EDITORIAL: Public pension nightmare is getting worse
The league is telling cities to consider local sales tax measures and to negotiate with labor unions to force current employees to pay more into pension plans.
Others are counting on a court ruling to reduce pension costs for those still working. Gov.
Unions and management retirees will fight any attempt to cut benefits. And it will be difficult to tell people who have based retirement plans on the "certainty" of a pension that they might have to wait. But it's also difficult to ask taxpayers to be sympathetic after learning that CalPERS pays more than 30 retirees in excess of
Yes, it's easy to blame public-employee unions. In 1999, they convinced Gov.
Despite a return 11.2 percent last year, returns were often much lower -- like the 0.6 in 2016. Far more frequently, investment returns failed to meet CalPERS' outsized expectations, leaving a hole on balance sheets. Local governments are required to fill those funding holes for their employees.
It also helps that in 2016 CalPERS lowered its expected return rates to more realistic figures. But that doesn't help the 451 California cities that are looking up from the bottom of those pension holes.
Bolting CalPERS won't work. The city of
Many counties are at least a little better off.
The worst is yet to come. As the federal government goes deeper into debt, a downturn is inevitable. When that happens, what will cities do? They'll cut. Deeply.
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