Comprehensive Annual Financial Report Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2012 BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Notes To Financial Statements - Note 14 Other Postemployment Benefits (OPEB)

Notes to the Financial Statements

June 30, 2012

Note 14 Other Postemployment Benefits (OPEB)

The State sponsors two defined benefit OPEB plans: the State Employee OPEB Plan (SEOPEBP) and the Retired Teacher Healthcare Plan (RTHP). SEOPEBP is administered by the State Comptroller (Healthcare Policy and Benefit Division), and RTHP is administered by the Teachers' Retirement Board. None of these plans issues stand-alone financial statements. However, financial statements for these plans are presented in Note No. 15.

State Employee OPEB Plan
Plan Description
SEOPEBP is a single-employer defined benefit OPEB plan that covers retired employees of the State who are receiving benefits from any State-sponsored retirement system, except the Teachers' Retirement System and the Municipal Employees' Retirement System. The plan provides healthcare and life insurance benefits to eligible retirees and their spouses. Plan benefits, required contributions of plan participants and the State, and other plan provisions are described in Sections 5-257 and 5-259 of the General Statutes. As of June 30, 2011 (date of the latest actuarial valuation), the plan had 64,860 retirees and beneficiaries receiving benefits.

Plan Funding
The contribution requirements of the plan members and the State are established and may be amended by the State legislature, or by agreement between the State and employees unions, upon approval by the State legislature. The cost of providing plan benefits is financed approximately 100 percent by the State on a pay-as-you-go basis through an annual appropriation in the General fund. Administrative costs of the plan are financed by the State.

Retired Teacher Healthcare Plan
Plan Description

RTHP is a single-employer defined benefit OPEB plan that covers retired teachers and administrators of public schools in the State who are receiving benefits from the Teachers' Retirement System. The plan provides healthcare insurance benefits to eligible retirees and their spouses. Plan benefits, required contributions of plan participants and the State, and other plan provisions are described in Section 10-183 of the General Statutes. As of June 30, 2012 (date of the latest actuarial valuation), the plan had 35,215 retirees and beneficiaries receiving benefits.

Plan Funding
The contribution requirements of plan members and the State are established and may be amended by the State legislature. The cost of providing plan benefits is financed on a pay-as-you-go basis as follows: active teachers pay for one third of plan costs through a contribution of 1.25 percent of their annual salaries, retired teachers pay for one third of plan costs through monthly premiums, and the State pays for one third of plan costs through an annual appropriation in the General Fund. Administrative costs of the plan are financed by the State.

Annual OPEB Cost and Net OPEB Obligation
The State's annual OPEB cost and the net OPEB obligation for each plan for the current fiscal year were as follows (amounts in thousands):

SEOPEBP RTHP
Annual Required Contribution $1,354,738 $184,145
Interest on Net OPEB Obligation 73,689 2,172
Adjustment to Annual Required Contribution (207,850) (20,362)
Annual OPEB Cost 1,220,577 165,955
Contributions Made 541,262 49,486
Increase in net OPEB Obligation 679,315 116,469
Net OPEB Obligation - Beginning of Year ¹ 4,508,054 451,893
Net OPEB Obligation - End of Year $5,187,369 $568,362

¹ SEOPEBP balance restated. See Note 23

In addition, other related information for each plan for the past three fiscal years was as follows:

Annual Percentage of Net
Fiscal OPEB Annual OPEB OPEB
Year Cost Cost Contributed Obligation
SEOPEBP
2012 $1,220,577 44.3% $5,187,369
2011 $1,165,510 46.7% $4,508,054
2010 $2,349,663 23.6% $4,150,866
RTHP
2012 $165,955 29.8% $568,362
2011 $167,368 3.2% $451,893
2010 $115,321 10.5% $289,837

Funded Status and Funding Progress
The following is funded status information for the SEOPEBP and the RTHP as of June 30, 2011 and 2012, respectively, date of the latest actuarial valuations (amounts in million):

Actuarial Actuarial Unfunded UAAL as a
Value of Accrued AAL Funded Covered Percentage of
Assets Liability (AAL) (UAAL) Ratio Payroll Covered Payroll
(a) (b) (b-a) (a/b) (c) ((b-a)/c)
SEOPEBP $49.6 $17,954.3 $17,904.7 0.3% $3,902.2 458.8%
RTHP $0 $3,048.3 $3,048.3 0.0% $3,652. 5 83.5%

Actuarial valuations of an ongoing plan involve estimates of the value of reported amounts and assumptions about the probability of occurrence of events far into the future. Examples include assumptions about future employment, mortality, and the healthcare cost trend. Amounts determined regarding the funded status of the plan and the annual required contributions of the employer are subject to continual revision as actual results are compared with past expectations and new estimates are made about the future. The schedule of funding in progress, presented as required supplementary information following the notes to the financial statements, present multi-year trend information about whether the actuarial value of plan assets is increasing or decreasing over time relative to the actuarial accrued liability for benefits.

Actuarial Methods and Assumptions
Projections of benefits for financial reporting purposes are based on the substantive plan (the plan as understood by the State and the plan members) and include the types of benefits provided at the time of each valuation and the historical pattern of sharing of benefit costs between the State and plan members to that point. The actuarial methods and assumptions used include techniques that are designed to reduce the effects of short-term volatility in actuarial accrued liabilities and the actuarial value of assets, consistent with the long-term perspective of the calculations.

Significant methods and assumptions were as follows:

SEOPEBP RTHP
Actuarial Valuation Date 6-30-11 6-30-12
Actuarial Cost Method Projected Unit Credit Entry Age
Amortization Method Level Percent of Pay, Closed, 30 Years Level Percent of Pay, Open
Remaining Amortization Period 26 Years 26 Years
Asset Valuation Method Market Value of Assets Market Value of Assets
Actuarial Assumptions:
Investment Rate of Return 5.70% 4.5% (includes 3% inflation rate)
Projected Salary Increases 4.00% 3.75%-7.00% (includes 3% inflation rate)
Healthcare Inflation Rate 7.25% Initial, 5% Ultimate 7% Initial, 5% Ultimate

Other OPEB Plan
The State acts solely as the administrator and custodian of the assets of the Policemen and Firemen Survivors' Benefit Fund (PFSBF). The State makes no contribution to and has only a fiduciary responsibility for this fund. The fund does not issue stand-alone financial statements. However, financial statements for this fund are presented in Note No. 15.

Plan Description
PFSBF is a cost-sharing multiple-employer defined benefit OPEB plan that covers policemen and firemen of participating municipalities in the State. As of June 30, 2012 there were 9 municipalities participating in the plan with a total membership of 598 active members. The plan provides survivor benefits upon the death of an active or retired member of the fund to his spouse and dependent children. Plan benefits, contribution requirements of plan members and participant municipalities, and other plan provisions are described in Sections 7-323a to 7-323i of the General Statutes.

Contributions
Plan members are required to contribute one percent of their annual salary. Participating municipalities are required to contribute at an actuarially determined rate. Administrative costs of the plan are financed by participating municipalities.