3.5 PENSION COST

SSD TOTAL
EXPENDITURES
COMPENSATION COMP.  %
 TOT.EXP.
ENROLLMENT
ADM.
2013 Fo $82.3 MILLION $70.6 MILLION 86%  
2012 Fo $79.9 MILLION $68.2 MILLION 85%  
2011 Fo $77.6 MILLION $65.7 MILLION 85%  
2010 Fo $75.3 MILLION $63.7 MILLION 85%  
2009 Fo $73.1 MILLION $61.6 MILLION 84%  
2008 A $70.0 MILLION $58.8 MILLION 84% 5480
2007 A $67.8 MILLION $57.8 MILLION 85% 5397
2006 A $66.7 MILLION $56.0 MILLION 84% 5505

Fo – Oct. 2008 forecast; A – actual; Compensation – wages, pension, insurance. 1997 enrollment – 6204

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Don’t mention that pension

In Ohio, secrecy shrouds many facts about public employees’ retirement benefits

Sunday, June 20, 2010  02:58 AM

AKRON BEACON JOURNAL

Despite spending more than $4 billion annually on state and local government pensions, Ohio taxpayers have little access to retirement records.

They cannot find out how much they paid toward workers’ pensions or how much taxpayer money a retiree receives. They can’t know how well the pension systems track potential abuse, or worse, if they are being taken advantage of.

And state lawmakers are being asked to consider adjustments to those systems at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars a year without details being public.

Ohioans now pay into a fund for benefits for nearly 400,000 public retirees. Yet state law prevents Ohio’s five public pension systems from disclosing much about their retirement earnings.

“It’s outrageous. That is not the kind of transparency that we need in government,” said Matt Mayer, president of the Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions in Columbus.

“These gold-plated pensions are one of the greatest drivers of public government, and if we can’t determine how we are compensating these folks with taxpayer money, we can’t fix the ever-increasing cost of government,” Mayer said.

But not everyone is upset. Many defend keeping the information private, saying that the retirees are no longer public workers and their pension income isn’t the public’s business.

Ohio’s pension systems date to 1920. In the beginning, financial records for individual retirees were considered public documents. But the state legislature moved in 1965 and 1976 – just as it significantly improved benefits – to exempt them from public view.

Today, the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System, State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio and School Employees Retirement System of Ohio will release the names and addresses of retirees and members but nothing else. The Ohio Police & Fire Pension Fund and the Ohio State Highway Patrol Retirement System will reveal nothing about individual retirees – not even their names.

The five systems denied public records requests for financial information about retirees. The requests were filed on behalf of the state’s eight largest newspapers.

Unlike Ohio, at least 21 states – including New York, Florida and Illinois – consider financial benefits for retirees a matter of public record. At least 26 states prohibit the release of such information. Other states did not return calls.

Government watchdog groups and the media in the open states have exposed eye-popping pensions and potential abuses – details that are hidden from Ohioans.

A Chicago Sun-Times investigation last year found three Illinois public employees who topped $3 million in pension benefits since retiring. Others earned more than their final salaries, thanks to automatic 3 percent annual increases.

The California Foundation for Fiscal Responsibility sued to obtain pension records and created an online database of public retirees earning more than $100,000 a year. Taxpayers have been shocked to learn how public employees play the system, said Marcia Fritz, the group’s president.

There are many stories about public workers in Ohio playing the system.

Pensions are awarded based on the highest three years of salary, although there are proposals to raise that to five. Some individuals spike their salaries with overtime or other pay in those final years to boost their pensions.

Others might work low-paying jobs for years and then nab a high-paid political position just before they retire, meaning they paid little toward their large pension check. In other cases, workers retire and immediately return to the same public job, improving their personal income by collecting a paycheck and pension at the same time.

State Reps. Matt Lundy, D-Elyria, and Stephen Dyer, D-Green, said it would be easier for lawmakers considering reforms if financial details were available.

“You can’t make a tough decision if you don’t have all the information,” Lundy said. “It’s not a taxpayer-friendly system.”

