"The Cincinnati City Council unanimously opposed the amendment targeting
city workers' pensions, which is why backers of the amendment had to spend
$70,000 to collect the required 7,443 signatures to put it on the ballot. The
ironically named Cincinnatians for Pension Reform, the people behind the ballot
initiative to degrade city workers' pensions, is a group of tea party leaders
from outside Cincinnati and Ohio (Paul Jacob, the president of the Liberty
Initiative Fund is one). We've seen this before and we'll see it again,
privatizers and the wealthy 1 percent elite trying to force the middle class to
gamble their economic security in retirement on the roulette wheel of the stock
market."
Barbara J. Easterling
President,
Alliance for Retired Americans
Privatizing Cincinnati's Retirement System -- A Bad
Deal for Retirees, Workers and the City
Posted: 09/13/2013
A proposed
charter amendment slated for Cincinnati's ballot this November would break its
pension promises to city workers, harming working families and the city economy.
It is part of an immoral national fight against retirement security.
The Cincinnati City Council unanimously opposed the amendment targeting
city workers' pensions, which is why backers of the amendment had to spend
$70,000 to collect the required 7,443 signatures to put it on the ballot. The
ironically named Cincinnatians for Pension Reform, the people behind the ballot
initiative to degrade city workers' pensions, is a group of tea party leaders
from outside Cincinnati and Ohio (Paul Jacob, the president of the Liberty
Initiative Fund is one). We've seen this before and we'll see it again,
privatizers and the wealthy 1 percent elite trying to force the middle class to
gamble their economic security in retirement on the roulette wheel of the stock
market.
One important caveat is that Cincinnati city workers and their employer do
not contribute into nor do they receive Social Security. The Cincinnati
Retirement System was created in 1931, before Social Security, to provide a
modest but dignified retirement through its defined benefit. It has done a good
job.
There is evidence that this charter amendment would increase financial
liabilities for Cincinnati and its taxpayers. Supporters encourage its passage
and say the details can come later. However, the executive director of the
Cincinnati Retirement System said, "We would have no idea how to implement it,"
and noted it could lead to a mass exodus of employees, the city may end up in
worse financial straits by having to contribute more resources to Social
Security than it currently contributes toward the Retirement System on behalf of
newer employees, among other problems.
I couldn't agree more with the vice mayor of Cincinnati, Roxanne Qualls,
who said:
"To start messing -- literally messing -- with the pension system by people
who do not know what they are doing and who are not aware of the complications
involved in terms of requirements by the IRS as well as the rules that govern us
and putting people's lives and livelihoods when they retire and retirees at risk
is just irresponsible."
City workers and retirees have already faced significant changes in regard
to the retirement plan with major reforms passed twice by council in since 2008.
These reforms raised retirement ages, made employees responsible for a greater
share of medical costs, increased employee contributions, and reduced pension
benefits. Public employees have done their part. It is important that the city
and workers work together to find a solution that does not further compromise
retirement security. State and municipal budget crises were caused not by
employee compensation, but by revenue declines triggered by the Great Recession,
from which we are still recovering. Irresponsible tax cuts and giveaways during
the good times certainly exacerbated the problem. Cincinnatians, including our
members there and their families, are not prepared to surrender their right to a
secure retirement just because Wall Street bankers and Tea Party hacks are out
for the money and are willing to pay to force it through our political systems.
Stand with the city of Cincinnati, its workers and retirees in
opposing this ill-advised ballot amendment.
If you live in Cincinnati and would like to become more involved, you
can contact the Ohio Alliance for Retired Americans' Bentley Davis at bentleydavis@retiredamericans.org.
-------------------------------------
Foreign Interest
Out-of-town tea party groups take aim at Cincinnati’s
struggling pension system
By German Lopez
August 14th, 2013
Local and national tea party groups are backing a city charter amendment
that would semi-privatize Cincinnati’s ailing pension system. But local
officials and unions are urging voters to reject the measure in November because
they claim it would raise costs for the city and reduce gains for retirees.
At the center of the issue is the city’s unfunded pension liability, which
grew by $134 million between 2012 and 2013 to $862 million. City officials claim
future costs for the pension system were fixed by reforms in 2011, but a
solution for the growing liability has remained elusive as the Cincinnati
Retirement System board debates whether taxpayers or retirees should be hit
worse by the next round of cost-cutting changes.
“I think it’s a fair statement to say we have a problem with our pension
system,” Councilman Chris Seelbach said on Aug. 5. “We need a solution that at
least five members of this Council can get behind. But the solution proposed by
the ballot initiative is a really, really bad one.”
The amendment would privatize pension plans so the city and city employees
hired after January 2014 would contribute to individual retirement accounts that
employees would then manage by independently selecting investments. That’s a
shift from the current system in which the city pools pension funds and manages
the investments through an independent board. The idea is to move from a public
plan and instead imitate a 401k plan that’s often seen in the private sector.
But unlike private-sector workers, city employees might not qualify for
Social Security benefits. That means public employees would be treated like
private-sector workers with a 401k-style plan, but, at the same time, they’d be
missing out on the safety net and extra cash that private-sector employees
typically get through Social Security. If a retiring employee mismanaged the
plan, he or she would have nothing left to fall back on.
Even if city workers did qualify for Social Security, that could actually
cost more for the city, which would then have to match employee contributions on
top of paying into Social Security. Despite the higher costs, the final benefits
including Social Security might not be enough to match traditional
private-sector plans, according to an Aug. 5 report from the city
administration.
The city administration’s report says it’s also unclear if the Cincinnati
for Pension Reform plan would even work as written: “Certain provisions in the
Amendment do not consider requirements imposed by federal legislation and the
Governmental Accounting Standards Board. In addition, it lacks a litany of plan
details that would be required to establish and administer the programs.”
