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United States News Title: Bonus Payments to City Retirees Are Drawing Ire As San Francisco struggles under ballooning pension and health care costs, the citys retirees will receive unexpected cost-of-living bonuses totaling $170 million. The citys anticipated budget deficit for the coming year is $360 million. A nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization providing local coverage of the San Francisco Bay Area for The New York Times. To join the conversation about this article, go to baycitizen.org. A political battle has raged over the citys growing retirement obligations. In November, Proposition B, which would have required city workers to contribute more toward their pensions and benefits, was soundly defeated. The measures opponents every major elected official and energetic public-employee unions said fears about the pension fund were overblown. Meanwhile, the funds fundamentals deteriorated as it gradually accounted for its huge losses in the stock market crash. It took in $414 million in contributions in 2010 but paid out $819 million. On Jan. 4, an actuarial firm reported that the $13.1 billion San Francisco Employees Retirement System now had an unfunded liability of $1.6 billion triple its shortfall a year earlier. Gary A. Amelio, the systems chief since January 2010, did not respond to questions. In spite of the shortfall, Mr. Amelio and the systems board quietly decreed in mid-December that excess earnings on investments in 2010 entitled retirees to an unexpected cost-of- living increase of as much as 3.5 percent this year. The special $170 million bonus is in excess of regular cost-of-living adjustments, or COLAs. The irony of issuing bonus payments to retirees at a time the pension fund is a billion dollars down is insane. It really is, said Jeff Adachi, San Franciscos public defender and the chief proponent of Proposition B, which he says would have saved the city $120 million this year. Its like a bankrupt corporation paying dividends to its shareholders. Until 2005, the city paid nothing into the pension fund because the fund had more assets than long-term liabilities and the excess investment income more than covered its expenses. During those flush years, the benefits were made increasingly generous, especially to the police and fire departments. But the system has posted investment losses for 4 of the last 10 years. The city is required to inject cash if necessary to pay its retirees. This year, it will pay $325 million, or 13.6 percent of the total payroll of $2.4 billion. In the coming fiscal year, it will pay 18.1 percent about $434 million. Three years from now, according to the actuarial report, the city will be paying 28.8 percent of payroll, or about $691 million. The citys estimated budget shortfall for the coming fiscal year is $360 million. If not for its growing pension-fund contributions, the city might not face a budget crisis at all. No one foresaw this event, with the pension fund going down and all of a sudden a 3.5 percent raise to retired people, said Thomas J. OConnor, head of the powerful firefighters union and a participant in a group of city leaders and union officials trying to come up with a more palatable proposal to trim the citys employee costs. The $170 million arose from a provision in a 2008 ballot initiative that required newly hired employees to contribute more toward benefit costs. To win support, the initiative contained a promise of increased bonus payments to retirees if the pension funds performance exceeded its target. The pension system posted a huge loss in the 2008-9 fiscal year, so it was unsurprising that it exceeded its 7.75 percent target return the following year when the market improved. Mr. OConnor seems open to compromise. In these times, with the overall health of the fund, we could see COLAs being deferred for a time until the fund is solvent again, he said. No one imagined wed be at this point giving a raise to people. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: All (#0)
. The libTURD pigs and favored classes NEVER step away from the trough do they? The problem is that sooner or later you run out of other people's money to steal. libTURDS thy name is HYPOCRITE!
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