Home (Post) ND News Mobile Say Anything Forum Contact Register Login

Wednesday, November 04, 2009


Michigan town near bankruptcy due to public pension obligations

Rick Moran

Leftie economics strikes again!

Expect this kind of thing to start happening all over the country. Small to medium sized cities, saddled with astronomical public employee pension obligations, forced to declare insolvency because their predecessors refused to deal with the problem.

According to Mark Stowers writing in the Oakland Press: (via The Blog Prof )

  The Auburn Hills pension plan put in place decades ago for city workers will potentially bankrupt the city if changes are not made, city officials fear.

  Assistant City Manager Tom Tanghe has worked for the city for most of the current decade and has been negotiating city worker contracts. Tanghe said the problem lies with employees in the Defined Benefit Pension plan, which was closed by the city in the late 1990s.

  “The thing that is harming the pension fund is that someone decided and adopted a 5 percent, non-compounding cost-of-living adjustment,” Tanghe said. “If you retired at $40,000 you would get a 5 percent adjustment the following January.”

  The 5 percent amount is added each year to the base pension. Tanghe said that simple 5 percent cost-of-living adjustment will double the pension in 20 years to $80,000. Retirees’ pensions are passed on to spouses in the event of death. Of the city’s 187 employees, 46 are in the defined benefit plan. The rest are in the city’s 401(k) retirement plan.

[...]

Indeed - and this is not the most generous of city pensions around. Some allow the employee to be eligible for up to 70% of these benefits after only 5 years of service. Others allow a city employee to retire, receiving 90% of an average of his final 3 years salary - a salary oftentimes deliberately inflated just so that those last three years can garner the employee as much taxpayer loot as possible.

The solution? Many experts believe that these defined benefit plans should be moved to a defined contribution plan, as well as passing stricter rules for eligibility, and dropping the gold plated retirement provisions.

It may well be too late for Auburn Hills.


The greedy State Employee union pension demands are the cause of the bankruptcy of CA.
This sort of bloated pension giveaway is only posssible to support by printing your own money, since it can never pay for itself, and the States can’t do that.

Does this tick you off? Click here to email your elected representatives right here on Say Anything, or comment below.

Comments

Register For An Avatar/Reader Blog | Commenting Policy

Before commenting, please recite:

Grant me the serenity to ignore the trolls,
the courage to debate with honest opponents,
and the wisdom to know the difference.

blog comments powered by Disqus