June 2006
House and Senate negotiators on the pension bills missed their self-imposed Memorial Day deadline without reaching final agreement on a pension bill. The optimistic goal is to work out remaining issues in the first two weeks of June, pass the conference agreement and send it to the President before the next Congressional recess for July 4th. At the least, they hope to reach agreement on the tough defined benefit issues so that staff can draft language over the July 4th recess. However, it is possible that due to continuing delays, a final bill will not emerge until a “lame duck” session after the November elections.
The defined benefit funding issues, especially special rules for airlines, are the main drivers of the bill and also have been the major sticking points. Negotiators directed their staffs to draft language over the week-long Memorial Day recess and had hoped to resolve the remaining issues when they return the following week.
House and Senate leaders added a number of “must-do” expired tax provisions — the most well-know is the Research & Development tax credit — to the pension bill. While the expiring provisions add a new sense of urgency to the bill, the cost of extending the provisions adds to the overall price tag for the bill. As negotiators try to wrap up the bill, they will be reviewing each provision on the basis of merit and revenue cost and as with every negotiation there will be winners and losers. As our number one priority, ICMA-RC is working with key groups and coalitions urging Congress to make the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA) permanent.
The principle negotiators, Senators Grassley, Baucus, Enzi, Kennedy, and Representatives Thomas, and McKeon were engaged in face-to-face negotiations just prior to the Memorial Day recess and began to make progress. They have not officially addressed the defined contribution portions of the bill, which are not as controversial as the defined benefit funding provisions but cost money to accomplish. The outlook on key governmental defined contribution issues is as follows: