  832  if any, are made to provide benefits for police officers, or for
  833  police officers and firefighters if both are included. Such
  834  component is an element of a local law plan and exists in
  835  conjunction with the defined benefit component that meets the
  836  minimum benefits and minimum standards of this chapter. The
  837  retirement benefits, if any, of the defined contribution plan
  838  shall be provided through individual member accounts in
  839  accordance with the applicable provisions of the Internal
  840  Revenue Code and related regulations and are limited to the
  841  contributions, if any, made into each member’s account and the
  842  actual accumulated earnings, net of expenses, earned on the
  843  member’s account.
  844         (10)(7) “Division” means the Division of Retirement of the
  845  Department of Management Services.
  846         (11)(8) “Enrolled actuary” means an actuary who is enrolled
  847  under Subtitle C of Title III of the Employee Retirement Income
  848  Security Act of 1974 and who is a member of the Society of
  849  Actuaries or the American Academy of Actuaries.
  850         (12)(9) “Local law municipality” means is any municipality
  851  in which there exists a local law plan exists.
  852         (13)(10) “Local law plan” means a retirement defined
  853  benefit pension plan, that includes both a defined benefit plan
  854  component and a defined contribution plan component, for police
  855  officers, or for police officers and firefighters if both are,
  856  where included, as described in s. 185.35, established by
  857  municipal ordinance or special act of the Legislature, which
  858  enactment sets forth all plan provisions. Local law plan
  859  provisions may vary from the provisions of this chapter if the,
  860  provided that required minimum benefits and minimum standards of
  861  this chapter are met. However, any such variance must shall
  862  provide a greater benefit for police officers. Actuarial
  863  valuations of local law plans shall be conducted by an enrolled
  864  actuary as provided in s. 185.221(2)(b).
  865         (14) “Minimum benefits” means the benefits set forth in ss.
  866  185.01-185.341 and ss. 185.37-185.50.
  867         (15) “Minimum standards” means the standards set forth in
  868  ss. 185.01-185.50.
  869         (16)(11) “Police officer” means any person who is elected,
  870  appointed, or employed full time by a any municipality, who is
  871  certified or required to be certified as a law enforcement
  872  officer in compliance with s. 943.1395, who is vested with
  873  authority to bear arms and make arrests, and whose primary
  874  responsibility is the prevention and detection of crime or the
  875  enforcement of the penal, criminal, traffic, or highway laws of
  876  the state. The term This definition includes all certified
  877  supervisory and command personnel whose duties include, in whole
  878  or in part, the supervision, training, guidance, and management
  879  responsibilities of full-time law enforcement officers, part
  880  time law enforcement officers, or auxiliary law enforcement
  881  officers, but does not include part-time law enforcement
  882  officers or auxiliary law enforcement officers as those terms
  883  the same are defined in s. 943.10(6) and (8), respectively. For
  884  the purposes of this chapter only, the term also includes
  885  “police officer” also shall include a public safety officer who
  886  is responsible for performing both police and fire services. Any
  887  plan may provide that the police chief shall have an option to
  888  participate, or not, in that plan.
  889         (17)(12) “Police Officers’ Retirement Trust Fund” means a
  890  trust fund, by whatever name known, as provided under s. 185.03
  891  for the purpose of assisting municipalities in establishing and
  892  maintaining a retirement plan for police officers.
  893         (18)(13) “Retiree” or “retired police officer” means a
  894  police officer who has entered retirement status. For the
  895  purposes of a plan that includes a Deferred Retirement Option
  896  Plan (DROP), a police officer who enters the DROP is shall be
  897  considered a retiree for all purposes of the plan. However, a
  898  police officer who enters the DROP and who is otherwise eligible
  899  to participate may shall not thereby be precluded from
  900  participating, or continuing to participate, in a supplemental
  901  plan in existence on, or created after, March 12, 1999 the
  902  effective date of this act.
  903         (19)(14) “Retirement” means a police officer’s separation
  904  from municipal city employment as a police officer with
  905  immediate eligibility for receipt of benefits under the plan.
  906  For purposes of a plan that includes a Deferred Retirement
  907  Option Plan (DROP), “retirement” means the date a police officer
  908  enters the DROP.
