Moody’s: Illinois 2011 unfunded liability jumps by 65 percent
Moody’s: Illinois 2011 unfunded liability jumps by 65 percent
by Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner Moody’s Investors Service reported that Illinois’ true unfunded pension liability in fiscal year 2011 was nearly 65% higher than the state’s official estimate. In its report titled “Adjusted Pension Liability Medians for U.S. States,” Moody’s calculated the unfunded liabilities for Illinois’ three largest state-run pension plans at $133 billion, compared...
By Chris Andriesen
Increasing State Employee Retirement System costs fall on the backs of Illinois taxpayers
Increasing State Employee Retirement System costs fall on the backs of Illinois taxpayers
Employee contributions to the State Employees’ Retirement System, or SERS, have gone up by 66 percent since 1998. During the same time period, taxpayer contributions to state employee retirements increased by 593 percent. In 2012 alone, Illinois taxpayers contributed $1.1 billion more to SERS than state employees did. And the disparity between taxpayer and employee...
By John Klingner
Pension plan developed by universities fails to solve Illinois’ pension crisis
Pension plan developed by universities fails to solve Illinois’ pension crisis
A six-point pension plan created by the Institute of Government and Public Affairs, or IGPA, fails to solve Illinois’ pension problem. That’s because the plan, Senate Bill 2591, maintains the state’s unmanageable defined benefit plan for current employees. It requires all new employees to participate in a hybrid defined benefit and defined contribution pension plan, and...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Capitol Updates: lawmakers push off pension reform in favor of ‘pension conference committee’ during special session
Capitol Updates: lawmakers push off pension reform in favor of ‘pension conference committee’ during special session
State lawmakers were in Springfield yesterday for a special session ordered by Gov. Pat Quinn. As expected, the General Assembly did not take formal votes on any pension reform legislation. Instead, Quinn called for the formation of a conference committee, with the intention of resolving the differences between the House and Senate on pension reform. As a means of breaking up...
By Jane McEnaney
The path forward on pension reform: A fair solution for all stakeholders
The path forward on pension reform: A fair solution for all stakeholders
State Reps. Tom Morrison (R-Palatine) and Jeanne Ives (R-Wheaton) have proposed House Bill 3303, which is based the Institute’s pension reform plan. State Sen. Jim Oberweis (R-Sugar Grove) introduced a floor amendment to Senate Bill 2026, which is identical to House Bill 3303. The problem Illinois has the nation’s worst-funded pension systems. The unfunded liability currently stands at more...
By Chris Andriesen
Quinn eyes bad pension legislation for special session
Quinn eyes bad pension legislation for special session
by Ben VanMetre Political leadership in Illinois punted on pension reform during the recent spring legislative session — a move that resulted in back-to-back credit rating downgrades. The General Assembly’s inaction and the resulting credit blows caused Gov. Pat Quinn to call lawmakers back to session. The purpose of the June 19 special session is...
By Chris Andriesen
State Universities Retirement System option provides model for Illinois pension reform
State Universities Retirement System option provides model for Illinois pension reform
The Illinois General Assembly is gearing up for a special session to discuss pensions next week because of lawmakers’ reform inaction during the recent spring session, which resulted in back-to-back credit rating downgrades. The debate during session will likely be over which of two plans will solve Illinois’ crisis – House Speaker Mike Madigan’s proposal or the one...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Tapped out taxpayers shoulder more and more of the costs of teacher pensions
Tapped out taxpayers shoulder more and more of the costs of teacher pensions
Teacher contributions to the Teachers’ Retirement System, or TRS, have gone up by 100 percent since 1998. But taxpayer contributions to teacher retirements have gone up by 400 percent since then. In 2012 alone, Illinois taxpayers contributed $1.6 billion more to TRS than teachers did. And the disparity between taxpayers and employee contributions is projected...
By John Klingner
Illinois’ supersized pension problem
Illinois’ supersized pension problem
Illinois’ pension problem dwarfs the retirement problems in all other states. Officially, the underfunding of the five state-run pension systems total $100 billion. But when more realistic assumptions are used, the shortfall exceeds $200 billion. Without real pension reform, every Illinois household is on the hook for more than $40,000 in additional taxes just to cover...
By Ted Dabrowski
Illinois committee will reconvene to discuss pensions June 18
Illinois committee will reconvene to discuss pensions June 18
Though Illinois taxpayers should be disappointed that pension reform was not enacted during the scheduled spring legislative session, they should also be relieved that fake reform was not enacted. The competing proposals offered by House Speaker Mike Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton did not offer solutions commensurate to the severity of Illinois’ pension problem (Senate Bill 1and Senate Bill...
By Jane McEnaney
CTBA’s pension plan doesn’t fix the problem
CTBA’s pension plan doesn’t fix the problem
Back in January, Ralph Martire of the union-backed Center for Tax and Budget Accountability proposedwhat he called a “solution” for Illinois’ pension crisis. This plan has been getting more attention lately. But before embracing it, lawmakers should ask: does this plan really solve the problem? After all, Martire’s plan is to leave the broken pension system untouched –...
By Jonathan Ingram
Head of TRS says the state may need to reduce COLAs
Head of TRS says the state may need to reduce COLAs
After years of denying that the pension funds are in trouble, the head of the state's largest pension fund is finally acknowledging the crisis.
By Jonathan Ingram