Sunday, May 24, 2009

Will Tim Myers attend the June 9 meeting in Lima at Apollo Career Center?

From Dennis Leone, May 24, 2009
Folks……it is this simple: Tim Myers knows that certain people in attendance on the 9th (Leone and Stoll in particular) will hold his feet to the fire and ask him to explain his public actions and public statements – such as:
1. Why, Tim, did you tell the Elida teachers in writing that their pensions were secure?
2. Why, Tim, did you put in a NW-OEA newsletter that reducing bonuses aversely impacts the BASE SALARIES of investment staff?
3. Why, Tim, didn’t you want stop the FY 2009 bonuses in September after the backlash of paying $6 million in FY 2008 bonuses (which you voted for, Tim) and after STRS lost $12 billion in assets in the preceding 10 months?
4. Why, Tim, did you vote no on the original motions to: (A) Suspend the bonuses; and (B) Establish a $65 billion threshold for assets in order to trigger maximum bonus potential in the future?
5. Why, Tim, after you voted no in January to suspend the bonuses, did you say publicly (and were quoted in the Columbus Dispatch) that the STRS Board was “breaking a promise” by suspending the bonuses? Why did you say this, Tim, when all investment staff received a letters in July of 2008 that the said the bonus plan could be modified or terminated by the board at any time for any reason?
6. Why, Tim, did you allow Leone’s motion on May 15, 2009 (to NOT pay the 7/12ths bonuses for FY 2009) die without a second?
7. Why, Tim, did you recently write to a supt and say that the board might lose 10 times the cost of the 7/12ths bonuses in litigation if the bonuses were NOT paid? Wouldn’t possible litigation be a non-issue, Tim, had you and your fellow board members stopped the bonuses last fall, when you could have?
There is much more………..it’s really not hard to see why Tim Myers might avoid a meeting where he could be asked these questions.
Dennis Leone

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Sunday, May 17, 2009

An oldie-but-goodie from Dennis Leone (October 2004); better get out your Pepto Bismol!

From Dennis Leone, October 22, 2004
Subject: STRS Initiated (?) Cost-Saving Measures
TO: All Ohio Superintendents
FROM: Dennis Leone, recently retired Chillicothe supt of schools
On October 12, 2004, STRS Executive Director Damon Asbury sent all of you an e-mail entitled "Cost-Saving Initiatives." His e-mail was in response to a front page Cleveland Plain Dealer article on October 10 that was headlined "Retirees Appalled By Pension Fund Perks -- Workers Enjoy Tuition, Child Care Benefits."
While I do not dislike Damon Asbury, and appreciate the enormity of the task he has at STRS, I take issue with the claims in his e-mail and his insinuations of STRS-initiated managerial and budgetary changes. Not one of the ten changes he listed -- not a single one -- would have occurred had it not been for a group of articulate, persistent, strong-willed, and pushy retirees who pushed and pushed and pushed. Also, it deserves noting that the ten changes he listed in his e-mail did not address the subjects of the October 10 Plain Dealer article, which were:
1. Between 2000 and 2002, when STRS assets dropped a huge $12 billion, the STRS Board and Administration handed out college tuition reimbursements to their staff totaling $1.1 million. Remember, this occurred during a time when active STRS members were informed that their contribution rate would be increasing from 9.3% to 10.0%, and at a time when retirees were told their health insurance premiums would significantly increase and that their 13th check would be no more. The Plain Dealer pointed out that STRS staff members can receive up to $7,000 per year for college tuition. How many school districts give their teachers this kind of money for tuition reimbursements?
2. A work week for full-time STRS employees constitutes 37-1/2 hours. Unknown to almost all, this apparently has been in effect since the 1960's.
3. While STRS claims that the child care services they provide employees are now cost-neutral, here's the full story: Prior to this school year, the pension fund forked out over $500,000 per year so staff could have child care services inside the STRS headquarters. After actives and retirees expressed their outrage over this, employee fees were increased and it brought the excess amount down to $190,000. STRS then announced its plan to "cut" the remaining $190,000: Certain employees at STRS will voluntarily work additional hours per week, and not be paid for the additional work. This, in the eyes of STRS, is a way to "cut" the budget. I say it is wrong, and -- for all of us -- would likely represent a Fair Labor Standards Act violation.....not to mention the fact that school boards and the public would never accept such an idea.
4. It was recently revealed that employees at STRS who adopt a child are given a $5,000 cash gift by our pension fund. The rationale at STRS for this? It is because Dave Thomas at Wendy's recommended it to Columbus-area businesses some years ago. I say we also need to ask Ronald McDonald how to spend money from our pension fund. Why not? It makes as much sense.
I gave the following speech to the STRS Board yesterday, October 21, if you wish to read it:
"Members of the Board, I am here today to do two things....to make an observation and to make a request. I have noticed over the past several months a common theme in remarks coming out of STRS. Former Board President Eugene Norris, STRS press releases and newsletters, and both Damon Asbury and current Board President Joe Endry all have had an obsession to say: (A) Beware of those who continually criticize STRS; (B) Be patient with us at STRS; and (C) Look at what we done at STRS.....just look at that changes we have made.
"I am here to remind you that not one of the changes that have occurred in the past 16 months -- not one of them -- would have occurred had you not been pushed and pushed and pushed. You act like, oh yes, these are STRS initiatives. The truth is that if it had not been for a good number of articulate, persistent, strong-willed, and pushy retirees, none of the changes would be in place. And if you think I am wrong about this, you are kidding yourselves.
"There would no cuts in the STRS budget, no reductions in staff, no policy changes. Herb Dyer would still be here. Eugene Norris would still be on the Board. There would no John Lazares, no Dave Speas, no Judith Fisher on the Board. There would be no additional retiree on the Board in 2005. There would be no Senate Bill 133, and there would not be new group like CORE (Concerned Ohio Retired Educators).....not a chance. No new oversight mechanisms would be in place, no new disciplinary procedures for Board members who misspend pension fund money would be in place. There still would be a boatload of STRS credit cards and pension money being spent on things like alcohol, parties, concert tickets, Kings Island, baseball games, thousands of poinsettia plants for this building, and of course, the huge bonus checks for STRS non-investment staff.
"How do I know? There are several examples. When the staff here hit its all-time high of 735, the Board approved a budget to go even higher -- up to 765 or 775, and this was at the peak of the decline of assets here. Mr. Endry, when you spoke to the Allen County Retired Teachers Association last year, you said the didn't even know about the bonus checks. And Joe, do you know who shouted the loudest back in 1995 about the money STRS Board members were spending on flying around the country? You did, as ORTA President. Then when you got on the Board yourself, a year later you went to Anchorage. The next year, you were one of 7 Board members -- that's right, 7 of you -- went together to the same meeting in Boston (when one or two could have gone and brought information back for the rest). I've heard that you're going to Oregon with Board member Debbie Scott for STRS business soon. I hope that's not true.
"None of you have said in your speeches and in your written communications: "We screwed up." You've said it in small group session, but never publicly. Board member Michael Billirakis said it publicly about the artwork that was purchased here, after months of the staff inappropriately implying that they were bound to follow a new construction guideline that didn't even apply to STRS. The point is, after Michael said what he did, everyone basically shut up about it. You want people to believe that what's happened here is due to STRS initiatives. Not true. You had to be pushed and pushed.....that's why the changes have happened.
"I urge all of you to be cautious of saying "no more changes until see the results of the independent audit." I urge you to listen and respond to what the membership of STRS is telling you it wants.....whether it involves staff sizes, child care services, your 37-1/2 hour work week, huge tuition reimbursements for staff, and another one you've chosen to ignore that I brought up last year. You are still paying a cool $1 million per year if full-time STRS staff members decide to cash in up to 18 days of unused sick leave and unused vacation leave. You offer a nice benefit to staff, then you pay them not to use it. That's about as smart as saying that you're going to cut $190,000 from your budget by asking certain employees to work more hours, then not pay them for the additional work.
"You need to remember that it may not matter to us out here if you are told by the independent auditors that the pension board in New Jersey goes to Honolulu each year, or that the California pension board gives out big bonus checks to staff each year. And it really doesn't matter to us if you know of a few school districts who allow teachers to cash in unused sick leave every year? What matters is whether YOU are meeting the spirit of ORC 3307.15 -- which dictates that ALL of your decisions are to benefit the participants and beneficiaries of STRS. What matters is whether YOU are being responsive to the membership of STRS.
"In closing, Herb Dyer said to the Ohio Retirement Study Council in July of last year: "No one told me run a cheap system." A week later, State Representative Michelle Schneider said in the Cincinnati Enquirer -- referring to Board expenditures and STRS staff perks: "They're like kids in a candy store." It's now up to you, as Board members, to dispel both comments."
Thank you.
Dennis Leone