Dyer said he and Lundy are drafting legislation to require more openness based on the Ohio Newspaper Organization inquiry.

William Estabrook, executive director of the police and fire pension fund, said that he wouldn’t have a problem with making some financial records public, but that the fund watches for potential abuses. Last year, the pension board banned the practice of packing on overtime to boost salaries and ultimately, pensions, in the final three years of employment.

PERS, the largest pension system with nearly 171,000 retirees, and the one most ripe for political abuse, did not respond to multiple requests to discuss the issue of public records.

rarmon@thebeaconjournal.com

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Public School Teacher Retirement Costs Significan=======tly Higher than in Private Sector

Employer contributions to retirement benefits for public school teachers in 2008 were substantially higher than for private professionals, a group that includes lawyers, physicians, financial managers, engineers, computer programmers, and others.  Employer contributions to teachers were over 14% of earnings in 2008 compared to 10% for the private sector.

According to the most recent data from the U. S. Department of Education, the nation’s public schools spent $59 billion in benefits for instructional personnel, adding about 32 percent to salaries
(Note: Sycamore added 33 percent to salaries. It forecasts adding 34, 36, 37, 39 and 40 percent to salaries in the 2009 through 2013 period.)

The sharp downturn in the economy has contributed to a precipitous fall in the market value of pension funds. Barring a major market recovery, teacher pension funds across the country will have significantly larger unfunded liabilities, and the gap in pension benefit costs is likely to widen further. This will be a further burden for K-12 school districts in coming years.

http://www.hoover.org/publications/ednext/Teacher_Retirement_Benefits.html
Read “Teacher Retirement Benefits” now available online at www.EducationNext.org.   SPRING 2009

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THE OHIO EDUCATION GADFLY

A Bi-Weekly Bulletin of News and Analysis from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute
Volume 3, Number 27. September 16, 2009

 

State’s retirement systems need more than a mere nip and tuck

Two years ago the Thomas B. Fordham Institute issued a report critical of the financial sustainability of the State Teachers Retirement System (STRS) and the adverse effects the system’s benefits policy has on recruiting young teachers.

The June 2007 report noted the system’s unfunded liability was $19.4 billion, which then represented a debt of over $4,300 per Ohio household.”At current contribution rates, STRS actuaries estimate that it will take 47.2 years to amortize the unfunded liability, a funding period that exceeds the 30-year requirement established in state law (see here),” the report noted. This was at a time when the Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at almost 14,000. Today it stands at about 9,500.

When our report came out, STRS officials angrily denied problems and essentially labeled Fordham and the report’s authors — the well-respected economists Robert Costrell and Mike Podgursky — scaremongers.

But what a difference a couple of years make. Last week, STRS Executive Director Michael Nehf stood in front of lawmakers and state officials and admitted that without a massive infusion of taxpayers’ dollars and trimming and adjusting of benefits, the fund eventually would be bankrupt.

“If no changes are made we will eventually be unable to pay benefits,” Nehf told the Ohio Retirement Study Council. The timeline for amortizing the unfunded liability is now set at infinity (see here).
As far as Ohio education is concerned, the STRS plan affects more than just teachers, school districts and taxpayers. The very future of our K-12 education system is at stake if you believe that smart, talented young teachers make for good schools. The whole idea behind teacher compensation has been to scrimp on upfront pay for new teachers, promising them a nice, taxpayer guaranteed pension down the road.

As was noted in our 2007 report, “the system is out of step with the state’s current teacher needs, labor markets, and career patterns. While Ohio’s teacher retirement system provides impressive benefits to teachers who make it through a 30-year career, these benefits come at a serious cost to younger system members, to taxpayers, and to the state. For instance, teachers who separate from the system before the 25 or 30-year mark face substantial losses in pension wealth. Thus the system contains potent and perverse incentives that seriously hinder teacher recruitment and mobility, and that foster generational inequities between younger and older teachers.”

