Thousands of Philadelphia-area Acme workers, retirees at risk of losing their pensions
The 33,000 members of the UFCW Tri-State plan are among the 1.5 million workers in multiemployer pension plans nationwide facing dissolution within the next decade. Already 120 plans have shut down and received
The federal agency has subsidized so many plans that it is now expected to run out of money itself by 2025.
"If there's no pension reform, then more plans will end up in insolvency," said Wendell Young IV, president of
The reform Young and many labor leaders are pushing is the Butch Lewis Act, which would allow for the creation of a new federal agency to issue bonds and give 30-year loans to struggling plans. The plan trustees would use the loans to pay their liabilities. The bipartisan bill was introduced in the
Critics say the loans would be a government bailout for labor unions.
"It really doesn't solve the problem," Mitchell said. "We have to stop the bleeding right away and I think that the plans that are underfunded so dramatically should be frozen, should be shut down."
One of the key problems with the UFCW Tri-State plan and many others like it is that there are fewer than 10,000 active workers for whom employers are paying into the plan and more than 23,000 currently receiving a pension or owed one at retirement age.
So, unless
"No employer wants to come in because they will be stuck with the liability," Young said.
The tri-state plan, which covers grocery workers in
At the beginning, three major grocers paid into the plan -- Food Fair,
"If a large base of employers leaves the fund, it leaves the rest of the employers holding the bag for the liability," Young said.
When the stores went bankrupt, they weren't required to make the plan whole for their pension debt.
Brown joined one of the local's smaller plans, the
The tri-state plan, on the other hand, as of last year had 43 percent of the
The board overseeing the tri-state plan increased employer contribution rates and reduced future benefits for workers starting in 2000. But after the stock market crash in 2008, much of the plan's assets were wiped out. It has not recovered.
Retirees in failing plans are frustrated. One person who worked for nearly 30 years at
"I do need my pension ... but that seems like it's out of my control. I'm very pissed about it," the retiree, who asked to not be named for fear of retribution, said. "The union boys earn more than a fair living. It's their job to make sure the pensions stay on track, but at best they can't even do that."
"Some of these jobs are very physically demanding," Givan said. "So it's a real hardship for them to have planned on a retirement that they may not be able to have."
"I'm just glad I have a job," Kephart, 48, said as he took a smoke break out back. He does some cleaning and other side jobs to pay the bills.
Kephart wasn't surprised to hear the grim news on the pension plan. Before the store was an
Young, the
"We're asking for some relief," from
___
(c)2019 The Philadelphia Inquirer
Visit The Philadelphia Inquirer at www.philly.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
You got the new house! Now, how to afford the furniture?
Back home, Democrats hear a lot, or not much, on impeachment
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News