Pension system short by millions
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Dave Brooks
City taxpayers will need to kick in an additional $50 million to
cover the costs of the city’s pension system for police officers and
firefighters, a recent budget report shows.
The large unfunded liability is the result of a benefits package
negotiated by union leaders in May 2001 that allows officers to
retire as early as age 50 and collect pensions equal to 90% of their
final salaries for the rest of their lives. City officials disagree
on the effects the retirement plan will have on city coffers.
The plan is managed through a series of investments by a state
agency, the Public Employees Retirement System. The city contracts
with the agency to invest city money in a retirement fund to pay for
pensions and post-employment benefits. On a recent investment report,
the agency was said to control nearly $190 billion in assets, making
it the nation’s largest public pension fund.
City Finance Director Dan Villella said the agency makes
conservative predictions on returns from its investments, and strong
earnings in coming years could reduce the funding gap.
“I think [the amount the city owes] will definitely go down,”
Villella said. “Their earning assumptions are a little low.”
At current assumptions, Huntington Beach needs to invest $50
million on top of its existing $270 million in assets to earn the
rate of return required to fund the city’s pension system.
The report showed that in 2001, the city was over-investing in
the retirement package, but a funding gap began to develop after the
city approved a new pension plan.
Under the deal, negotiated by former union boss Russell Reinhart,
retired police officers receive 3% of their salary for every year
they worked on the force. An officer who worked at the department for
30 years would receive 90% of his final salary for the rest of his
life. The city’s firefighters later negotiated a similar deal.
Within two years, the city went from an $11-million surplus in its
retirement fund to a $50-million deficit. Villella said that
discrepancy will decrease as the fund begins to incorporate strong
investment returns into its financial reports.
“I think they will soon start ratcheting down our annual
contribution,” Villella said.
It the short term, however, the city will be making some big
payments. This year, the city paid $9.1 million to the investment
pool to take advantage of a 3% savings for paying in a lump sum.
Councilman Dave Sullivan said such large payments are a drain on
general funds usually earmarked for roads and city services. He said
when the plan was adopted, its backers argued that the retirement
system would pay for itself without any additional contributions from
the city. That was in May 2001, before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
and the subsequent stock market slump.
Sullivan said he thinks city employees should pay into a fixed
contribution plan such as a 401k.
“The current system doesn’t make sense -- you don’t see any
companies out in the private sector doing that,” he said. “We have a
unsustainable system, and I think it’s going to lead to fiscal
disaster.”
Councilman Keith Bohr suggested a more measured approach to the
pension system, arguing that the city should analyze the fund’s
performance in the next two years to see if earnings improve.
“We need to look at the whole program,” he said. “If we can’t
afford it, we can’t afford it, but I’m not ready to pull the plug on
it yet.”
Most cities in Orange County offer their police and firefighters
similar retirement benefits, and ending Huntington Beach’s pension
system would make it difficult to recruit new officers, he said. The
retirement system also serves as an incentive for officers to retire
before they can no longer perform their duties.
“We have to look at what other cities do and see how they respond
to this issue,” he said. “I would not want to be the first out of the
system, but I also don’t want to be loyal to our employees to the
point where it costs us financially.”
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