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Saturday, May 16, 2009

Rich DeColibus to STRS Board: STRS would be far better off eliminating the PBI program, not just tinkering with it

From Rich DeColibus, May 16, 2009
Subject: PBIs
".....being in the middle of the lemming pack is not much of an excuse for going off the cliff"
".....had STRS invested in 5% return T-bills for the last eight years, it would have been far better off today, by tens of billions of dollars"
".....any suggestion to permanently eliminate the COLA lessens everyone's buying value year after year after year, virtually guaranteeing an impoverished living standard as time goes on"
"Professionals are supposed to do their best for their client. Without bonuses as incentives. That is the definition of a professional. My presumption is our investment counselors will act professionally, and if they do not, that is why we have a management. Frankly, again, if the whole department would have been dismissed eight years ago, we'd be tens of billions of dollars richer."
Gentle(wo)men:
I believe the argument over whether PBIs should be extended when STRS loses total assets is like being unable to see the lake because of glare off the water. The fundamental question is whether there should be PBIs AT ALL, not just when our total asset value is down. My conclusion is STRS would be far better off, in every way that is important, by scrapping the whole program, not just tinkering with it. Bear with my logic.
The Board in the past was sold PBIs as a standard way of doing this kind of business, a replication of Wall Street employment practices, and a practice without which STRS would be left without competent investment counselors. My understanding is virtually no one currently on the Board was actually there when this practice started; most of you simply inherited it. Various experts have either validated the practice or judged it excessive and unwarranted (you can, in short, get any opinion you want if you shop around for it). More to the point, what may have been true in the past is no longer true. There has been a sea-change in accepted thinking about what constitutes appropriate compensation; granted many on Wall Street are doing their best to "Bring back the good old days," but there is now a tidal wave of anger and condemnation against huge salaries and grotesque bonuses as rewards for, at best, mediocre performance. Think of the AIG bonuses, if you need a solid example.
The number one responsibility of the STRS Board is preservation of capital. It is NOT a given percent of return (like an average of 8% per year). If you inspect the record, it is crystal clear all those years of wonderful returns were completely washed away by one catastrophic year (the most recent one). Not only is there no guarantee this will not happen again, in the mostly free market of America, it's virtually a certainty this will happen again. It is not a good thing for the situation to have deteriorated to such a degree that the Ohio General Assembly is now interested.
Your responsibility was to avoid this catastrophic loss, not maintain 8% returns year-after-year only to see it all lost by a failure to anticipate a bad year. Yes, few others were clever enough to see what was coming, but being in the middle of the lemming pack is not much of an excuse for going off the cliff. The fact of the matter is brutally obvious: had STRS invested in 5% return T-bills for the last eight years, it would have been far better off today, by tens of billions of dollars. Your current PBI program simply encourages investment counselors to invest in riskier vehicles than are appropriate, because the rewards for them personally are great (the bonuses) and the risks are all taken by us who have a vested interest in STRS (which is none of the investment counselors).
Professionals are supposed to do their best for their client. Without bonuses as incentives. That is the definition of a professional. My presumption is our investment counselors will act professionally, and if they do not, that is why we have a management. Frankly, again, if the whole department would have been dismissed eight years ago, we'd be tens of billions of dollars richer. That is a fact. If you insist on hanging on to the department, then at least expect them to be professionals, just like the teachers and administrators who put a lifetime of their savings into the pot. That does not seem like such an unreasonable request.
The suggestion to eliminate the COLA is a horrible one. It penalizes every individual who has already retired, and the younger they are, the more it penalizes them. In years where the cost of living is stagnant (such as this year), not a problem, but any suggestion to permanently eliminate the COLA lessens everyone's buying value year after year after year, virtually guaranteeing an impoverished living standard as time goes on. This is not what STRS is supposed to stand for. Please discard this really bad idea forever. Losing the 13th check is one thing, but a COLA is absolutely essential to maintaining a normal but modest life style into the retirement years, especially as unreimbursed health care costs mount, which they tend to do as the years go by. The federal government's COLA calculation doesn't even include the price of gasoline or food, two of the most volatile price indexes in existence. Does anyone think, running up a trillion and a half dollars of federal government debt, isn't going to skyrocket the inflation rate in the near future?
We need to look to the future, not rest on the outdated and clearly failed business practices of the past.
Rich DeColibus

[Rich is a retired teacher and former president of the Cleveland Teachers Union.]

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Columbus Dispatch on 5/15/09 bonus vote

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Friday, May 15, 2009

Lima News: The Huffman bill and a subsequent STRS bonus vote

STRS board decision mirrors Huffman's bill
COLUMBUS - The State Teacher Retirement System (STRS) board voted Friday to eventually do the same thing a local state representative hopes to put into law.
The board voted that starting in fiscal year 2011, no performance-based incentives will be paid out to investment staff if the retirement fund sees a negative overall return, said board member Dennis Leone, of Chillicothe.
Ohio Rep. Matt Huffman, R-Lima, introduced legislation earlier this week that would ban the STRS bonuses when the fund is not making money.
"Rep Huffman's bill had an impact on those votes occurring," Leone said. "I appreciate him stepping up to plate with the proposal."
All eight STRS board members approved the decision. The board also voted to eliminate bonuses in fiscal year 2010, which begins in July, if there is a negative return.
Also, for the investment staff to qualify for bonus potential, the fund's total asset has to climb to at least $65 billion. It is currently $51 billion. If there is an increase, but it doesn't reach the $65 billion, a formula will determine the bonus amounts.
The staff could still see bonuses from the first half of fiscal year 2009, which ends June 30. The board suspended its existing bonus program for the second half of fiscal year 2009, meaning the payments are based on just the first half of the fiscal year.
Preliminary reports show bonuses likely paid for fiscal year 2009 to about 90 employees total nearly $3.4 million. They range from $162,488 and $480. Leone made a motion to not pay the bonuses, but it died for a lack of a second. The board still needs to approve the bonuses by its September meeting.

