The LEOFF 1 Pension Raid: Washington State’s Assault on Retired Heroes

6 · 03 · 26
In a brazen display of fiscal desperation, Washington State Democrats have executed what critics rightly call a “raid” on the Law Enforcement Officers’ and Fire Fighters’ Retirement System Plan 1 (LEOFF 1). House Bill 2034, signed into law by Governor Bob Ferguson, terminates the legacy LEOFF 1 plan effective June 30, 2029, creates a “restated” plan funded at just 110% of liabilities, and sweeps nearly $3.9–4 billion in surplus assets for general spending—including $569 million funneled into the Climate Commitment Account.
This move targets a closed pension system for first responders hired before 1977. These retirees—now mostly in their 70s and 80s—risked their lives for decades under a defined-benefit promise. The plan is currently overfunded at around 160-168%, providing a vital cushion against market volatility and rising medical costs.
The Progressive Defense: Responsible Use of “Surplus” Funds
Supporters, primarily Democrats, argue the surplus belongs to the state, which contributed roughly 77-80% of the funding historically. They claim the bill preserves all promised benefits while freeing up excess capital to address a $2 billion+ budget shortfall caused by prior spending. The new plan remains actuarially sound at 110% funding, they insist, and one-time surplus money can stabilize the budget without new taxes or deep cuts.
Proponents note that pension assets beyond what’s needed for benefits aren’t constitutionally protected like the benefits themselves. Redirecting funds, they say, prevents waste and supports priorities like climate initiatives and general operations. Some view it as pragmatic governance in tough fiscal times.
The Conservative Critique: A Dangerous Precedent of Theft
This “pragmatism” masks a fundamental betrayal. LEOFF 1 funds were contributed for the exclusive benefit of retirees, not as a piggy bank for Olympia’s spending addiction. Reducing the cushion from 160%+ to 110% exposes vulnerable elderly retirees to investment risks, inflation, and longer lifespans. If markets falter or healthcare costs spike, taxpayers could face renewed contributions after 25 years of none.
The bias is clear: Democrats passed record tax hikes yet still raid pensions from police and firefighters—the very heroes they claim to support. Over $500 million diverted to a bloated climate account reeks of ideological favoritism, not fiscal necessity. This sets a terrifying precedent. If they raid LEOFF 1 today, what stops future raids on other public pensions, PERS, or TRS? Retired first responders, including former Congressman Dave Reichert, have filed lawsuits alleging violations of contract clauses in state and federal constitutions.
Conservatives rightly decry this as government overreach. Washington suffers chronic overspending on progressive priorities—homelessness programs, green mandates, and bureaucracy—while shortchanging core duties. True reform demands spending restraint, not confiscating retirement security from those who protected us. Using one-time pension “surplus” for recurring expenses is the definition of fiscal malpractice.
LEOFF 1 retirees sacrificed youth and health in dangerous service. They built this surplus through disciplined funding, not as a slush fund. Treating their nest egg as discretionary revenue dishonors their contract and erodes public trust in government promises.
As lawsuits proceed, Washingtonians must demand accountability. Prioritize essential services, cut waste, and leave pensions untouched. Public safety retirees deserve better than becoming collateral damage in Olympia’s budget wars. This raid isn’t stewardship—it’s theft dressed as policy.
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References Washington State Standard. (2026). Plan to sweep $4B from WA police and firefighter pension fund spurs lawsuit. https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2026/04/30/plan-to-sweep-4b-from-wa-police-and-firefighter-pension-fund-spurs-lawsuit/
Wall Street Journal. (2026). Washington State’s Pension Raid. https://www.wsj.com/opinion/washington-states-pension-raid-5ee13a44
Reason.org. (2026). Washington House Bill 2034 redirects pension funds. https://reason.org/backgrounder/washington-house-bill-2034-redirects-pension-funds-for-non-pension-spending/

About me

robert garrison
Hello!

I'm Robert Garrison

I live in Washington State. I received an M.A. in political science (with honors; concentration American Government & Politics) from American Public University System (APUS) in 2013. I received a B.A. in political science (with honors) from APUS in 2010. I want to be a paid political consultant. I am disabled with Cerebral Palsy. (CP) and use a wheelchair. I want to work with the people that serve “We the People In our nation’s government. I decided to go into politics after the 2000 election and 9/11 happened. In my off time, I enjoy listening to old time radio (OTR) shows from the 1920-1960’s, reading biographies and watching TV, especially game shows, cable news and C-SPAN. I follow the political goings on in both the U.K. and Canada in addition to the U.S.
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