An unfair approach to pension reform
An unfair approach to pension reform
For 33 years, Clyde Tome served the city of Detroit as a firefighter. Every day he was on duty he knew his life was on the line; in one encounter with riot fires, Tome watched a colleague die. Another time, he saw a nearby fireman killed in a random shooting. For his commitment, Tome counted...
By John Tillman
Five reasons why Madigan’s pension fix is a step backward
Five reasons why Madigan’s pension fix is a step backward
There’s immense pressure on Illinois legislators to pass a pension bill. With the state pension system nearing insolvency and credit agencies warning of further downgrades, the perceived wisdom is that any pension fix, no matter how small, is a “step forward” that must be passed. But when it comes to pension reform in Illinois, that...
Time to end Illinois lawmaker pensions
Time to end Illinois lawmaker pensions
The General Assembly Retirement System, which provides pensions to retired legislators, is broke.
By Ted Dabrowski
Illinois pensions need to become more transparent
Illinois pensions need to become more transparent
The history of state government pensions in Illinois is fairly simple. Politicians discover that pension funds are running a deficit. Those same politicians develop a plan to eliminate the deficit, which typically involves Illinois taxpayers putting in more money. Taxpayers pony up the funds. The deficit, somehow, gets worse. In 1994, the five state-run pension...
By Paul Kersey
More than 50% of Illinois’ nearly 200K government pensioners retired at age 59 or younger
More than 50% of Illinois’ nearly 200K government pensioners retired at age 59 or younger
Illinois government workers are able to retire before the age of 60 while collecting most of their final average salary.
By Ted Dabrowski
Pension reform: Time to means test COLAs
Pension reform: Time to means test COLAs
Illinois’ pension conference committee is once again rumored to be nearing a “fix” for the state’s pension mess. But if the pension conference committee is serious about saving the pensions of state retirees and workers who have dedicated their careers to public work, they will put an end to cost-of-living-adjustments, or COLAs, for government retirees...
By Ted Dabrowski
Lessons from Vallejo: Don’t avoid pension reforms
Lessons from Vallejo: Don’t avoid pension reforms
Illinois legislators and local officials could learn a thing or two from California cities that have buckled under the weight of too much debt. The first is if they don’t implement reforms early enough, bankruptcy for the city of Chicago and other municipalities may be unavoidable. In California, both Stockton and San Bernardino were forced...
By Ted Dabrowski
Illinois’ state government pension crisis and the top 100 pensioners
Illinois’ state government pension crisis and the top 100 pensioners
Illinois’ current unfunded state government pension liabilities total approximately $200 billion under Moody’s Investors Service’s new methodology. The Illinois Policy Institute estimates that the state’s pension funding ratio is currently less than 25 percent, meaning the state has the worst-funded pension system in the nation. Buried within this massive financial obligation are thousands of current...
By Justin Hegy
Illinois will pay out $620 billion in pension benefits over the next 32 years
Illinois will pay out $620 billion in pension benefits over the next 32 years
Opponents of pension reform try to downplay Illinois’ $100 billion in official pension debt because it’s “not due at one point in time.” They like to compare the pension debt to a “mortgage,” which is paid over 30 years. But this argument is misleading, and here’s why: Illinois isn’t on the hook for just $100...
Cook County’s debt downgraded: pension liabilities double under Moody’s new methodology
Cook County’s debt downgraded: pension liabilities double under Moody’s new methodology
Chicago’s fiscal crisis just got worse. Last month, the city received a rare triple-notch downgrade from Moody’s Investors Service, to A3 from Aa3. Now, Chicago’s parent government, Cook County, has received a downgrade of its own. Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Cook County’s general obligation bond rating to A1 from Aa3 due to the county’s “growing...
By Ted Dabrowski
Illinois taxpayer contributions to state pensions skyrocket
Illinois taxpayer contributions to state pensions skyrocket
Detroit’s recent bankruptcy is sending cities and states a warning: taxpayers shouldn’t be taken for granted. Unfortunately, Illinois’ long-term pension plan does exactly that. Springfield still believes that taxpayers are passive sources of revenue. While state worker contributions to Illinois’ five pension systems have gone up by 75 percent since 1998, taxpayer contributions have gone...
By John Klingner
7 in 10 Fortune 100 companies provide only defined contribution, 401(k)-style retirement plans
7 in 10 Fortune 100 companies provide only defined contribution, 401(k)-style retirement plans
Suburban Chicago-based NorthShore University HealthSystem announced last month that it will “will freeze its employee pension plan as of Dec. 31 and shift all employees to a defined contribution savings plan.” The NorthShore hospital system isn’t the only private company making this move — Boeing, American Airlinesand Verizon each dropped their defined benefit plans for defined contribution retirement systems. The core...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Alaska’s bold solution to its pension crisis
Alaska’s bold solution to its pension crisis
Illinois has the nation’s worst-funded pensions. Each Illinois household can expect to pay more than $40,000 in additional taxes to cover the pension shortfall if no reforms are passed. The size of the pension crisis demands that state lawmakers pass the boldest reforms in the country. Fortunately, Illinois lawmakers can look to the examples other states have...
Five reasons why the university pension plan won’t solve Illinois’ crisis
Five reasons why the university pension plan won’t solve Illinois’ crisis
The Institute of Government and Public Affairs, or IGPA, a university-based research organization, recently developed a pension plan for Illinois. That plan was presented at a pension conference committee hearing earlier this month. But it’s not the type of reform Illinois’ needs. The IGPA plan fails to solve Illinois’ pension problem. Here are five reasons...
By Benjamin VanMetre