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STRS Board actions on bonus-related motions proposed by Dennis Leone May 15, 2009

1. Bonus plan for Fiscal Year 2010: motion made by Dennis Leone, seconded by Craig Brooks; passed 8-0.
Voting yes: Leone, Brooks, Burch, Meuser, Myers, Ramser, Puckett, Cervantes.
Absent: Hayden & Chapman.
Plan prohibits bonuses if overall return is negative.
Plan restricts bonuses unless total STRS assets return to $65 billion (we now stand at $51 billion).
For every $1 billion our total assets fall short of $65 billion at the end of FY 2010, bonuses will be reduced by 3%. Example: If we have $54 billion at the end of FY 2010, this is $11 billion under $65 billion. 11 x 3% = 33% reduction in bonus potential.
2. Motion by Dennis Leone, seconded by Craig Brooks: to prohibit bonuses beyond FY 2010 in years in which total returns are negative. Motion passed 8-0.
3. Motion by Dennis Leone: to remove Investment Chief Steve Mitchell from PBI (Performance-Based Incentive) Plan; motion died due to lack of a second. Dr. Leone cited conflict of interests concerns since Mitchell evaluates other bonus recipients.
4. Motion by Dennis Leone: to deny FY 2009 bonuses; motion died, due to lack of a second. This means between now and September the Board will have to vote on the actual payments for the 7/12 FY 2009 bonuses.
May 15, 2009

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STRS Board votes this afternoon on 2010 PBI program

From STRS, May 15, 2009
Subject:
[News] Board Takes Action on PBI Program
During its May 2009 meeting, the State Teachers Retirement Board adopted a Performance-Based Incentive (PBI) Program for 2010 for eligible Investment associates that includes a provision for no incentives being awarded if the STRS Ohio total investment fund has a negative absolute return for the fiscal year (July 1, 2009-June 30, 2010).
The vote followed months of discussion and consideration regarding incentive compensation. Other key components of the newly adopted incentive program include provisions adopted by the board at previous meetings:
- If the STRS Ohio total fund earns a positive absolute return but the total market value of investment assets is less than $65 billion by the end of the fiscal year (June 30, 2010), then incentive awards will be reduced by 3% for every $1 billion (and fraction thereof) of the shortfall from $65 billion. For example, if assets on June 30, 2010, are $55 billion, earned PBIs will be reduced by 30%. As of April 30, 2009, total fund assets were approximately $51 billion.
- The new PBI program will enhance earned PBIs when the absolute and relative performances are high.
The board also adopted a motion that said in future years, when the total investment fund returns are negative, no Investment staff will receive PBIs. This is effective with fiscal year 2011 going forward.
Additional information about the May Retirement Board meeting will be published in Board News on Monday.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Lima News editorial re: STRS...."If you're not making money for your client, you don't deserve a bonus."

From John Curry, May 14, 2009
Editorial: No gain, no bonus is common sense
"Rewarding someone to lose money, though, is just obscene."
"If you're not making money for your client, you don't deserve a bonus."
The Lima News, May 13, 2009
Wall Street wasn't the only place where investment executives earned bonuses to lose money. It's been happening in Columbus with the State Teachers Retirement System, too.
The private sector is perfectly fit to make the changes needed on Wall Street, but a state system requires intervention of the kind state Rep. Matt Huffman, R-Lima, proposes. Huffman this week introduced a bill that would ban performance-based incentives if the teachers retirement fund isn't making money.
Preliminary reports show half-year bonuses for about 90 employees of the State Teachers Retirement System will total almost $3.4 million. That's a handsome reward when a fund has lost more than $33 billion over the last 16 months. And it's a reward that 460,000 public educators and millions of taxpayers alike would have to contribute to.
"All of these employees who are to receive these bonuses are already compensated for the work they perform, with some earning a six-figure salary," Huffman said. "When many Ohio citizens are losing their retirement investments in this economy, how can STRS of Ohio justify giving these bonuses?"
That's a good question.
A newsletter tried to justify the bonuses by saying the fund could have lost more than it did. That's a bold statement: You get to pay us even more money because we've only lost so much of yours.
Some people won't like that the average salary among those handling investments at the State Teachers Retirement System is $156,000, but some careers paying far better than others is part of life. Rewarding someone to lose money, though, is just obscene. Other states have eliminated bonuses. Ohio should at least go as far as Huffman wants: no bonuses in a year with negative returns.
The State Teachers Retirement System board is scheduled to vote on the bonuses in September. Other state lawmakers should join Huffman in seeing that such a vote isn't needed. If you're not making money for your client, you don't deserve a bonus.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Lima News....'Local retired teachers supporting bill'

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PENDING LEGISLATION ON BONUSES
From John Curry, May 12, 2009
Here it is...House Bill # 177...yes, it is Bipartisan!
Note from John...if you don't see your state representative listed below PLEASE contact them and ask them to join on as a co-sponsor.
Click images to enlarge.

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Subject: Knock, knock...STRS...you might want to see this! Notice that it is sponsored by representatives from BOTH parties?

From John Curry, May 12, 2009
"The bill, sponsored by representatives from both parties and supported by local retired teachers, specifically says that in any year with a net negative return, no bonuses will be paid out."
Huffman bill aims to ban teacher's retirement system bonuses
Representative Matt Huffman
Lima News, May 12, 2009
Beth L. Jokinen
COLUMBUS - Ohio Rep. Matt Huffman, R-Lima, introduced legislation this week that would ban performance-based incentive for the State Teacher Retirement System (STRS).
The STRS board suspended bonuses for the first half of this fiscal year, which ends June 30. The board is considering giving the bonuses back to about 50 employees, Huffman said. The bonuses total nearly $3.4 million.
The bill, sponsored by representatives from both parties and supported by local retired teachers, specifically says that in any year with a net negative return, no bonuses will be paid out.
"My big issue is I don't think there should be bonuses paid when what is paid out to the teacher could be potentially damaged or less," Huffman said.
The bill still needs to be assigned to a House committee for further discussion. Huffman hopes to have the bill in place before the STRS board makes a decision in September.
http://www.limaohio.com/news/bonuses-37288-huffman-bill.html
Read more about this story in Wednesday's The Lima News.

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Wednesday, May 06, 2009

STRS Flashback - 5 years ago - Incumbent loses spot on State Teachers Retirement System board‏

From John Curry, May 6, 2009

Canton Repository, May 9, 2004
By Paul Kostyu

Incumbent loses spot on State Teachers Retirement System board

COLUMBUS — In a stinging rebuke to the leadership of their unions, Ohio teachers elected Superintendent John Lazares to the board of the State Teachers Retirement System.