  909         (20) “Special act plan” means a plan subject to the
  910  provisions of this chapter which was created by an act of the
  911  Legislature and continues to require an act of the Legislature
  912  to alter plan benefits.
  913         (21) “Special benefits” means benefits provided in a
  914  defined contribution plan for police officers.
  915         (22)(15) “Supplemental plan” means a plan to which deposits
  916  of the premium tax moneys as provided in s. 185.08 are made to
  917  provide special extra benefits to police officers, or police
  918  officers and firefighters if both are where included, under this
  919  chapter. Such a plan is an element of a local law plan and
  920  exists in conjunction with a defined benefit component plan that
  921  meets the minimum benefits and minimum standards of this
  922  chapter. Any supplemental plan in existence on March 1, 2014,
  923  shall be deemed to be a defined contribution plan in compliance
  924  with s. 185.35(6).
  925         (23)(16) “Supplemental plan municipality” means a any local
  926  law municipality in which there existed a supplemental plan
  927  existed as of December 1, 2000.
  928         Section 9. Subsection (6) of section 185.06, Florida
  929  Statutes, is amended to read:
  930         185.06 General powers and duties of board of trustees.—For
  931  any municipality, chapter plan, local law municipality, or local
  932  law plan under this chapter:
  933         (6) To assist the board in meeting its responsibilities
  934  under this chapter, the board, if it so elects, may:
  935         (a) Employ independent legal counsel at the pension fund’s
  936  expense.
  937         (b) Employ an independent enrolled actuary, as defined in
  938  s. 185.02(8), at the pension fund’s expense.
  939         (c) Employ such independent professional, technical, or
  940  other advisers as it deems necessary at the pension fund’s
  941  expense.
  942  
  943  If the board chooses to use the municipality’s or special
  944  district’s legal counsel or actuary, or chooses to use any of
  945  the municipality’s other professional, technical, or other
  946  advisers, it must do so only under terms and conditions
  947  acceptable to the board.
  948         Section 10. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
  949  185.07, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  950         185.07 Creation and maintenance of fund.—For any
  951  municipality, chapter plan, local law municipality, or local law
  952  plan under this chapter:
  953         (1) The municipal police officers’ retirement trust fund in
  954  each municipality described in s. 185.03 shall be created and
  955  maintained in the following manner:
  956         (d) By payment by the municipality or other sources of a
  957  sum equal to the normal cost and the amount required to fund any
  958  actuarial deficiency shown by an actuarial valuation conducted
  959  under as provided in part VII of chapter 112 after taking into
  960  account the amounts described in paragraphs (b), (c), (e), (f),
  961  and (g) and the tax proceeds described in paragraph (a) which
  962  are used to fund defined benefit plan benefits.
  963  
  964  Nothing in this section shall be construed to require adjustment
  965  of member contribution rates in effect on the date this act
  966  becomes a law, including rates that exceed 5 percent of salary,
  967  provided that such rates are at least one-half of 1 percent of
  968  salary.
  969         Section 11. Subsection (2) of section 185.16, Florida
  970  Statutes, is amended to read:
  971         185.16 Requirements for retirement.—For any municipality,
  972  chapter plan, local law municipality, or local law plan under
  973  this chapter, any police officer who completes 10 or more years
  974  of creditable service as a police officer and attains age 55, or
  975  completes 25 years of creditable service as a police officer and
  976  attains age 52, and for such period has been a member of the
  977  retirement fund is eligible for normal retirement benefits.
  978  Normal retirement under the plan is retirement from the service
  979  of the city on or after the normal retirement date. In such
  980  event, for chapter plans and local law plans, payment of
  981  retirement income will be governed by the following provisions
  982  of this section:
  983         (2)(a) The amount of the monthly retirement income payable
  984  to a police officer who retires on or after his or her normal
  985  retirement date shall be an amount equal to the number of the
  986  police officer’s years of credited service multiplied by 2.75 2
  987  percent of his or her average final compensation. However, if
  988  current state contributions pursuant to this chapter are not
  989  adequate to fund the additional benefits to meet the minimum
  990  requirements in this chapter, only increment increases shall be
  991  required as state moneys are adequate to provide. Such
  992  increments shall be provided as state moneys become available.
