20% reduction in workforce across the board in all affected agencies (except police and fire) predicted! Layoffs may eventually hit 40%.
Moody’s Investor Service dropped the bond ratings of Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Park District to junk a day after it did the same for the city of Chicago.
For CPS, the downgrade doesn’t trigger any new payments to financial institutions, but the worsening of CPS’ ratings could potentially affect negotiations the district has entered into with several banks over those “swap” termination fees.
Moody’s dropped CPS’ rating three notches to Ba3 from Baa3, with a continuing negative outlook. The Chicago Park District saw the same three-notch slide to Ba1 with a negative outlook.
CPS’ rating, which determines its borrowing costs, applies to $6.2 billion in general-obligation debt; the park district’s rating to $616 million in general-obligation debt.
Moody’s blamed CPS’ “steadily escalating pension contributions and use of reserves to fund those contributions.”
“We believe pension costs will place increasing strain on the district’s precarious financial position” absent new revenue or cuts, “both of which appear increasingly difficult for the district to achieve,” it wrote of CPS.
As for the Park District, it said, “We perceive increased risk that the city’s intensified pressures will adversely affect CPD’s [Chicago Park District] financial operations and position.”
The Chicago Park District says it strongly disagrees with the downgrade and Moody’s assessment that the park district has governance ties to the city. The park district has operated as its own entity for 81 years. It also has its own pension reform that went into effect in January and allows for any source of
revenue to make its contributions rather than rely on just property taxes.
The park district’s pension reform, unlike the state, requires significant contributions by the park district — $12.5 million in 2015 and 2016, and $50 million in 2019.
“The Chicago Park District has done everything that Moody’s has asked — we have structurally balanced our budget each year and maintained healthy reserves; we passed pension legislation that balances reform with revenue and has not been contested; we have responsibly increased property taxes; and the bonds that they rated are bolstered with dedicated revenue streams larger than are needed to make interest payments,” park district spokeswoman Jessica Maxey-Faulkner said.
Moody’s cited the state Supreme Court’s ruling Friday overturning of state pension reforms as unconstitutional for all the downgrades, saying CPS and the park district are running out of options to reduce pension liabilities.
CPS interim CEO Jesse Ruiz repeated Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s mantra Tuesday that Moody’s unfairly targeted CPS but didn’t touch the state’s rating in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling. Ruiz said the downgrade “does reaffirm why we must address Chicago Public Schools’ urgent financial crisis and finally bring equity to Chicago Public Schools and our city’s taxpayers.”
Ruiz chalked up $700 million of the district’s projected $1.1 billion deficit to pension costs.
“This crisis is now at our classroom doors, and we urge Springfield to prioritize education funding and end the broken pension system that forces Chicago taxpayers to pay twice for teacher pensions,” he said.
Neither downgrade Wednesday came as a surprise given that Moody’s also downgraded the city’s debt to junk status Tuesday.
Moody’s wrote that the “magnitude of the budget adjustments” needed to solve the $30 billion total pension crisis at the city and schools is “significant,” and Chicago’s tax base is already on the hook for them, the agency said.
The city’s rating applies to $8.1 billion in general-obligation debt, $542 million in outstanding sales tax revenue debt and $268 million in outstanding and authorized motor fuel tax revenue.
On Tuesday, Emanuel had denounced the rating agency as “irresponsible” for playing “politics with Chicago’s financial future by pushing the city to increase taxes on residents without [pension] reform.”
The mayor acknowledged Chicago’s financial crisis is “very real and at our doorsteps.” But he called the Moody’s double-drop “irresponsible,” “far beyond reality” and “out of step with other rating agencies — by as many as six steps.”
On Wednesday, Civic Federation President Laurence Msall called on the city to come up with a short- and long-term plan to restore Chicago’s bond rating to investment grade level.
And the Chicago Teachers Union accused Emanuel of ignoring their pitches for new revenue sources.
“The downgrade is an example of how the rating agencies work in concert with bondholders in pushing our city and schools to the brink by recklessly increasing termination fees and costs of borrowing,” CTU spokeswoman Stephanie Gadlin said. “Today’s action by Moody’s induces further political panic to force the city to implement even more misguided fiscal decisions that will hurt our students and public schools.”
