(1)
Upon making application for a service retirement allowance under
RCW 2.10.100 or a disability allowance under RCW 2.10.120, a
judge who is eligible therefor shall make an election as to the
manner in which such service retirement shall be paid from among
the following designated options, calculated so as to be
actuarially equivalent to each other:
(a) Standard allowance. A member selecting this option
shall receive a retirement allowance, which shall be computed as
provided in RCW 2.10.110. The retirement allowance shall be
payable throughout the judge's life. However, if the judge dies
before the total of the retirement allowance paid to the judge
equals the amount of the judge's accumulated contributions at the
time of retirement, then the balance shall be paid to the
member's estate, or such person or persons, trust, or
organization as the judge has nominated by written designation
duly executed and filed with the department of retirement systems
or, if there is no such designated person or persons still living
at the time of the judge's death, then to the surviving spouse
or, if there is neither such designated person or persons still
living at the time of death nor a surviving spouse, then to the
judge's legal representative.
(b) The department shall adopt rules that allow a judge to
select a retirement option that pays the judge a reduced
retirement allowance and upon death, such portion of the judge's
reduced retirement allowance as the department by rule designates
shall be continued throughout the life of and paid to a
designated person. Such person shall be nominated by the judge
by written designation duly executed and filed with the
department at the time of retirement. The options adopted by the
department shall include, but are not limited to, a joint and one
hundred percent survivor option and a joint and fifty percent
survivor option.
(2)(a) A judge, if married, must provide the written consent
of his or her spouse to the option selected under this section,
except as provided in (b) of this subsection. If a judge is
married and both the judge and the judge's spouse do not give
written consent to an option under this section, the department
will pay the judge a joint and fifty percent survivor benefit and
record the judge's spouse as the beneficiary. Such benefit shall
be calculated to be actuarially equivalent to the benefit options
available under subsection (1) of this section unless spousal
consent is not required as provided in (b) of this subsection.
(b) If a copy of a dissolution order designating a survivor
beneficiary under RCW 41.50.790 has been filed with the
department at least thirty days prior to a member's retirement:
(i) The department shall honor the designation as if made by
the member under subsection (1) of this section; and
(ii) The spousal consent provisions of (a) of this
subsection do not apply.
(3)(a) Any member who retired before January 1, 1996, and
who elected to receive a reduced retirement allowance under
subsection (1)(b) or (2) of this section is entitled to receive a
retirement allowance adjusted in accordance with (b) of this
subsection, if they meet the following conditions:
(i) The retiree's designated beneficiary predeceases or has
predeceased the retiree; and
(ii) The retiree provides to the department proper proof of
the designated beneficiary's death.
(b) The retirement allowance payable to the retiree, as of
July 1, 1998, or the date of the designated beneficiary's death,
whichever comes last, shall be increased by the percentage
derived in (c) of this subsection.
(c) The percentage increase shall be derived by the
following:
(i) One hundred percent multiplied by the result of (c)(ii)
of this subsection converted to a percent;
(ii) Subtract one from the reciprocal of the appropriate
joint and survivor option factor;
(iii) The joint and survivor option factor shall be from the
table in effect as of July 1, 1998.
(d) The adjustment under (b) of this subsection shall accrue
from the beginning of the month following the date of the
designated beneficiary's death or from July 1, 1998, whichever
comes last.
[1998 c 340 § 4; 1996 c 175 § 2; 1995 c 144 § 21; 1990 c 249 § 2; 1988 c 109 § 9.]
NOTES:
Effective date -- 1998 c 340: "Except for section 13 of this act, this act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or support of the state government and its existing public institutions, and takes effect immediately [April 3, 1998]." [1998 c 340 § 14.]
Findings -- 1990 c 249: "The legislature finds that:
(1) It would be advantageous for some retirees to have
survivorship options available other than the options currently
listed in statute. Allowing the department of retirement systems
to adopt several different survivor options will assist retirees
in their financial planning; and
(2) Disabled members of the retirement systems listed in RCW 41.50.030, except for members of the law enforcement officers'
and firefighters' retirement system plan 1, must forfeit any
right to leave a benefit to their survivors if they wish to go on
disability retirement. This results in some disabled workers
holding onto their jobs in order to provide for their dependents.
The provisions of this act allow members to go on disability
retirement while still providing for their survivors." [1990 c
249 § 1.]
Effective date -- 1988 c 109: See note following RCW 2.10.030.