WeVote

Bill

Bill

S 7757

Authorizes Scott Pavlick to receive certain service credit under a twenty-five year retirement plan

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Lea Webb

Authorizes Scott Pavlick to receive specific service credit under a 25-year retirement plan, altering his pension calculation.

REFERRED TO CIVIL SERVICE AND PENSIONS
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 7757

Summary of Senate Bill S 7757

Quick overview

  • Bill number: S 7757
  • Title: Authorizes Scott Pavlick to receive certain service credit under a twenty-five year retirement plan
  • Sponsor: Lea Webb (primary)
  • Introduced: May 5, 2025
  • Status: Referred to Civil Service and Pensions (Senate committee)
  • Related legislation: Companion Assembly bill A 7999 (listed as a companion)

Purpose and intent

  • The bill appears to be a targeted or private bill designed to authorize a named individual, Scott Pavlick, to receive specific service credit within a twenty-five year retirement plan.
  • The likely goal is to adjust Pavlick’s retirement calculation by recognizing or granting additional service credit that would affect his retirement eligibility or benefit under the plan.

Key provisions (as indicated by the title)

  • The bill would authorize the inclusion or recognition of certain service credit for Scott Pavlick in the context of a twenty-five year retirement plan.
  • It would specify that the authorized service credit be used for computing Pavlick’s retirement benefit under the plan (e.g., affecting pension amount or eligibility timelines).
  • Precise details (such as the exact amount or type of service credit, eligibility conditions, or effective date) are not provided in the available information and would be found in the bill text.

Who and what is affected

  • Primary beneficiary: Scott Pavlick (named in the bill) who would receive the authorized service credit.
  • Retirement system/plan: The state retirement framework administering the twenty-five year plan would implement the credit, affecting Pavlick’s benefit calculations.
  • Legislative process: The companion Assembly bill A 7999 may mirror or relate to the Senate measure, indicating cross-chamber interest or parallel action.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • The bill was introduced and immediately referred to the Civil Service and Pensions committee on May 5, 2025.
  • Legislative action log shows two identical committee referrals on the same date, suggesting a standard first-step referral without further committee action yet.
  • No further milestones (e.g., committee votes, floor votes, or enactment) are listed; as a private bill, enactment would affect only the named individual rather than the general public.

Notes

  • Because the bill targets a specific person, it is categorized as a private or individual bill rather than a general policy change.
  • Readers seeking more detail should review the full text of S 7757 and any accompanying fiscal notes or committee reports, as well as the related A 7999 companion bill.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.