  993         (b) Effective July 1, 2014, a plan that is in compliance
  994  with this chapter except that the plan provides a benefit that
  995  is less than 2.75 percent of the average final compensation of a
  996  police officer for all years of credited service, as provided in
  997  paragraph (a), or provides an effective benefit that is below
  998  2.75 percent as a result of a maximum benefit limitation, must
  999  maintain, at a minimum, the percentage amount or maximum benefit
 1000  limitation in effect on July 1, 2014, and is not required to
 1001  increase the benefit to 2.75 percent of the average final
 1002  compensation of a police officer for all years of credited
 1003  service.
 1004         (c) Effective July 1, 2014, a plan that is in compliance
 1005  with this chapter except that the plan provides a benefit that
 1006  is less than 2.75 percent of the average final compensation of a
 1007  police officer for all years of credited service, as provided in
 1008  paragraph (a), or provides an effective benefit that is below
 1009  2.75 percent as a result of a maximum benefit limitation, and
 1010  which changes the percentage amount or maximum benefit
 1011  limitation to 2.75 percent, or greater, of the average final
 1012  compensation of a police officer for all years of credited
 1013  service, as provided in paragraph (a), may not thereafter
 1014  decrease the percentage amount or the maximum benefit limitation
 1015  to less than 2.75 percent of the average final compensation of a
 1016  police officer for all years of credited service, as provided in
 1017  paragraph (a).
 1018         Section 12. Section 185.35, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 1019  read:
 1020         185.35 Municipalities that have having their own retirement
 1021  pension plans for police officers.—For any municipality, chapter
 1022  plan, local law municipality, or local law plan under this
 1023  chapter, In order for a municipality that has its municipalities
 1024  with their own retirement plan pension plans for police
 1025  officers, or for police officers and firefighters if both are
 1026  included, to participate in the distribution of the tax fund
 1027  established under pursuant to s. 185.08, a local law plan plans
 1028  must meet the minimum benefits and minimum standards set forth
 1029  in this chapter, except as provided in the mutual consent
 1030  provisions in paragraph (1)(g) with respect to the minimum
 1031  benefits not met as of October 1, 2012.:
 1032         (1) If a municipality has a retirement pension plan for
 1033  police officers, or for police officers and firefighters if both
 1034  are included, which, in the opinion of the division, meets the
 1035  minimum benefits and minimum standards set forth in this
 1036  chapter, the board of trustees of the pension plan must, as
 1037  approved by a majority of police officers of the municipality,
 1038  may:
 1039         (a) place the income from the premium tax in s. 185.08 in
 1040  such pension plan for the sole and exclusive use of its police
 1041  officers, or its police officers and firefighters if both are
 1042  included, where it shall become an integral part of that pension
 1043  plan and shall be used to fund benefits as provided herein.
 1044  Effective October 1, 2014, for noncollectively bargained service
 1045  or upon entering into a collective bargaining agreement on or
 1046  after July 1, 2014:
 1047         (a) The base premium tax revenues must be used to fund
 1048  minimum benefits or other retirement benefits in excess of the
 1049  minimum benefits as determined by the municipality.
 1050         (b) Of the additional premium tax revenues received which
 1051  are in excess of the amount received for the 2012 calendar year,
 1052  50 percent must be used to fund minimum benefits or other
 1053  retirement benefits in excess of the minimum benefits as
 1054  determined by the municipality, and 50 percent must be placed in
 1055  a defined contribution plan to fund special benefits.
 1056         (c) Additional premium tax revenues not described in
 1057  paragraph (b) must be used to fund benefits that are not
 1058  included in the minimum benefits. If the additional premium tax
 1059  revenues subject to this paragraph exceed the full annual cost
 1060  of benefits provided through the plan which are in excess of the
 1061  minimum benefits, any amount in excess of the full annual cost
 1062  must be used as provided in paragraph (b).
