Sunday, March 06, 2011
From John Curry, March 6, 2011
So, active educators...just how much do STRS retirees have to pay for their (and their spouse's) health care through STRS? I'll give you a clue...right now, it's over $1,300 per month for the retiree and retiree's spouse (for an 80/20 PPO) if both are under the age of 65! If you are paying little or noting under your current teaching contract STAY IN TEACHING UNTIL YOU AND/OR YOUR SPOUSE REACHES 65 as you are getting a bargain......no, you are getting "a steal." For some reason, when I tell actives this, they look at me in disbelief.....like deer staring into automobile headlights. TRUST ME, ACTIVES, IT IS TRUE!
John
"Tom Curtis of Stark County said when he retired from teaching in 1998 he paid just $30 a month for medical coverage for him and his wife. By 2004, STRS had stopped subsidizing spouses and reduced the subsidy for retirees. Curtis’ share now tops $14,000 a year, he said."
Retirees paying more for their health care
Medical bills are eating up more money than is being set aside to cover rising costs
DAYTON DAILY NEWS, January 3, 2010
By Laura A. Bischoff, Staff Writer
COLUMBUS — In 1974, the Ohio Police & Fire Pension Fund voluntarily started giving health care coverage to retired cops and firefighters. At the time, it was a bargain — $3 million.
But fast forward 34 years and the cost has spiked to $153.4 million a year. That doesn’t even count the higher co-pays, premiums and deductibles that retirees are paying out of their own pockets.
Now OP&F wants taxpayers to shell out more toward the retirement system for police and firefighters, in part because of high health care costs. Between the five public pension systems in Ohio, health care costs run $2.2 billion a year to cover 375,000 people.
"We know that health care costs are rising and life expectancy is increasing. It’s an added burden to our pension systems. It’s something we’ll have to get our arms around," said state Sen. Kirk Schuring, R-Canton, a member of the bipartisan Ohio Retirement Study Council.
No state law or contract requires health care coverage for retired public employees. Still, lawmakers and the retirement systems intend to preserve it, Schuring said.
"It’s come to the point where many retirees depend upon that health care benefit just as much as, if not more than, their pension benefit," he said.
The pension systems are self-insured. That means they pay their own doctor and hospital bills.
Member contributions, employer contributions and investment income provide the revenue used to support Ohio’s public retirees. Each system sets aside a chunk of the employer contribution for health care costs.
So, for every $1 in wages, the government entity sends between 14 cents and 26.5 cents to the retirement systems to cover pension costs. From that contribution, the five systems set aside between a penny and 6.75 cents for health care.
It’s not sustainable over the long term. Thanks to portfolio losses and rising costs, four of the five pension systems plan to shave back the percentages set aside for health care. Medical bills already are eating up more money than is being set aside. That means if all stays the same, the health care money will run out.
Right now, the State Teachers Retirement System projects its health care fund will run dry by 2016 and the School Employees Retirement System will run out of health care money just four years down the road.
"Bottom line: I believe the pension part of the system is going to be solvent. The health care side, I don’t know," said Carl Curry, 62, chief bailiff at Vandalia Municipal Court and a retired Vandalia police sergeant.
Skyrocketing health care bills have forced each of the retirement systems to shift more of the burden onto retirees. That has kept the ratio between health care and overall pension costs steady and even reduced it in some cases.
But the move has been painful for retirees, and some have had to return to work to pay their health care. In 2000, retired bus drivers and school janitors chipped in $11.5 million toward SERS health care. By 2008, they paid $73.8 million — a 541 percent increase.
Retired teachers are paying roughly 40 percent of the STRS health care bill, STRS spokeswoman Laura Ecklar said. 24
Tom Curtis of Stark County said when he retired from teaching in 1998 he paid just $30 a month for medical coverage for him and his wife. By 2004, STRS had stopped subsidizing spouses and reduced the subsidy for retirees. Curtis’ share now tops $14,000 a year, he said.
Thirty years ago, retired cops and firefighters and their families paid nothing for health care. Now they pay as much as $932.50 a month for medical and prescription drug coverage for the retiree, spouse and one dependent child.
Doug Shade said he paid $80 a month for coverage for him and his wife when he retired from the Vandalia Police Department in 2000. After his out-of-pocket costs spiked to $800 a month, Shade went back to work full-time, this time as a municipal court bailiff.
Shade, 59, hadn’t planned for the added health care costs.
"When you start out in public service, you better be putting money aside in a deferred compensation program or something like that, because who knows what (the pension system) is going to be like in 20 or 30 years," Shade said.
OP&F Director Bill Estabrook said change is certain. Down the road, retirees may be given a monthly stipend to cover their health care or perhaps survivors and dependent children won’t be covered as they are now, he said. "They’re just going to have to bear more of the cost."
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