Lazares, who leads the Warren County Educational Service Center, defeated incumbent and current board chairman Eugene Norris of Columbus. He won by just 274 votes among the 44,976 that were cast by mail during the past several weeks.

The Ohio Education Association and the Ohio Federation of Teachers had endorsed Norris and reportedly spent tens of thousands of dollars on his re-election campaign.

Lazares, on the other hand, was supported in large part by retired teachers, who were not eligible to vote because the seat belongs to an active teacher. Supporters stuffed teachers’ mailboxes at schools with fliers when they were not blocked by local union representatives.

The hotly contested election was prompted in part by news media accounts late last year about questionable spending at the pension system on artwork, staff bonuses, expenses and travel.

“I have to give credit to Ohio’s retired teachers,” Lazares said. “I knew it would be difficult to beat an incumbent, but teachers have always been my biggest supporters over the years.”

Lazares said he called Norris last week to wish him good luck and to thank him for running a clean campaign. “I can’t say that about OEA or OFT,” he said.

Norris said he accepted “the will of the people,” but didn’t have an explanation for his defeat. He said the board faces “complex issues with no simple solutions.”

He said he would continue to work on health-care issues and engaging system members during his remaining months on the board. “The system is in sound and good shape,” he said.

The closeness of the vote prompted one official and multiple unofficial recounts by 56 STRS employees who were paid $80 each to come in on Saturday to count the ballots in a very deliberative process, overseen by representatives of Norris, Lazares, the Ohio secretary of state and an internal auditor from STRS.

Ballots were mailed to 302,453 STRS members, but just 14.9 percent voted. After the first count showed Lazares ahead by 260 votes, Pamela Ennis, who represented Norris, asked for a recount. Lazares picked up four additional votes and Norris lost 10. The final vote was Lazares, 22,625, and Norris, 22,351.

Throughout the day, questionable ballots were pulled and sent to STRS Executive Director Damon Asbury, the candidates’ representatives and Cheryl Stewart from the secretary of state’s office. Of those ballots, 214 were rejected, many because no vote was cast. One ballot was ripped in half, and others had votes cast for write-in candidates including Daffy Duck, Yogi Bear and Gov. Bob Taft.

Lazares, who will take office Sept. 1, said he plans “to make sure STRS money is used efficiently. I will be very fiscally responsible.”

He said the effect of the retirees on this election should serve as a warning to incumbents or others who seek election to the board in the future. “They’re a very important force,” he said.

Lazares also said active teachers are more aware of how the pension system is operating. “They used to take it for granted,” he said. “I was one of those. Now they know they can’t be complacent.”

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Monday, May 04, 2009

Dennis Leone responds to the rhetoric

From Dennis Leone, May 4, 2009
Subject: Thank You
Jerry – Thank you for writing what you did to Meuser. I am sick-to-death of the Meuser/Myers/Ramser/Cervantes/Chapman/Nehf/Mitchell rhetoric of the bonuses being justified because the investment staff is providing “value added” (which means that our returns for the first 9 months of FY 2009 were -32.1% in comparison to Wall Street average market loss of -32.2%).
The union block on the STRS Board simply do not want to hear that base salaries averaging $156,000 for the investment staff (and spectacular fringe benefits) certainly pays for the so-called “value added.” No, they say it justifies giant bonuses on top of that.
I am also tired of hearing the age-old argument that the bonuses also are justified because we’d be spending more money using external money managers instead of our own internal money managers. Everyone could make an argument that it would cost him/her more money if they did things in a different way.
I guess I should have told my school board that I deserved a bonus check because I never recommended that my district hire a 2nd assistant supt, and therefore I was “saving” my district money by never recommending such. Maybe my wife and I are “saving” money by not buying a Florida condo that we can’t afford anyway.
Dennis Leone

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Friday, May 01, 2009

The bonus situation explained.....

From Dennis Leone, May 1, 2009
Most of the confusion surrounds the fact that the board votes each spring to adopt a new bonus plan for the upcoming fiscal year (which begins each July 1), but then 6 months later the board votes to approve the cash bonus payments for the PREVIOUS fiscal year (which is 12 months after the work is done).
This means: The board voted 8-1 to adopt the fiscal year 2009 bonus plan in March of 2008, then voted 8-1 in September of 2008 to approve the actual $6 million bonus payments for the previous fiscal year (fiscal year 2008, which ended 6-30-08). This is when the firestorm really started.
But instead of stopping the bonus plan for fiscal year 2009 at this time (September, 2008), everything went forward (with only me complaining). A Columbus Dispatch article in December of 2008 said I was the ONLY board member who was pushing to have the bonuses suspended.
Then in January of 2009, the board voted 6-3-1 to approve my motion to suspend the fiscal year 2009 bonus plan effective 2-1-09. This meant two things:
...(1) No one would get bonuses for their work in the final 5 months of FY 2009; and
...(2) The board would at some point have to vote yes or no on the cash bonus payments for the first 7 months of FY 2009 (which will be $3.3 million).
The board has itself in a real pickle now. If the board votes no, the door will be open for staff to sue and argue that they have already done the work for the first 7/12 of the fiscal year.
If the board votes yes on the 7/12 cash payments, board members will look stupid because they chose NOT to stop the bonus plan last September when they could have.
STRS Board policy permits the board to modify or terminate the bonus plan at any time, and all investment staff members received a letter early last summer that explains this. The comments by board members Tim Myers and Mary Ann Cervantes that appeared in the Columbus Dispatch after the board voted 6-3-1 to suspend the bonuses effective 2-1-09 were dead wrong. Both voted no on the suspension and were quoted as saying that board was “breaking a promise” by suspending the bonuses. No promise was broken. It was dishonest to make such a statement, and they both know it.
Between the years of 1995 and 2004, approximately 350 non-investment staff members at STRS (in addition to approximately 100 investment staff members) also got big bonus checks every year. This was a major component of my 2003 report. The board finally voted to end bonuses permanently for non-investment staff in 2004. Another elimination I pushed for, which was adopted in 2005, was the STRS practice of basing bonuses paid to investment staff, in part, on SUBJECTIVE factors. It’s gone now. How stupid was that past practice? Very Wall Street.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
"The PBI program may be interpreted, amended, rescinded and/or terminated at anytime by the Board."
~ STRS Board Policy Manual, page 33

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Thursday, April 30, 2009

STRS assets no doubt peaked at more than $82 billion, not $80.1 billion.....

From Dennis Leone, April 29, 2009
Yes, it was $46.3 billion on 2-28-09………..and the peak was $80.1 billion on 10-31-07. (Had an official asset tabulation been taken 3 weeks earlier [which it wasn't], when the DOW topped 14,100, our total assets clearly would have been above $82 billion.)
And by the way, the number of employees at STRS peaked at 734 in 2003, when I said in my 13-page report that 135 needed to be cut. No official staff reduction plan was put in place. The reductions of the past 6 years have occurred through attrition, except for a dozen IT Dept employees who were laid off last year due to the new computer system at STRS.

