Human Resources director Sean Cho updated commissioners on a 1.25% increase to Tier 2 public‑safety retirement contribution in the Utah Retirement System and asked whether the county would absorb that cost for employees.
Cho said the county had previously absorbed similar increases (2.27% in 2020 and 2.1% in 2024 for certain tiers) but that picking up a new increase would be an ongoing cost. Staff provided a preliminary estimate of about $108,000 based on payroll calculations and then noted additional employer 401(k) matching obligations that raised the estimated full‑year cost to approximately $126,000; a mid‑year (effective July 1) cost would be about $63,000.
Commissioners discussed the policy and budget implications. One commissioner said retirement contributions fluctuate and are part of the cost of employment, and another indicated agreement with not absorbing this increase. Staff also clarified the legal limitations: the county cannot choose to pick up Tier‑2 general employee increases by law, and the presented figure applied to Tier‑2 public‑safety employees only.
No formal vote was taken at the work session; commissioners did not direct staff to absorb the increase and appeared inclined to pass it to employees as had been done with recent adjustments.