Saturday, October 17, 2015

State pension checks are going to be late.


Now the proverbial chicken is coming home to roost for the State of Illinois.
Elizabeth Campbell and Tim Jones report for Bloomberg, Oct. 14, 2015, that Illinois will delay pension payments as a prolonged budget impasse causes a cash shortage. The spending standoff between Republican Governor Bruce Rauner and Democratic legislative leaders has extended into its fourth month with no signs of ending.
Comptroller Leslie Geissler Munger said her office will postpone a $560 million retirement-fund payment next month and may be late in its December payment as well. But the pension systems will be paid in full by the end of the fiscal year in June. Munger said that the
postponement is “the least of a number of bad options. For all intents and purposes, we are out of money now.”
The state still is making bond payments because “We prioritize the bond payments above everything else,” Munger told reporters.
Below are three graphs showing the shortfalls in Illinois’ pensions for state universities, teachers, and state employees (Source: ZeroHedge)
Chicago’s school system is bankrupt, requiring nearly $500 million in funding from the state to plug a gaping budget hole. At the same time, the state is doing nothing about egregious government waste and inefficiency. A report by Reuters has identified nearly a dozen cases of nepotism, where state legislators have spouses and children on government payroll.
Emanuel threatens that public safety will be decimated without the massive tax increase, as 20% of the police force and 40% of firefighters will lose their jobs.
How much this will cost the average homeowner is not yet clear. Emanuel is seeking approval from the Legislature to exempt those homes worth less than $250,000 from the increase, which means owners of more valuable homes would absorb the entire burden.
Emanuel’s tax plan has already led to a decline in home values, as shown by the Case-Shiller Home Price Index. Buyers may not be so ready to cut a deal that will see them inheriting a massive property tax hike.
Coupal emphasizes that Emanuel’s plan highlights the importance of California’s Proposition 13, which prohibits city governments from doing exactly what Chicago is doing. As a result, a number of Californian cities have been forced to file for bankruptcy in recent years, largely due to exploding government employee pension debt.
In California, Prop 13 limits increases in property taxes to 2% a year, gives voters the final say on new local taxes, and requires a two-thirds vote of each house of the Legislature to increase state taxes. That’s why Prop 13 is hated by state politicians, most of whom owe their election to their government employee union allies. If they can eliminate the impediments to tax increases established by Proposition 13, the politicians will be in a much better position to repay and reward their political benefactors.
Meanwhile, in Chicago, the city’s budget director has already gone on record as saying Mayor Emanuel’s property tax increase is not enough, which just goes to show, once again, that elections have consequences. But it’s a lesson that Democrat voters are determined to ignore.

11 comments:

  1. Anonymous10/18/2015

    What's this guy care if people depending on paychecks have to wait, he made about 58 million last year?

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  2. Anonymous10/19/2015

    Rauner's plan is to bankrupt the state so he can gut the union contracts and pensions mark my words!

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  3. Anonymous10/19/2015

    It is truly a shame that pensioners may have to wait a week or two....maybe three....to get paid. However, pensioners have been largely immune to the devastation that the economy wreaked on "Hard Working" citizens of Chicago and of Illinois over the past six plus years. Their pension arrived like clock work...while us in the private sector aka "the real world" - worried that ourselves ...or are spouses or kids were going to LOSE their jobs and with it the regular paycheck such a job provided....If we were fortunate to keep our jobs many of us got pay CUTS!! You can blame Rauner if you want to, (I know your hack Union mouthpieces want you to). But Rauner does not control Springfield. Madigan is the reason we have spent ourselves into the bankruptcy that looms. Years or traditional Republicans in Springfield begging to get our looney tune spending and borrowing machine under control were laughed at or ignored by all of you. Not one penny promised you - will you ever have to forfeit. The State Sup Court already ruled.

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    1. Anonymous10/20/2015

      Most of these pensions are ill gotten anyway.

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    2. Anonymous10/20/2015

      My pension represented 32 years of 9% payroll contributions from my job as a patrolman, so go fuck yourself smartass

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    3. Anonymous10/21/2015

      Except perhaps that he was being paid 9% too much all those years.

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    4. Anonymous10/21/2015

      Democratic policies never pay off.

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    5. Anonymous10/21/2015

      I worked 32 years......so go F yourself! Wow I am swayed by your clear thinking logical argument. You will be paid....every penny...if you have to wait a few months try trading in that $40,000 Japanese SUV you bought.

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  4. Anonymous10/19/2015

    Those numbers and graphs are staggering...and if the media would put those on their newscasts on a regular basis the s**t would hit the fan. The last time I checked the city of Chicago is run by the Democratic machine.....The courts are largely liberal Democrats appointed or voted in by Democrats and backed by Democrats. Madigan has controlled Springfield for 25 years and I am pretty sure he is a Democrat. Rauner has not been in office more than ten months. If you 19th Ward government job liberal Democrats are still willing to blame Obama for the economy while he is heading off into the sunset of his second term, then you cant blame Rauner...Give him a few years...maybe even four...or better yet re-elect him to give him enough time to "fix" things....And enjoy your Democrat property tax hike.

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  5. Anonymous10/19/2015

    Maybe the Governor could share his hedge fund prowess with the state treasurer and steal the state's way out of this mess.

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    1. Anonymous10/20/2015

      I guess if you are someone who cant even balance their check book, the world of finance may seem to be theft. Instead of throwing rocks at the nice cars of successful people why don't you try to learn how to manage your money better.

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