Last week, however, the emphasis was on retirees and the here and now. It was clear that while the pension funds may consider the measures they are contemplating tough, the changes are little more than tinkering with an archaic system. Raising the contribution rates on teachers and school districts may help in the short-term but it does nothing to deal with the long-term challenges facing a system that is not only too pricey to sustain in its current manifestation, but also in need of an overhaul to reflect longer life-expectancies and changing labor markets.

Consider the average retirement age for Ohio teachers is 58 years – well below the current minimum age for regular retirement in the Social Security system (65.5, rising to 67 in coming years). The fact that Ohio teachers retire so early also gives rise to a demand for health insurance, since Medicare coverage does not begin until 65.

Exactly, how much the current changes requested by the STRS and the state’s four other public pension systems will ultimately cost taxpayers will become increasingly clear in coming months. Certainly, some kind of General Assembly action is likely given the political clout of the pension funds and the associated state employee unions like the Ohio Education Association and the Ohio Federation of Teachers.

Just meeting the request of the hemorrhaging STRS and the police and fire funds is likely to cost taxpayers at least $1 billion. This is at a time of fiscal crisis for state government. The state budget came together only after painful cuts to numerous social services, an infusion of $5 billion in one-time federal stimulus money, and $2 billion raised through what the Columbus Dispatch called “Peter-to-Paul fund transfers, accounting tricks and raids on specialized funds” (see here).

“For the overall legislature it’s a tough sell,” said retirement council member State Rep. Lynn Wachtmann (R-Napoleon). “But don’t underestimate the political power of the OEA. There’s no end to their greed in asking taxpayers for more money.”

Listening to the pension fund executives outline their plans made clear that there wasn’t much more than a cursory nod to the state and the nation’s larger economic woes. Lest it be forgotten, many Ohioans have seen their 401(k)s shrink by close to half in the last two years and no one is bailing these folks out. Many have seen their property values collapse (especially Ohioans living in cities), while 11 percent of the state’s adults are unemployed.

Little was said about the plight of Ohioans who will be footing the bill for the increased employer contributions for teachers and other public servants. Only the School Employees Retirement System (the janitors and bus drivers) paid any attention to the rest of us and then mostly by pointing out that their people are the lowest paid, receive the lowest pensions and are usually the first to be laid off in times of trouble.

Scarier, however, is that public pension funds have still not figured out they are gambling with taxpayer dollars. Officials are still relying on eight percent investment returns, despite the massive losses they suffered in the last 12 months. In fact, the STRS had been using a nine percent rate until earlier this year. An eight percent rate is very common in public investment circles but is it realistic?

As economists have pointed out, despite the partial recovery in financial markets, basing pension benefits on an eight percent return is dangerous (see here). Private pension funds, for example, base their benefits on a return in the neighborhood of six percent, according to an expert at the Boston College Center for Retirement Growth. That may not seem like much of a difference but, over decades, it’s literally billions of dollars.

Jay Greene, a pension expert from the University of Arkansas, has pointed out that it makes far more sense to gauge growth, and benefit payments, on the risk-free but lower rate of long-term U.S. Treasury bonds. That might be more realistic, especially given the recent meltdown, but it would hardly fly in the public pension industry, where, remember, the promise of a big pension over several decades is the norm. A teacher pension that would have been 70 percent funded at eight percent would drop to 44 percent funded with a bond rate of four percent.

To get a significantly higher return requires taking on far more risk. Of course, what teacher pension funds and other public employee pension funds have been doing is gambling that the market will rebound and deliver their big payouts. The STRS portfolio dropped $24 billion from the end of its 2007 fiscal year through June 30 of this year (see here), yet the state constitution guarantees all promised pension benefits (but not healthcare) will be paid in full.

Now taxpayers are about to be asked to bail out the STRS and protect its generous benefits and backfill market loses. The STRS, for example, wants its members and school districts to pay an extra 2.5 percent each raising member contributions to 12.5 percent and school districts’ to 16.5 percent. The police and fire fund proposal calls for an increase in the payments made by municipalities that eventually would reach 25 percent, while employees would pay 2 percent more.