 1063         (d) Of any accumulations of additional premium tax revenues
 1064  which have not been allocated to fund benefits in excess of the
 1065  minimum benefits, 50 percent of the amount of the accumulations
 1066  must be used to fund special benefits and 50 percent must be
 1067  applied to fund any unfunded actuarial liabilities of the plan;
 1068  provided that any amount of accumulations in excess of the
 1069  amount required to fund the unfunded actuarial liabilities must
 1070  be used to fund special benefits pay extra benefits to the
 1071  police officers included in that pension plan; or
 1072         (b) May place the income from the premium tax in s. 185.08
 1073  in a separate supplemental plan to pay extra benefits to the
 1074  police officers, or police officers and firefighters if
 1075  included, participating in such separate supplemental plan.
 1076         (e) For a plan created after March 1, 2014, 50 percent of
 1077  the insurance premium tax revenues shall be used to fund defined
 1078  benefit plan component benefits, with the remainder used to fund
 1079  defined contribution plan component benefits.
 1080         (f) If a plan offers benefits in excess of the minimum
 1081  benefits, such benefits, excluding supplemental plan benefits in
 1082  effect as of September 30, 2013, may be reduced if the plan
 1083  continues to meet the minimum benefits and the minimum standards
 1084  set forth in this chapter. The amount of insurance premium tax
 1085  revenues previously used to fund benefits in excess of the
 1086  minimum benefits, excluding the amount of any additional premium
 1087  tax revenues distributed to a supplemental plan for calendar
 1088  year 2012, before the reduction must be used as provided in
 1089  paragraph (b). However, benefits in excess of the minimum
 1090  benefits may not be reduced if a plan does not meet the minimum
 1091  percentage amount of 2.75 percent, or greater, of the average
 1092  final compensation of a police officer, as provided in s.
 1093  185.16(2)(a), or provides an effective benefit that is below
 1094  2.75 percent as a result of a maximum benefit limitation, as
 1095  described in s. 185.16(2)(b).
 1096         (g) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a)-(f), the use of premium
 1097  tax revenues, including any accumulations of additional premium
 1098  tax revenues which have not been allocated to fund benefits in
 1099  excess of the minimum benefits, may deviate from the provisions
 1100  of this subsection by mutual consent of the members’ collective
 1101  bargaining representative or, if none, by majority consent of
 1102  the police officer members of the fund, and by consent of the
 1103  municipality, provided that the plan continues to meet the
 1104  minimum benefits and minimum standards of this chapter; however,
 1105  a plan that operates pursuant to this paragraph which does not
 1106  meet the minimum benefits as of October 1, 2012, may continue to
 1107  provide the benefits that do not meet the minimum benefits at
 1108  the same level as was provided as of October 1, 2012, and all
 1109  other benefit levels must continue to meet the minimum benefits.
 1110  Such mutually agreed deviation shall continue until modified or
 1111  revoked by subsequent mutual consent of the members’ collective
 1112  bargaining representative or, if none, by a majority of the
 1113  police officer members of the fund, and the municipality. An
 1114  existing arrangement for the use of premium tax revenues
 1115  contained within a special act plan or a plan within a
 1116  supplemental plan municipality is considered, as of July 1,
 1117  2014, to be a deviation for which mutual consent has been
 1118  granted.
 1119         (2) The premium tax provided by this chapter shall in all
 1120  cases be used in its entirety to provide retirement extra
 1121  benefits to police officers, or to police officers and
 1122  firefighters if both are included. However, local law plans in
 1123  effect on October 1, 1998, must comply with the minimum benefit
 1124  provisions of this chapter only to the extent that additional
 1125  premium tax revenues become available to incrementally fund the
 1126  cost of such compliance as provided in s. 185.16(2). If a plan
 1127  is in compliance with such minimum benefit provisions, as
 1128  subsequent additional tax revenues become available, they shall
 1129  be used to provide extra benefits. Local law plans created by
 1130  special act before May 27, 1939, shall be deemed to comply with
 1131  this chapter. For the purpose of this chapter, the term:
 1132         (a) “Additional premium tax revenues” means revenues
 1133  received by a municipality pursuant to s. 185.10 which exceed
 1134  the amount received for calendar year 1997.