The changes wouldn’t affect police and fire personnel, who use a separate
pension system.
Opponents of the amendment are concerned about the mystique surrounding the
reform effort. Within a couple weeks, Cincinnati for Pension Reform announced
its campaign then gathered enough petitions to clear the 7,443 signature
requirement. The quick turnaround came as a surprise to local leaders, including
Councilman Charlie Winburn, the lone Republican on City Council, who on Aug. 5
remarked that he didn’t know anyone involved in the petition drive.
In response, local leaders of all political spectrums have joined with
unions — including the AFL-CIO, the largest federation of unions in the country
— in condemning the Cincinnati for Pension Reform proposal. Opponents of the
amendment include Democrats such as Vice Mayor Roxanne Qualls and ex-Councilman
John Cranley, who are running for mayor against each other, and Republicans like
Winburn and City Council candidate Amy Murray.
In response,
local leaders of all political spectrums have joined with unions — including the
AFL-CIO, the largest federation of unions in the country — in condemning the
Cincinnati for Pension Reform proposal. Opponents of the amendment include
Democrats such as Vice Mayor Roxanne Qualls and ex-Councilman John Cranley, who
are running for mayor against each other, and Republicans like Winburn and City
Council candidate Amy Murray.
Tim Burke, chairman of the Hamilton County Democratic Party and the
Hamilton County Board of Elections, explains that it’s difficult to verify who
exactly is funding the Cincinnati for Pension Reform campaign since such efforts
typically use nonprofit organizations to mask the direct source of
contributions, but a campaign finance report, which petitioners will have to
file on Oct. 24, should shed light on who’s involved in the effort.
But given the evidence, Burke says the petitioners are from outside
Cincinnati. Burke was approached by one of the paid petitioners a week before
they turned in signatures, and, after a testy conversation, he found out the
petitioner isn’t a registered Cincinnati voter and her campaign offices are
based in Sharonville, Ohio — outside of Cincinnati’s boundaries.
Petition documents obtained through the city administration also show that
Cincinnati for Pension Reform paid California-based Arno Petition Consultants
nearly $70,000 to gather petitions, giving some credence to Burke’s belief.
“I’m not suggesting there’s anything illegal about that,” Burke says. “I
just find it to be more than a bit unsettling that you would bring
non-Cincinnatians in to screw up the pension programs that our city workers rely
upon.”
The payment to Arno Petition Consultants also proves the group has quite a
bit of cash on hand for a local campaign, although the sources of funding are so
far unknown.
For now, it appears Cincinnati for Pension Reform’s campaign is getting
some form of support from tea party groups outside the city and state. National
tea party champion Paul Jacob is president of Virginia-based Liberty Initiative
Fund and Citizens in Charge, two tea party groups attempting to reform pension
systems in cities around the nation. Liberty Initiative Fund’s website in
particular has a total of two blog posts, one of which is dedicated to the
Cincinnati pension amendment.
The other blog post is dedicated to a similar pension reform initiative on
the November ballot in Tucson, Ariz., which officials there claim will bankrupt
the city by imposing extraordinary costs for the first 15 years.
According to contribution reports from the campaign, Jacob’s groups have
donated about $81,000 in Tucson. The National Taxpayers Union, a conservative
anti-tax group, also contributed $52,000.
Much like the proposal in Cincinnati, the Tucson initiative would place
future employees in 401k-style plans, so the current pension system would no
longer take in a new pool of contributing employees. As employees in the current
system retire and no new employees come in with contributions, local taxpayers
would be forced to pick up the cost to keep the system afloat for old and
current employees.
Cincinnati would also be required to more quickly pay for the unfunded
liability it’s built up by underfunding the pension system by varying degrees
since 2003. That liability currently stands at $862 million, nearly two and a
half years’ worth of the city’s operating budget.
The liability presents a couple major problems for Cincinnati: The city
might have to pay for it by making budget cuts or raising taxes, and lenders
could grow weary of the city’s unpaid promises and charge more to finance local
capital projects. Those issues were particularly highlighted by a July 15 report
from credit rating agency Moody’s, which downgraded Cincinnati’s bond rating in
part because of the city’s unfunded pension liability.
To address those issues, the tea party-backed amendment would mandate an
annual audit of the system and require the city to draw down its liabilities
within 20 years, rather than 30. But city officials claim that could prove far
too expensive, given the enormous costs the city has already built up.
Still, proponents of the Tucson and Cincinnati initiatives argue that
changes are coming too slowly and the new 401k-style plans are needed to ensure
the city takes a sustainable, pay-as-you-go approach instead of making promises
it can’t keep.
“The city keeps making promises for future benefits, and then the city
doesn’t fund them,” says Gary Greenberg, an attorney who helped draft the
Cincinnati amendment.
For tea party supporters, opposition to the city’s public pension plan also
has philosophical roots. They tend to support smaller government at every level.
In the past, Jacob, of the Liberty Initiative Fund, likened Social Security and
other government-supported entitlement programs to “a Ponzi scheme.” Similarly
to local pension plans around the nation, tea party supporters see Social
Security’s looming deficits as proof governments are making more promises than
they can keep.
For AFL-CIO communications director Mike Gillis, the battle for the current
pension system is also philosophical. He points out that proposals like the
Tucson and Cincinnati initiatives are typically backed by Wall Street
businessmen and brokers who stand to financially benefit from more people taking
up individual 401k-style plans, even if it comes at the expense of the average
worker.
Although Gillis calls the current pension system modest, he argues the
401k-style plans would still be much worse for city employees.
“They’re not being paid as much as they were (while) working, and they’re
not getting rich by any means,” he says. “This pension is designed to give them
enough money to live on in their senior years.”