In exchange, the pension funds promise to tighten benefits. The STRS promises to change the way final average salaries are calculated, increasing years for eligibility, changing the benefit formula and reducing the annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). But there’s no real effort to address the larger problem–that teachers and other public sector employees can retire far younger than most of their fellow citizens and receive a pension that is far more generous than most Americans receive.

As we wrote in 2007, “Ohio’s teacher system was designed for a different era (one in which employees were far less mobile), and for a time when life expectancies were considerably shorter than they are today. Now, many new retirees can expect to collect pensions for more years than they taught. These incongruities are expensive, and the costs rise further when relatively young people (some in their early fifties) retire.”

Boston University economist Laurence J. Kotlikoff compares the running of state pension funds to a Ponzi scheme even in the best of times. In a paper (see here) published earlier this year by the National Center on Performance Incentives, he compares pension fund operations to a legal version of the cataclysmic investment fraud perpetrated by imprisoned New York City financier Bernard Madoff.

Kotlikoff wrote “…if these plans and the governments that explicitly or implicitly back them are in as bad a shape as appears to be the case then the plans are likely to renege on their commitments to young and middle age teachers in precisely the same manner that corporate America has been reneging on its obligations to its workers.”

Kotikoff urges school districts to actually pay young teachers more while promising less in retirements. “The alternative — continuing to run Ponzi schemes whose ultimate debacle is only a matter of time — will continue to leave both teachers and taxpayers at great risk.” For example, despite the run up in stock prices that pension funds like to tout, in 2007, three in five teacher pension plans in the United States were underfunded by at least 20 percent.

In this light, the parade of pension fund executives last week in Columbus was inevitable as is a big part of their solution — more taxpayer dollars to meet their benefits. They’re also going after younger teachers by asking for higher contribution rates from them. Young teachers will have to pay those higher rates the longest and this is sure to come at lower starting salaries.

This is surely a disincentive to enticing the best-and-brightest young Ohioans to teach. Many young teachers and young prospective teachers, who are paying off student loans, attempting to start families, and hoping to buy homes, might prefer more of their compensation up front rather than see it deferred into a system from which they may well never benefit.

For purposes of teacher quality and fairness across the generations, Ohio’s lawmakers should use the current crisis with the STRS system — and the other state retirement systems — to ask tough questions and debate tough changes. Here are five to consider:

  1. Should defined benefit plans for public employees be phased out or drastically curtailed to reduce the risk to taxpayers and future generations?
  2. Should the state move towards defined contribution plans and/or cash balance plans as most of the private sector has in America?
  3. Is it fair for public sector employees to expect retirement at 54 or 55 when most Americans are looking at retirement ages of 65 or 67?
  4. Can STRS and the other retirement systems continue to offer generous healthcare coverage that provides 75 percent of the cost of insurance premiums for most retired teachers?
  5. Is the current system transparent? Can the STRS trustees, who are mostly teachers or former teachers themselves, really make the hard decisions necessary to reform their retirement system?

Taxpayers and pension-fund members deserve answers to these questions and only by rejecting any request for more taxpayer dollars will we actually get answers that are honest.

3 Responses to “3.5 PENSION COST”

  1. Administrator says:

    “STRS has asked the legislature to increase public contributions to the (pension) fund from 14 percent of teacher and administrator salaries to 16.5 percent over the next few years.” Source: The Enquirer 8/13/10, C2

  2. propertyowner333 says:

    This week, the State Teachers Retirement Board held its monthly meeting. Following the regularly scheduled meetings, a report titled “Board News” is posted on the STRS Ohio Web site, as well as mailed to a number of members and education organization representatives who have requested it. As a registrant of the STRS Ohio news e-mail list, you will also receive this report each month. The January report follows.