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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

OEA and a half-truth

From John Curry, April 30, 2009
Below is a March 20, 2009 memo from OEA President Patricia Frost-Brooks to OEA District Leaders and OEA Presidents stating (see the yellow highlighted area) Ms. Frost-Brook's apparent disagreement "with bonus payments to investment officers in years when STRS loses money."
Now, please read the two attachments taken from the "approved" STRS Board meeting minutes of March 20, 2009. These two pertinent pages are attached and labeled "XIV" and "XV" and show how three of the OEA's active teacher Board members actually voted on the first round in the voting to accept the "Staff Benefits Committee's recommendation dated March 20, 2009" to temporarily suspend the bonuses. You will notice that the OEA-endorsed active teacher Board members Tim Myers, Mark Meuser and Conni Ramser all voted "no!" The only OEA-endorsed active teacher Board member who cast a "yes" vote to temporarily quash the investment bonuses was Columbus Education Association's Tai Hayden. She is to be congratulated for her courage and insight.
After another vote (see the attachments) and the statement from STRS's Executive Director Nehf that the State Teachers Retirement System staff could live with the suspension of the bonuses did two of the OEA naysayers (Myers and Meuser) finally come around to vote to temporarily freeze the bonuses. Still, on that final vote, OEA's Conni Ramser cast an "abstain" vote. Ms. Frost-Brooks didn't mention, in her letter above, the whole story, did she? What she related was a half truth. Of course, most active educators will not know that, will they? I'm also sure the OEA won't go out of their way to present this documentation to their membership.
John Curry
P.S. Concerning Ms. Frost-Brooks reference to Dr. Dennis Leone as a "dissident board member"....he is "fearful about the financial future of STRS." Well, so is STRS Board candidate Jim Stoll and so should every reader of this email be "fearful about the financial future of STRS." Dr. Leone has curbed more entitlements at STRS during the past four years as a board member than I have fingers and toes. Ms. Frost-Brooks didn't go into specifics on that one either, did she?
From Michael Mahoney, March 20, 2009
To: OEA Board of Directors
OEA District Leaders
OEA Local Presidents
From: OEA Communications and Governmental Services
Re: STRS Bonuses, Investment
Performance and Board Elections
Relaying a message from the OEA officers:
STRS Board candidate James Stoll recently distributed an e-mail to many Ohio educators that seeks to further his election campaign by alarming members of STRS about the fund’s market losses and “outrageous” bonuses for employees. STRS lost $33 billion in market value in its most recent fiscal year. The STRS system also paid bonuses to 83 employees for outperforming the market - losing less than comparable funds.
The Ohio Education Association is deeply concerned about STRS market losses. OEA does not agree with bonuses payments to investment officers in years when STRS loses money. As a result, OEA commends the recent vote by the STRS board to suspend 2009 bonuses, as well as formation of a board committee of the whole to address investment performance. However, OEA feels strongly that Mr. Stoll’s recent e-mail was a cynical exploitation of the emotions of educators, including a quote from dissident board member Dennis Leone, in an attempt to make them fearful about the financial future of STRS and cast a vote for Stoll.
During comments to promote his candidacy during the public participation period at the STRS board meeting this week, another odd practice, Stoll boasted he has a list of 145,000 educator e-mail addresses, presumably to further his campaign. Earlier, he had sued to obtain e-mail addresses from STRS, but the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear his case, upholding a policy to protect the privacy of member e-mail.
OEA has recommended the election Stoll’s opponent, Carol Correthers of the Lorain Education Association, to the active STRS board seat. We believe she has the temperament, qualifications and judgment to serve on the board.
Stoll never sought OEA’s recommendation and did not go to an OEA screening. Moreover his recent e-mail confirms our position. OEA must address this situation, but we apologize for any inconvenience our e-mail to you may cause. If you do not want to receive further e-mails on this subject, please click here or send your request to communic@ohea.org.
Cc: All OEA Staff
Click images to enlarge.
.................................................................................
And OEA insists they legally do not and cannot tell STRS Board members what to do and how to vote: yet we know they do from STRS Board members -- though fearful of even saying it publicly.
~ Molly Janczyk

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Superintendents getting a heads-up re: Bonuses

From Jim Stoll, April 29, 2009
Subject: RE: STRS - State Teacher Retirement System - Outrageous Bonuses 2009
Jerry,
Thanks to you and other Superintendents for getting involved. You are absolutely correct in that taxpayers foot 14% of this bill and that 8 - 10 % of every School Districts budget goes to STRS and they are going to pay the (ATTACHED) 7/12 Bonuses despite losing 33 billion in the past 18 months. Additionally, they continue to send out email responses which you've already received trying to defend this nonsense, which they themselves, by suspending then changing the PBI plan have recognized as extremely flawed. You are the fifth Superintendent that has contacted me today so you are not alone. Many thanks for taking action. I would agree that we need to move our efforts to legislators to stop these bonuses as the Exec. Dir. and Board are not responsive to the members overwhelming desires to Eliminate these bonuses. I have met with my legislators here in Southwest Ohio and they are most interested in the issue of these bonuses. Will let you know of developments.
Jim Stoll
Director of Athletics
Sycamore Schools
7400 Cornell Rd.
Cincinnati, Ohio 45242
cell 513-615-4690
From Jerry Harmon, April 29, 2009
Subject: RE: STRS - State Teacher Retirement System - Outrageous Bonuses 2009
To All;
Below is the action I took with my staff – I sent it to all of them because I haven’t seen an announcement by STRS eliminating raises and bonuses for this year. My understanding is that it is within the power of the STRS Board to do this. This is my first action that did not just involve those directly involved with this baloney.
As I stated earlier, I am not going to sit by while we go down the toilet. If I don’t hear something by the 1st of May, I will send letters to major newspapers expressing my outrage and encourage them to investigate and report in depth. I didn’t believe it would go this far, but I am too old to abide stonewalling about anything like this. With aggressive action now, we all can avoid the dreaded questions in the aftermath that go something like this: Why didn’t someone speak up? How could you, as a Board, do this? What do you say to taxpayers who will foot the bill by way of larger employee and employer contributions? All of this as the reporters totally display the waste and abuse even in past years.
I am also sending this to my state Senator and State Representative.
I saw a good quip the other day & it fits somewhat in this situation:
“THE PROBLEM WITH SOCIALISM IS THAT EVENTUALLY YOU RUN OUT OF OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY.
Respectfully,
Jerry W. Harmon, Superintendent
Jackson Center Local Schools
From: John Lazares, April 28, 2009
Subject: FW: STRS - State Teacher Retirement System - Outrageous Bonuses 2009
Superintendents:
Please forward to your staff.
Thank you.
John Lazares, Superintendent
Warren County ESC
From Jim Stoll:
Dear Superintendents:
It may have been brought to your attention, and I am sorry to report, there are some serious problems with STRS, our State Teachers Retirement System.
Did you know that STRS paid 11 Investment associates total compensation exceeding $400,000 last year? The highest topped out at $529,000.
Did you know that two investment associates got RAISES from 2008-2009 of $39,500. (yes, that was their RAISE. (See links below for all 83 investment associate raises.)
Did you know that this September, in spite of losing $33 Billion in the past 18 months and exploring “CUTTING” member benefits, they are paying “7/12 BONUSES” to 83 STRS Investment Associates, – one bonus for losing 33 Billion is in excess of $160,000 !
See Below for entire details….Many thanks to Superintendents John Scheu, Jerry Harmon and Rod Russell for getting on board and leading the fight to hold STRS accountable for this waste of member contributions and taxpayer dollars. In most school districts 8 – 10% of your entire BUDGET goes to STRS. IS THIS THE WAY YOU FEEL THOSE DOLLARS SHOULD BE SPENT – for outrageous salaries and bonuses?
Please email STRS Exec. Dir. Mike Nehf nehfm@strsoh.org and the Board board@strsoh.org and advocate for them to eliminate the 7/12 Bonuses for this year. Feel free to cc (copy) me at jastoll@yahoo.com.
Please feel free to call or email if I can be of further assistance. Upon request, I'd be happy to send the entire spreadsheet of salary, bonus and compensation totals separately, so you can share with your staff minus what may be construed as a political message below..
Respectfully,
Jim Stoll
Director of Athletics
Sycamore Schools
7400 Cornell Rd.
Cincinnati, Ohio 45242
Cell 513-615-4690
jastoll@yahoo.com