In March, Moody’s dropped CPS to a Baa3 rating — one level above junk status — on the board’s general-obligation debt. Two weeks later, a three-notch drop by Fitch Ratings to BBB with a negative outlook triggered termination clauses in debt “swap” deals with banks that put CPS on the hook potentially for $263 million in penalties. Chicago school officials told federal regulators in filings that their liability was less — more like $228 million.
CPS spokesman Bill McCaffrey said at the time and repeated Wednesday that the district was in talks with the financial institutions to renegotiate the terms of the deals.
O'Shea wants to legalize and tax marijuana. Everyone can smoke some dope. That way we will have the money to pay the pensions. They do deserve their pensions, don't you know.
ReplyDeleteShame on you Matt O'Shea. You know this is wrong, harmful to our children.
DeleteI like Matt but his proposal is irresponsible and a bit over the top. He wants to legalize the recreational use of marijuana so that we can tax it and then have money to fund the pensions? What's next gambling machines in high school cafeterias? How bout a little coke or heroin to go along with that marijuana? And lets lower the drinking age to 14 too. Don't laugh, Mat's proposal is a slippery slope.
DeleteGuess what……SCREW THE PENSIONS. There is a reason we have had these historical prohibitions. Marijuana has been proven to be incredibly psychologically addictive, especially to young people. The drug robs people of motivation. The future belongs to them. They have enough challenges to face.
Why in the world should we saddle them with their parents and grandparents debt via being hooked on smoke? How can this ever be justified? To pay the pensions? Think about what we will have if such a proposal is passed. Burnt out youth hanging at Munroe park but at least the pensions will be paid.
A better solution may be to call for the tax increases that are necessary to pay the city's obligations. How about a call for the city to cut expenditures such as the bizarre reparations being paid to the criminals that were interrogated by Commander Burge. It's because of that kind of spending that we don't have enough revenue.
Got my County Assessor statement today explaining that my home went up 20 percent in value from two years ago...it is beginning already. And if you work for the CPS you will have to choose between being laid off or a pay cut. And if you are one of the more recent hires get ready for your red tee shirt strike brothers and sisters with more time on the job to vote to lay you off.....All for one and one for....oh no.....no ....not if I have to give up 50 cents.....oh no....screw you.....Then they will get into their Toyota SUV and drive home to their 2500 sf addition home in Mt Greenwood and watch it on TV. You will be in a daze......it is called reality. It will suck. I say this with no joy at all.
ReplyDeleteThe financial markets are now waking up to the non stop irresponsible spending by our local Democrats. This has been awhile coming and now the financial markets see no willingness at all on the part of our politicians to accept any stricter measures to control these bloated pensions and obligations. The Democrats just keep turning to the taxpayer to rob them over and over and over again....give aways to the malcontents who wont work, and colluding with the unions to steal taxpayer money to give to them....All for cash and power. You talk to teachers, cpd, cfd, and all other city job holders and they are truly in amazing denial. I spoke to a teacher the other day "oh yeah,,,,they say we're broke....yeah but they have money for blah and blah". Truly stunning in it's stupidity. The day of reckoning is really coming. How and why can you retire at the age of 50???? Why in God's name should my hard earned and worked for tax dollars have to pay for you to live off the govt teet for 30 more years?? If you don't accept some concessions NOW - they will declare bankruptcy later...and you will have NOTHING!
ReplyDeleteThe aldermen voted unanimously to spend OUR money for "Burge Reparations."
ReplyDeletePlease don't get started on the Burge reparations. Its revisionist history, pandering to the masses that contribute nothing, all in the name of political correctness. My kids are in high school now, but if they started peddling that police brutality bullshit, I would take them aside and give them the straight scoop, right out of the books of Martin Prieb. All of us do a lot of biting our tongues, just trying to go along and get along. What's really astounding to me is that the African American population of this country is less than 18%. You'd never think that if you own a television.
DeleteBlack population of America is about 11%
DeleteThe sad truth is that if we to fire half of the non police / fire city employees, the city would run just fine. Thats what needs to be done.
ReplyDeleteIn preparation for this eventual meltdown, I've put the lawn chairs on the front porch and am patiently waiting for the Publisher's Clearing House Prize Patrol. We're so screwed.
ReplyDelete