    JANUARY BOARD NEWS

    OTHER STRS OHIO NEWS 1/15/2010

    RETIREMENT SYSTEMS STRESS VALUE OF DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS
    In the past few weeks, Ohio’s major newspapers have written about Ohio’s public pension plans and their future sustainability. Adding to the discussion have been several editorials, as well as “letters to the editor” – both pro and con – regarding the value and funding of the Defined Benefit Plans available to Ohio’s public employees. Before these articles ran, STRS Ohio reiterated its commitment to the Defined Benefit Plan with its members through its Web site and e-mail news service. In addition, the executive directors of the five Ohio systems shared the following message with key legislators.

    DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS ARE GOOD FOR THEIR MEMBERS AND GOOD FOR OHIO
    For many decades, the public employees of Ohio have been provided with dependable retirement income during economic ups and downs. Public employers have had the ability to recruit and retain workers and budget for a predictable contribution rate. The vast majority of these Ohioans’ retirement security has been provided through the investment returns earned by Ohio’s five public pension plans. The balance is provided by contributions from the members and their employers. At the conclusion of their public service careers, members receive a pension benefit that is paid in lieu of Social Security. Going forward, the public pension plans can continue to provide this valued financial security by making reasonable, measured changes.

    The Defined Benefit Plans offered by OPERS, STRS Ohio, SERS, Highway Patrol Retirement System and Ohio Police & Fire have benefited Ohio’s public employees, this state and all taxpayers.

    - Defined Benefit Plans provide financial protection for both plan members and taxpayers. Members are provided a lifetime benefit they won’t outlive – a problem now faced by so many whose savings or 401(k) plans have been depleted in this recession and now face the possibility of slipping into poverty in their “golden years,” having to turn to taxpayer-funded public assistance, Medicaid or social services. The state is already struggling to budget the higher level of resources to cover the new people seeking assistance.

    - Defined Benefit Plans are both efficient and economical. A 2008 National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS) report found that a defined benefit pension can deliver the same retirement income at 46% lower costs than an individual defined contribution account due to pooling of investment risk, continual diversification of assets and professional investment management.

    - Defined Benefit Plans provide a stable source of revenue for Ohio’s local economies. According to NIRS, in 2006 nearly 360,000 residents of Ohio received a total of $8.41 billion in pension benefits from state and local pension plans, with $8.29 billion paid from plans within the state and the remainder originating from plans in other states.

    - Defined Benefit Plans support Ohio workers. NIRS has also reported that retiree expenditures stemming from the pension plan payments in 2006 supported more than 79,000 Ohio jobs that paid $4.3 billion in wages and salaries.

    - Defined Benefit Plans support the services provided by local, state and federal governments through the taxes paid on these pensions. In 2006, taxes paid by retirees and beneficiaries in Ohio directly out of pension payments, as well as taxes attributable to direct, indirect and induced expenditures, accounted for $702.5 million in state of Ohio and local tax revenue, according to NIRS.

    - Defined Benefit Plans play a critical role in reducing the risk of poverty and hardship among older individuals. Defined benefit pension income saved taxpayers $7.3 billion in public assistance expenditures nationally in 2006 alone because retirees had a regular monthly pension payment that helped sustain them above the poverty level.

    The public pension plans in Ohio have a history of remaining sustainable with reasonable, measured changes. Each system has taken the prudent and responsible step to present proposals that recognize the need to look at options, including adjusting benefits that acknowledge the fact that people are living longer. The legislative process is important to provide plan stability for the systems’ members, local economies and all Ohioans.

    The starting point for discussions must be the preservation of the Defined Benefit Plan offered by each system. These plans are major economic drivers for the state; are administratively efficient and economical; and provide a stable retirement income for public workers in Ohio, thereby reducing the burden on taxpayers and Social Security.

    For further information about NIRS reports, visit http://www.nirsonline.org.

  3. propertyowner333 says:

    Read Cinti Enquirer 1/3/2010 articles:

    “Public workers under fire for cost of pensions” by James Nash and “Even more cuts in benefits possible for city’s workers” by Barry M. Horstman.

    1/9/10 article, “City pensions have 17 years… CONSULTANT LISTS PAINFUL OPTIONS”

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