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Why OEA will never engage in a public debate.....

From Molly Janczyk, April 27, 2009
Subject: Open Debate: Bonuses
Just as Bill Leibensperger will not agree to an open debate, neither will Tim Myers or probably any of the OEA-backed STRS Board members. Debating without prepared statements with unknown questions and audience is well outside their comfort zone. Speaking, like Dennis Leone does and Jim Stoll is requesting, interactively with audiences whether friendly or critical isn't where they want to be.
Interestingly, when Leone speaks with facts behind him, most audiences who were previously more closed minded change perspectives, but Dennis possesses the ability to face opponents or supporters without fear simply stating facts and presenting evidence. OEA likes to mail or gather their supporters in a room and bask in the glow of those who do not 'dissent.' They are not so quick or nimble on their feet as Leone and Stoll. Thus, that is a problem in imaging for them. Therefore, debate does not occur and public speaking on/in friendly territory or one in which no one is permitted to respond -- the-hit and-run arena.
Bill L.'s question to me of WHY does Dennis only wish to speak publicly with him is a perfect example of what I have said. There is no understanding of give and take, transparency, ability to prove accuracy, facing opponents who speak back with evidence to support them. It takes away the ability to take words out of context and throw out smears if someone is standing there ready to respond and prove otherwise. Not in their comfort zone.
Molly J.

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Jim Stoll to Tim Myers: 400 e-mails and an invitation to a debate

From Jim Stoll, April 27, 2009
Subject: Re: [QUAR] RE: Bonuses

I'll be happy to bring over 400 physical email responses as evidence of my position and would welcome for you to bring your positive responses to compare the positions and true feelings of your membership.... I'd love for the other Board members to weigh in on what responses they've received overall as well. My guess is that our responses may have some deviation and prejudice built in, but theirs would be more close to the norm.
Let's meet anytime, anywhere at a place of your choosing to debate the issue of these "7/12" Bonuses in an open forum and have Ms. Ecklar and Mr. Nehf use your email database to invite the membership.
Better yet, let's allow the membership to vote on this issue as a referendum.... I'm sure sending ballots out would not cost anywhere near the 3.3 million of the Bonus payouts.
I wonder if your positive respondees have any idea of the contingencies the Board is planning to their benefits in light of these bonuses. ie. Friday's Board discussions of possible 4% increase in contribution rates, raising of minimum retirement age to 60, changing the Final Avg. Salary Calculation, reducing Cola's for retirees, using flat 2.2% formula for all years of service etc. - Be assured, with my email database, if you don't share this with them - I will.
Regardless, I will bring my copies of all email responses to the next board meeting and share them with everyone in my allotted 3 minutes. Would welcome for you to do the same and share your responses as well.
Looking forward to you accepting my invitation to debate the Bonus issue - just let me know where and when - I will definitely be there. If you want to debate in a closed forum with no audience and then put the debate on "You Tube" for the membership to access, I'd welcome that if you were fearful of audience applause or emotion, coming into play.
Jim Stoll Director of Athletics
Sycamore Schools
7400 Cornell Rd. Cincinnati, Ohio 45242
513-615-4690
From Tim Myers, April 26, 2009
Subject: Re: [QUAR] RE: Bonuses
Since I am mentioned in this email I will respond:
I have a completely different experience than the one cited below [See post immediately below: Ralph Graham to Mark Meuser: Now they have negative results and shouldn't be rewarded]. The members that have replied to my response are thankful that I have given them the information that they were missing when they sent the original email. One superintendent even told me to keep up the good work and that he was pleased that he voted for me last year! An Athletic Director apologized for sending out the earlier letter without checking the facts first. He then sent out my reply to the same list that he had previously used.
So, far from alienating members, it seems that the more members know, the less upset they are.
Tim

From Ralph Graham, April 14, 2009
Subject: Bonuses
Dear Mike Nehf and STRS Board:
I've just received an email from James Stoll and I must say as a member of STRS I am outraged at the lack of common sense. A bonus is something to be given when job performance exceeds expectations. That is not the case with our investment advisors. They are paid a very good salary to perform a job they were hired to do, unfortunately they didn't perform very well and DO NOT DESERVE a bonus. I am tired of hearing the same bogus response that started on Wall Street that these bonuses will help retain quality people. First, I'm not sure we want to retain people that underperform and second, I seriously doubt quality people will walk away from quarter million dollar salaries. I have no problem rewarding individuals that perform at an exceptional level, but that is not the case here. I can guarantee you that I will be voting for James Stoll to protect the investment I have in STRS. I strongly encourage you to ELIMINATE these bonuses that are currently on the table.
Sincerely,
Ralph Graham
Southeast Local Schools

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Saturday, April 25, 2009

OEA...does this sound familiar?

From John Curry, April 25, 2009
"Unions vs. Reforms: Fix it or lose it. Powerful public employee unions have made it hard for public employers and retirement systems to clean up their act because the labor organizations have interjected themselves into the process. The resultant rules that become embedded in public plans enable abusers to find opportunities to exploit the systems. This is not to advocate the overturning of labor groups, but to remind them that they need to look in a mirror sometimes when we talk about reforms — and become partners in progressive change rather than obstacles. The retirement-advocacy groups need to honestly address the financial shenanigans some unions have played — and the resultant harm to their systems. That's a tall order when times are tough like they are now, but if we are to preserve the core values of retirement security, then the unions have to get on board as well."
Repairing Pension Plans
Governing.com, April 23, 2009
By GIRARD MILLER


Girard Miller

Questions, success stories or
anecdotes about benefit issues in
government? Girard Miller
wants to hear from you.

