No Agreement Yet on Pension Reform

pension-reform-stockAs local communities like Davis face devastating budget cuts, protracted labor strife, and even bankruptcy due to a retirement pension crisis, leaders in Sacramento are moving closer but have failed to reach an agreement on pension reform.

Last February the governor unveiled the statutory and constitutional language to implement the 12-point pension reform plan he presented last October.

Two critical pieces of that plan seem to be points of contention. One is raising the retirement age to 67 and the other is the creation of a 401(k)-style defined contribution plan that the governor’s office claims will reduce the risks on public agencies and place the entire risk of loss on investments on employees.

“The governor could not agree to some of the changes in the pension counterproposal,” Governor Brown’s spokesman Gil Duran said in a statement. “These complex issues cannot be resolved in two days and he has asked the Legislature to continue to work with him over the recess to resolve the substantial differences.”

In a statement from Assembly Speaker John Perez, “The Assembly has been working diligently to finalize a pension proposal that not only satisfies the 12 points of the Governor’s plan, but also goes further in finding needed reforms that will create real savings, help ensure financially strong and fiscally responsible pension systems in California, and prove fair to taxpayers and retirees.”

“This is a complex issue that requires a thoughtful approach, and we will continue to work with the Governor and our colleagues in the Senate to put forward and pass a proposal by the end of the legislative session,” the Speaker added.

“I believe that all public employees should have a pension plan that strikes a fair balance between a guaranteed benefit and a benefit subject to investment risk. The ‘hybrid’ plan I am proposing will include a reduced defined benefit component and a defined contribution component that will be managed professionally to reduce the risk of employee investment loss,” said the governor last winter.

It would also increase the retirement age to 67, the same age as social security, and it would require three-year final compensation to be the guide in order to stop spiking.

“Raising the retirement age will reduce the amount of time retirement benefits must be paid and will significantly reduce retiree health care premium costs. Employees will have fewer, if any, years between retirement and reaching the age of Medicare eligibility, when a substantial portion of retiree health care costs shift to the federal government under Medicare,” the governor said.

Assemblymember Warran Furutani, who chairs the Legislature’s pension committee, indicated that while the Democrats can support most of the governor’s proposals, they disagree on how to raise the retirement age and also want changes to the hybrid pension system.

The Democrats said they are willing to cap pensions but support a defined benefit program called the “cash balance plan,” which would be tied to a lower guaranteed interest rate to supplement pensions.

Democrats also oppose a hard raise of the retirement age, but are willing to have reduced benefits for early retirees.

“It’s going to be a sliding scale with a minimum of hurt for the people that retire early,” Assemblymember Furutani said. “If you stayed until 67, you’ll be able to get a sweetened amount that’s extra.”

That means that the Democrats are agreeable to some of the other key provisions of the bill, including a shift away from pension formulas being based on the final year’s pay.  The governor’s proposal moves it to a three-year average.

As the governor argued, “That one-year rule encourages games and gimmicks in the last year of employment that artificially increase the compensation used to determine pension benefits.”

It would also calculate benefits based on regular and recurring pay as another way to stop spiking, by manipulating benefits through the supplementing of salaries with special bonuses, unused vacation time, excessive overtime and other pay perks.

His plan would limit post-retirement employment.

“Retired employees often have experience that can deliver real value to public employers, though, so striking a reasonable balance in limiting post-retirement employment is appropriate,” the governor said.  “My plan will limit all employees who retire from public service to working 960 hours or 120 days per year for a public employer. It also will prohibit all retired employees who serve on public boards and commissions from earning any retirement benefits for that service.”

From our standpoint, the Democrats’ compromise on the retirement age may work.  We would have to calculate the numbers.  By encouraging later retirement, it would also ease the burden for extra coverage of medical benefits.

Assembly Speaker John Perez said Democrats would keep working on passing a proposal before the legislative session wraps up at the end of August. Although Republicans support Brown’s plan, the Democratic governor needs support from members of his own party to pass legislation.

Democrats need to act fast if they want to avoid more draconian measures to be put on a ballot before the voters.

The Legislative Analyst’s Office calculates pension contributions accounted for 2.4 percent of state spending in 2006. It’s expected to reach 3.9 percent of this year’s $91.3 billion budget.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the nation’s largest public pension fund, has an unfunded liability of around $85 billion. The California State Teachers’ Retirement System has about $64.5 billion in unfunded liabilities.

—David M. Greenwald reporting

Author

  • David Greenwald

    Greenwald is the founder, editor, and executive director of the Davis Vanguard. He founded the Vanguard in 2006. David Greenwald moved to Davis in 1996 to attend Graduate School at UC Davis in Political Science. He lives in South Davis with his wife Cecilia Escamilla Greenwald and three children.

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Budget/Fiscal

6 comments

  1. [quote]The ‘hybrid’ plan I am proposing will include a reduced defined benefit component and a defined contribution component that will be managed professionally to reduce the risk of employee investment loss,” said the governor last winter.[/quote]

    “managed professionally” to reduce the risk of loss? We’ve seen how well that has worked out in the past. I suspect this is more of a “hope” than a “promise”…

    [quote]By encouraging later retirement, it would also ease the burden for extra coverage of medical benefits.
    [/quote]

    I’m still not seeing this one. If the person has to be covered w health benefits whether they are still working or if they are retired, I don’t see where the savings are. There was a discussion which gave an example of paying three people at once, the retiree, the person that replace him/her, and if they retired early the person who replaced him/her, but it was conceded that such instances are probably rare…

    [quote]The Legislative Analyst’s Office calculates pension contributions accounted for 2.4 percent of state spending in 2006. It’s expected to reach 3.9 percent of this year’s $91.3 billion budget.[/quote]

    So pension reform will save what percent of the budget?

  2. Most of the pension reform will have no immediate impact on the budget. Why? Because most of it doesn’t impact current workers, it will however fix the system down the line.

  3. Pension reform will only help fix the budget if high priced positions aren’t created as well. Case in point, Davis reduces the staff by nine, only to replace them with this –

    Administrative Services Director $10,198.40 – $12,396.21

  4. [quote]Most of the pension reform will have no immediate impact on the budget. Why? Because most of it doesn’t impact current workers, it will however fix the system down the line.[/quote]

    Will it? I have my doubts. My guess is that this reform will only nibble away at the edges at best if it does anything at all. And as you say, it does nothing for the current budget problems…

  5. “Will it? I have my doubts.”

    You could be right. I would say that the reforms are aimed in the right direction but most of them will not have immediate impact.

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