San Francisco Examiner/Melissa Griffin, 7/22/12. "Sniffing out financial failure in California cities." Article printed in its entirety, approved by Melissa Griffin.
"The Golden State cities of Vallejo, Stockton, Mammoth Lakes and San
Bernardino have all declared bankruptcy, and city leaders in Compton are
publicly pondering that option as well. Basically the roster of
California cities has become a game of dead pool to see which one will
drop next.
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Boosting city survival against odds |
And while that might not be entirely preventable,
State Controller
John Chiang has asked legislators to give his office permission to
deploy “red teams” of auditors to swoop in and dig around in the books
of local governments when the whiff of financial failure first fills the
air. Currently, the auditors can only go in once a city’s finances are
ruined.
The argument for Chiang’s proposal just got a boost from the July 17
report of a State Budget Crisis Task Force. The multi-state task force
advisory group is co-chaired by former New York Lt. Gov. Richard Ravitch
and former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, and its members are a
bipartisan group of luminaries that are my new answer to the “fantasy
dinner party” game.
The report compares the financial condition of various states and
offers recommendations for reform. One of those recommendations is that
states get a better handle on the finances of local governments.
According to the report, states such as North Carolina, New Jersey and
Pennsylvania require cities to report their finances and offer early
assistance where distress is evident. Even Kentucky has a better system
of local budget controls than California. Here’s hoping that Chiang’s proposal passes and that the “red teams” get awesome superhero uniforms. Take that, Kentucky.
Alienating the math-savvy. That the California State Teachers’ Retirement System fund just
posted a 1.8 percent investment return for fiscal year 2011-2012 is
definitely a problem.
But a more dire problem is that legislators won’t fund the system.
CalSTERS is different from other public pension funds in that the
benefits and contributions aren’t negotiated between employees and the
employer; they are set by the Legislature. Since at least 1993, teachers
have paid 8 percent of their salaries toward the fund and school
districts have paid 8.5 percent.
The state contribution used to be 4.43
percent, but now it’s 2.017 percent thanks in part to a 1998 deal that
simultaneously lowered the state contribution and increased retiree
benefits.
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".. from the government, .. here to help." |
Other public pension funds have fixed employee contributions, and the
governments have no choice but to fork over any shortfall. But while
CalSTERS’ current funding just isn’t cutting it, legislation is needed
to change the contribution levels. That leaves the pension fund with a
$64.5 billion dollar shortfall and only 69 percent funded for the
2010-11 fiscal year.
Because our fearful leaders won’t dare cross teachers unions or local
school boards by demanding they pay more or get fewer benefits, even
the most ambitious reform scenarios being considered in Sacramento
wouldn’t dent the unfunded liabilities that CalSTERS has racked up.
The longer this continues the more insolvent the fund will become and the harder it will be to recruit new talent."
Reference - California State Teachers' Retirement System (CAlSTRS). See "Summary of Governor Brown's Twelve point pension proposal and its impact on CalSTRS members,"
here.
Definition - Wikipedia. A
red team is a independent group that seeks to challenge an organization in order to improve effectiveness.
Submitted by Jim Alex
Posted by Kathy Meeh
2 comments:
They need to sniff around Pacifica before it's too late. Something stinks and it's not Vallemar.
Good luck. In London they already lost their pension and the retired teachers are living like paupers. Soon , California, very soon, is going under. Hold on.
If you can get out of California , do it now. They will take all you have to fund these pensions.
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