E-mail him
Reform — don't destroy — public retirement systems.
Readership of these columns in Governing on retirement systems has grown significantly in the two years since we started. In addition to trustees and practitioners who are looking for technical and strategic information that rarely appears elsewhere, we enjoy a public-policy following — the pension geeks — which consists of both advocates and critics of public pension systems. Then there are the financial services vendors who are looking for an edge somewhere to help them compete in this marketplace. Rounding out the readership are employees, union leaders and retirees keeping watch on what management is up to, or just simply interested in new developments in the benefits field. It's a vibrant community, and one lesson I've learned from reader feedback is to avoid broad generalizations about state and local government retirement plans.
About 90 percent of the workers in this sector have a defined benefit pension plan, and some 2/3 of the states have dominant, consolidated state pension systems, so there are some commonalities in those systems. Moreover, the aggregate unfunded liabilities of the pension and OPEB systems now exceed $2.5 trillion with investment assets of less. That's about all one can say in general. Benefits formulas, eligibility requirements, investment and funding practices and supplemental systems are richly diverse across the country. In the retiree medical benefits area known as OPEB ("other post-employment benefits"), the variations are even more dramatic. There are very few statewide plans of any type at this embryonic time in the evolution of those plans, and each public employer has crafted a different and often unique benefit structure.
In the face of this broad variation, there is a natural tendency to generalize whenever we see an abuse of these systems. Sometimes this is justified when, say, there is a statewide plan that permits individuals to game the system on a broad basis (as with pension-spiking in certain states). Oftentimes, however, the problems are isolated to a specific employer. When the abuses are isolated, it makes for great headlines, but the criticism and finger-pointing doesn't help us build better systems. And that's the spirit of this column. I want to identify a series of constructive reforms for public sector retirement systems — both the high-profile defined benefit pension plans and cradle-to-grave OPEB plans — hoping to achieve a sustainable balance in the long run.
Public service and public abuses. Most public employees are indeed public servants. Some are professionals who joined the government workforce with high aspirations to make a difference in this world; others frankly took the best job they could get. But most public workers do understand that they have a responsibility to the public and the taxpayers they serve, and they understand the concepts of accountability and fairness. Thus, it's the small minority who draw media attention and the ire of taxpayer groups when they game the system. We need to remember the ratio of good to evil when we discuss retirement reform.
Unions vs. Reforms: Fix it or lose it. Powerful public employee unions have made it hard for public employers and retirement systems to clean up their act because the labor organizations have interjected themselves into the process. The resultant rules that become embedded in public plans enable abusers to find opportunities to exploit the systems. This is not to advocate the overturning of labor groups, but to remind them that they need to look in a mirror sometimes when we talk about reforms — and become partners in progressive change rather than obstacles. The retirement-advocacy groups need to honestly address the financial shenanigans some unions have played — and the resultant harm to their systems. That's a tall order when times are tough like they are now, but if we are to preserve the core values of retirement security, then the unions have to get on board as well.
Sufficiency and sustainability. There's growing talk in governmental finance circles about "sustainability," and the lack thereof in retirement benefits. According to the Government Accountability Office, in fewer than 30 years the federal government will consume all of its future tax revenues for interest payments and entitlement programs including Social Security and Medicare. Meanwhile state and local governments have run up pension deficits of $1 trillion and OPEB deficits of $1.5 trillion. Thus, it is becoming more doubtful that the tax revenues of some municipalities will ever grow enough to pay for the benefits already promised. The average adult working taxpayer is now on the hook for $20,000 of state and local retirement deficits. In many cases, structural changes are absolutely necessary in order to preserve the benefits. Otherwise, we will find ourselves literally running out of money, and younger workers may never receive what we're now promising them.
Thus, it's essential that state and local leaders, union leaders and retirement plan officials begin working now to make sure that the level of benefits now promised is actually sustainable. I have referred to the concept of a "sustainability audit" or assessment in a prior column, and that would be a worthwhile place to start. Knowing now that most pension plans are facing the prospect of employer contributions rising 20 to30 percent in the next three or four years if not sooner, this issue has now risen to front-and-center.
In many cases, a sustainability analysis will show that the employer-paid share of the overall retirement package will never be sufficient to pay all the benefits now promised. In many cases, that means that employees will have to begin paying a greater share of contributions into these systems in order to achieve a benefit level that will provide them sufficient savings and benefits when they retire. As we all know, the level of savings in this country is abysmally lower than most others, and part of the system-wide reforms of public retirement systems will need to involve greater employee participation through increased contributions. Whether these moneys go into a defined benefit plan, a defined contribution system of some type, a deferred compensation arrangement, or a hybrid blend of all three, is less important now than the idea of increased employee contributions and savings. In many cases this means mandatory payroll withholding in order to achieve the best tax advantages for the employees.
Meanwhile, public officials must also perform an analysis of the level of benefits their reformed systems will provide to new employees. With health care costs rising, a meager employer contribution to the overall retirement and benefits plans will leave employees well short of the amount they will need in order to avoid eating cat food when they retire. If so, then the plan must include features to encourage employee savings so that they can actually afford to retire if they follow the plan.
Getting real about benefits. In a recent column on retirement eligibility ages, I outlined a series of measures that will need to be implemented by many plans in order to achieve sustainable benefits levels. None of these reforms would reduce the sufficiency of retirement benefits. But they are virtually unavoidable, especially in light of the impact that the market meltdown has had on the taxpayers who contribute a majority of the funds that pay for these benefits. As one reader wrote me last week, "a public pension system cannot be sustainable if its retirees live far better off than the taxpayers who support them." That's like welfare in reverse. Although the vast majority of public employee pensions are modest, the early retirement benefits will likely draw increased attention, just like the high-profile benefits received by some public officials who find ways to double-dip.
Anti-abuse reforms. In addition to these more general structural reforms in plan design and financing, the public pension community needs to step up and fix the fatal flaws in those systems which presently allow employees to suck money from their coffers. I suspect that if some of these changes are not made voluntarily, they will be included in a future landmark ballot initiative somewhere, and provide fodder to the political campaigns of pension critics. So I would urge a proactive approach to rapid reform, rather than playing defense down the line.
Here's a shortlist of three anti-abuse reforms that every public plan should enact in order to eliminate the highly publicized and justifiable criticisms that inevitably arise when games are played with public funds.
1. Stop spiking. As I've written before, there are few abuses of the defined benefit pension system as outlandish as the payment of lifetime benefits to workers whose lifetime average earnings are far lower than their final compensation because they spike their pay at the end of their career. It's even worse when seniority practices institutionalize this nonsense, as recently reported as official practice in Buffalo, New York, with an actual formula that demonstrates the actuarial folly of these practices. When overtime and special pay are included in the pension benefits, it's an invitation to abuse. For more on this issue, and the strategies of a Pennsylvania retirement board and the City of New York fire department, see today's companion column. My November 2008 column on pension spiking provides a viable solution.
Here's a new concept that could change the future of pension plans and collective bargaining: If unions want overtime included in the pension calculation, let the employees pay half the costs of a separate, actuarially determined employee contribution on their overtime. My guess is that for police and fire, their share will work out to 10 to 20 percent of their OT pay. That way the younger union members can help subsidize their elders — and we'll see how long that lasts.