 1135         (b) “Extra benefits” means benefits in addition to or
 1136  greater than those provided to general employees of the
 1137  municipality and in addition to those in existence for police
 1138  officers on March 12, 1999.
 1139         (3) A retirement plan or amendment to a retirement plan may
 1140  not be proposed for adoption unless the proposed plan or
 1141  amendment contains an actuarial estimate of the costs involved.
 1142  Such proposed plan or proposed plan change may not be adopted
 1143  without the approval of the municipality or, where required
 1144  permitted, the Legislature. Copies of the proposed plan or
 1145  proposed plan change and the actuarial impact statement of the
 1146  proposed plan or proposed plan change shall be furnished to the
 1147  division before the last public hearing on the proposal is held
 1148  thereon. Such statement must also indicate whether the proposed
 1149  plan or proposed plan change is in compliance with s. 14, Art. X
 1150  of the State Constitution and those provisions of part VII of
 1151  chapter 112 which are not expressly provided in this chapter.
 1152  Notwithstanding any other provision, only those local law plans
 1153  created by special act of legislation before May 27, 1939, are
 1154  deemed to meet the minimum benefits and minimum standards only
 1155  in this chapter.
 1156         (4) Notwithstanding any other provision, with respect to
 1157  any supplemental plan municipality:
 1158         (a) Section 185.02(6)(a) 185.02(4)(a) does not apply, and a
 1159  local law plan and a supplemental plan may continue to use their
 1160  definition of compensation or salary in existence on March 12,
 1161  1999.
 1162         (b) A local law plan and a supplemental plan must continue
 1163  to be administered by a board or boards of trustees numbered,
 1164  constituted, and selected as the board or boards were numbered,
 1165  constituted, and selected on December 1, 2000.
 1166         (c) The election set forth in paragraph (1)(b) is deemed to
 1167  have been made.
 1168         (5) The retirement plan setting forth the benefits and the
 1169  trust agreement, if any, covering the duties and
 1170  responsibilities of the trustees and the regulations of the
 1171  investment of funds must be in writing and copies made available
 1172  to the participants and to the general public.
 1173         (6) In addition to the defined benefit component of the
 1174  local law plan, each plan sponsor must have a defined
 1175  contribution plan component within the local law plan by October
 1176  1, 2014, for noncollectively bargained service, upon entering
 1177  into a collective bargaining agreement on or after July 1, 2014,
 1178  or upon the creation date of a new participating plan. Depending
 1179  upon the application of subsection (1), a defined contribution
 1180  component may or may not receive any funding.
 1181         (7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, a
 1182  municipality that has implemented or proposed changes to a local
 1183  law plan based on the municipality’s reliance on an
 1184  interpretation of this chapter by the Department of Management
 1185  Services on or after August 14, 2012, and before March 4, 2014,
 1186  may continue the implemented changes or continue to implement
 1187  proposed changes. Such reliance must be evidenced by a written
 1188  collective bargaining proposal or agreement, or formal
 1189  correspondence between the municipality and the Department of
 1190  Management Services which describes the specific changes to the
 1191  local law plan, with the initial proposal, agreement, or
 1192  correspondence from the municipality dated before March 4, 2014.
 1193  Changes to the local law plan which are otherwise contrary to
 1194  the minimum benefits and minimum standards of this chapter may
 1195  continue in effect until the earlier of October 1, 2017, or the
 1196  effective date of a collective bargaining agreement that is
 1197  contrary to the changes to the local law plan.
 1198         Section 13. The Legislature finds that a proper and
 1199  legitimate state purpose is served when employees and retirees
 1200  of this state and its political subdivisions, and the
 1201  dependents, survivors, and beneficiaries of such employees and
 1202  retirees, are extended the basic protections afforded by
 1203  governmental retirement systems that provide fair and adequate
 1204  benefits and that are managed, administered, and funded in an
 1205  actuarially sound manner as required under s. 14, Article X of
 1206  the State Constitution and part VII of chapter 112, Florida
 1207  Statutes. Therefore, the Legislature determines and declares
 1208  that this act fulfills an important state interest.
 1209         Section 14. This act shall take effect July 1, 2014.