2. Ban unfunded retroactive increases. This abuse needs to be on the list of permanent reforms, although it is too late to fix the many cases where retiree groups and unions already persuaded public officials to award them unsustainable benefits increases retroactively, without funding them. Giving workers a benefits increase for past service, and then charging future taxpayers for the cost, is a clear abuse of power. When elected officials approve these deals, often behind closed doors, they do a great disservice to their taxpayers. If they want to grant benefits increases, full payment should be made in the year awarded.
3.Prohibit ad hoc COLAs in underfunded plans. For several decades, public pension plans granted cost of living allowances and pension benefits increases without building the costs into their actuarial assumptions. Each time, the award was treated as if it would never happen again. And each time, it happened again. Meanwhile, the funding ratios of public pension funds have dropped as their liabilities increased. Even plans that systematically include COLAs in their actuarial formulas should look in a mirror and ask if their real returns have come anywhere close to what they projected. If not, maybe it's time for a rule that embedded COLAs can be awarded only when 10-year investment returns have actually met the actuarial assumptions, and the plan is at least 85 percent funded. And for those that don't even bother to reduce their assumed "real" investment returns to account for ad hoc COLAs, or project them in their liabilities, the requirements must be much stiffer: full funding and provisions for revocation in the event of subsequent market losses.
In addition to these reasonably obvious reforms, several others are equally important for long-run sustainability:
Pre-announce reform of your 'dirty' amortization schedules. This abuse is mathematical and thus, less visible to the public. Presently, many pension and OPEB plans are sweeping their dirt under the rug by amortizing their funding deficits beyond 2035. The accounting rules now allow that. So, when they suffer stock market losses or award new benefits increases for today's workers and retirees, many plans instruct the actuary to amortize that deficit over the next 25 to 30 years. Again, we can't generalize about everybody, and some plans use a shorter schedule. But the majority of public retirement plans today are using amortization schedules that are far longer than their corporate counterparts, and far longer than the remaining lives of their retirees and the remaining service lives of their employees. The result is that costs are transferred to future taxpayers — our children and grandchildren — for services provided to our parents by employees who will die before the benefits are fully funded.
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board is now revisiting this issue, and may have something to say about these practices in 2010. Regardless of what GASB allows, pension plans need to achieve intergenerational equity by tightening up their amortization schedules. The problem now is that if everybody cleaned up their act tomorrow, the costs of pension plans would skyrocket as these amortizations would boost the annual costs of unfunded liabilities. There is a phased solution, however: Do the actuarial analysis and determine the annual impact of a realistic, actuarially based amortization. Then tell the employer today what that cost will be in three years when you actually begin to implement it. That will give the employer sufficient lead time to make budget adjustments. The smart ones can then take that information to the bargaining table and begin to demand that employees share a portion of these costs going forward (see below).
Restructuring retiree medical benefits. Some municipalities offer lifetime medical benefits to early retirees; others pay only a supplement to Medicare after age 65. Many simply allow the employees to participate in the employer's group plan (implicit rate subsidy). Schools, cities, counties, special districts and states all have different deals. So when I write of cradle-to-grave benefits, it's not a universal problem. What we do know is that for those employers who permit 40- or 50-year-old retirees to receive full medical benefits at taxpayer expense, the plans are likely to be unsustainable going forward without significant restructuring. Except for OPEB plans that offer only the implicit rate subsidy, cost caps need to be installed in order to prevent runaway medical inflation from hitting future taxpayers.
Sharing the costs and risks. Sustainability will require genuine cost-sharing and risk-sharing between employers and employees for the entire spectrum of retirement benefits. I introduced this theme in a column on "gain-sharing and pain-sharing" last month, and I want to underscore its importance. In the past, public employers typically bore the majority of the cost of contributing and bore all investment risks. Again, there are exceptions: some systems require employees to make hefty contributions and already share a fair level of the costs. And a few systems even share investment risks. But nationally, the course-change most needed in the public retirement world is a shift toward an equal burden of costs and risks.
On the contribution side, this would mean employees pay half of the total contributions costs. That may take a decade to achieve in some cases, but a good place to start would be with the upcoming pension contribution increases that most plans will be sending to employers as a result of the recent market meltdown. If employees were to share half of those cost increases, that would be a good start. Likewise, as public employers begin to pre-fund their OPEB plans actuarially, it makes common sense to start sharing the normal service cost equally with employees. (Employers should bear the full costs of unfunded OPEB liabilities in my view, as they were the ones asleep at the switch here, not the employees.)
On the risks side, I would favor a hybrid DB-DC (defined benefit-defined contribution) arrangement where feasible, especially for OPEB but even for some pension hybrids. In Washington State, they have done this already with their pension plan, with half the benefits in the form of a fixed pension and the other half an individual DC account. Whether the DC component is an individual account or a collective defined contribution trust as I described in my previous column on ways to fix OPEB funding, the point is the same. If taxpayers and public employees share equal exposure to stock market risks and the contribution costs, they will develop a mutual respect for each others' interests.
"Pension holidays": A new twist. One reader has suggested to me that legislatures and public employers will need to consider several new forms of "pension holidays." In the past, this always meant that the employer would suspend contributions and take a payment holiday. That just makes the pension deficit grow larger and increases the long-term costs to taxpayers. But this idea has now taken on new life on the benefits side of the equation, and includes also the concept of COLA holidays (no cost of living allowances) and service-accrual holidays. A service-accrual holiday is when employees are granted no pension credit or fractional service credits for work during financial emergency periods. It is the governmental equivalent of private companies suspending their 401(k) match during unprofitable periods. In Florida, for example, there is legislative talk about suspending public sector labor agreements statewide in order to work out the budget crises. By combining all three forms of pension holidays, there would be an immediate budget savings but also a reduction of long-term liabilities so that the ultimate costs to taxpayers remain stable.
Is legislation necessary? Ideally, the public pension community will achieve these reforms on its own. I'd love to see the various conferences include this topic as a regular feature for trustees to consider, and for the National Conference of State Legislatures to monitor. Right now, the taxpayers' advocacy groups are focusing on bigger fish in the national financial crisis, so pension reform has taken a back seat to other issues. In California, we already have radio ads sponsored by the Howard Jarvis taxpayers group that initiated Prop 13 — and their focus for now is taxes, not pensions. But eventually the "pension envy" scenario is likely to return in legislative proposals and possibly ballot initiatives. Or, it could get wrapped into a tax limit initiative. Such proposals could mandate equal employee contributions, higher retirement ages, anti-abuse rules and other provisions that reasonable people would approve and frustrated taxpayer groups will demand.
My advice to all those who support public retirement systems is this: Start making these reforms proactively before another wave of unrest begins to foment. Begin with the anti-abuse suggestions, while working toward employer-employee partnership agreements and structural reforms. Then we might actually make it through the next decade, with retirement plans that can afford to pay for what's been promised.
~ ~ ~
Girard Miller, a senior strategist for retirement plans and investments at the PFM Group, has 30 years of experience in the public, private and nonprofit sectors. His general market observations and institutional investment strategies are his own and should not be construed as investment advice or recommendations concerning specific securities. He can be reached at millerg@pfm.com. More biographical information

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