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Pension reforms, spending cuts must come before tax hike

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Illinois is broke. In the short run, it is running out of cash - and borrowing to cover its own operations as well as to fund health care, schools, local governments and social services. Or it simply fails to pay its bills - borrowing, in effect, from its suppliers.

In the longer run, Illinois operates with a radically imbalanced annual operating budget that is perhaps $15 billion in the hole when one takes into account mushrooming pension and state retiree health costs.

Why?

Illinois supports a wage and benefit structure for state employees that does not reflect the pressures of the marketplace or the economic realities of modern America. State workers were given generous multiyear raises in fall 2008 by then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich, at a time when such raises were a rarity in the private sector. State workers with enough years of service can retire at 55 with full pensions. The pension increases 3 percent per year. Then, at age 67, they get Social Security. The result is that they may receive more in retirement than they earned the last year that they worked.

State retirees also get generous health care insurance - and the state pays the entire premium. Those who retire at 55 or thereabouts can then find another job - possibly double-dipping in another state or municipal position, running up additional pension rights. In Chicago, workers can retire at 50 and then double-dip in another position.

The tolerance of Illinois voters for bearing these costs appears to be wearing thin.

First, it has become clearer than ever that Illinois cannot afford the costs of both the rich employee retirement benefits and the rising costs of education, health care and safety-net programs. Many voters care more about covering the latter than the former.

Second, voters have begun to realize that Gov. Pat Quinn's proposed 1 percentage point increase in the income tax - from 3 percent to 4 percent - would do no more than scratch the surface of the state's budget deficit problem. In the absence of budget reform and serious cost cutting, the tax increase needed to correct the state's real budget imbalance would be in the range of 5 percentage points - increasing the personal income tax rate from 3 percent to roughly 8 percent. (A 1-point increase in the tax rate is estimated to yield about $3 billion in additional revenue per year. The real annual deficit is now in the range of $15 billion.)

Without budget reform - particularly pension and retiree health reform - the pressures for very large tax increases will continue to grow; and as they do, public opposition may well morph into outrage. This is the nightmare that haunts many of our elected officials and candidates for office.

Third, organized labor is itself far from monolithic. Older union members may have a very different interest than members in their 20s or 30s, who are required to contribute money to pension funds that are likely to run out of money in 10 years or so.

What happens if and when one of the pension funds runs out of money? Nobody knows for sure. But in Illinois - and in Chicago - there are strong legal arguments that neither the state nor the city would be liable as guarantors of the pension fund obligations. The state Constitution does not make the state the guarantor. As pension funding levels continue to drain away, younger employees may well ask: Shouldn't there be some equitable adjustments to make sure that their contributions are not being used entirely to pay benefits for those in or nearing retirement?

Bankruptcy of a pension fund would be a disaster for retirees and their families. Many would blame the state - rightly - for past failures to fund the pensions adequately. But some might also blame union leadership for letting it happen, for preferring current costly wage levels at the expense of adequate pension funding, or for opposing reasonable reforms that would make pension funding less unpopular.

The way out of this mess is clear, but it is far from painless. It is to reform the pensions and retiree health plans; cut Medicaid and other costs; and balance the state's budget. Only after the reforms and cuts are in place should raising taxes even be considered. Otherwise, the reforms and cuts would never happen. Parties and candidates will disagree about the right combination of steps to be taken; but overriding these disagreements are two fundamental realities: The budget must be balanced, and the borrowing has to stop.

The longer these painful steps are postponed, the more painful they will become, as more and more of today's costs are shoved off onto the future.

Voters should think about these things as they consider who to support in the fall elections.

R. EDEN MARTIN IS PRESIDENT OF THE CIVIC COMMITTEE OF THE COMMERCIAL CLUB OF CHICAGO AND A MEMBER OF THE ILLINOIS IS BROKE CAMPAIGN, WWW.ILLINOISISBROKE.COM.

R. Eden Martin: Incredible that it's business -- and politics -- as usual

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

By R. Eden Martin

David Vaught, Gov. Pat Quinn's budget director, told Bloomberg News last week that the governor, if re-elected, would seek to increase the state income tax on personal income from 3 percent to 5 percent next January.

The campaign of his Republican opponent, state Sen. Bill Brady, immediately jumped on this story, commenting that if a tax increase were passed before Brady takes office (if he wins), Brady would "work to roll it back." U.S. Senate-candidate Mark Kirk issued his own release opposing any tax increase, even though it's a state issue, not a federal one. Then, Quinn said he was only for a 1 percent increase.

Here we are -- only a bit more than three months before the November election -- and our state is slipping into fiscal chaos, as are many municipalities. We have a real annual state budget deficit on the order of $14 billion to $15 billion. The state can't pay its bills. Everybody is owed money -- our universities, our schools, our social service agencies, the state's suppliers. Unfunded retirement-related liabilities associated with the state's public employees continue to mount.

Yet there is no sense of urgency. The General Assembly has not been called into special session to deal with this emergency. We'll continue to run up bills and borrow until after the election, or maybe next spring, and then maybe we'll deal with it -- or maybe we won't. Business as usual.

And politics as usual. Some folks think the state's budget deficit should be fixed entirely with a tax increase. They don't mention pension reforms or cost-cutting. Others think it should be fixed entirely by cutting costs -- or more borrowing. Some candidates see it as an opportunity either to curry favor with particular constituencies or to tie the albatross of blame around somebody else's neck. But most see it as something not to talk about. No point in making folks needlessly upset. Cuts would hurt somebody. A tax increase would hurt anybody with income. Maybe the problem will somehow disappear.

If ever there were a time for a different approach -- for a bipartisan solution, for reaching across the aisle, for suspending the blame game and putting away the hatchets for a few weeks -- it is right now.

Everybody has an interest in getting this cistern cleaned up. Business has a strong interest -- since failure to stop the borrowing will bring the state to its knees. Without reforms and cuts, taxes will eventually go up a lot more than Quinn's budget director is signaling. Investments and jobs will leave the state.

Labor has an even stronger interest. The pensions must be reformed and funding has to get fixed. If a pension fund goes broke, who will pay the pensions? The worker's contract claim is against the pension fund -- not the state. Moreover, the state's sovereign immunity protects it from all but the smallest claims. Normal creditors' rights aren't available.

Are state employees going to keep mindlessly making their contributions into funds that won't have the money for their pensions when the time comes?

Is it delusional to think that in such an emergency -- when so much is at stake -- the party leaders might put away their knives long enough to come together and balance the budget? Is it fantasy to think that voters might be mad enough to blame any leader, in any party, who won't make the effort? Or that voters might (as in New Jersey) be relieved to have some statewide leader tell them the unvarnished truth?

A great American at the time of the revolution said that, "We must all hang together or ... we shall all hang separately."
We have a monumentally serious emergency in Illinois today. If we don't hang together -- and try to fix it together -- we'll all sink together into the state's fiscal quagmire.

And blame will cease to be relevant -- except to the historians.

R. Eden Martin is president of the Civic Committee of The Commercial Club of Chicago and a member of the nonpartisan Illinois is Broke public-education campaign, www.IllinoisisBroke.com.

Pension reform needed to help solve the state's messy financial situation

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

The Evanston Review reported July 28 that the director of the union-backed Illinois Retirement Security Initiative (IRSI) recently told an Evanston audience that reforming the state's pension system would "... jeopardize the state's ability to hire the best people for public sector positions." ("Speaker: Pension bloat overblown")

Your readers should make up their minds based on the facts.

Illinois' fiscal affairs are imploding. Its annual revenues are approximately $27 billion. Its real, embedded annual deficit -- the difference between revenues and costs -- is $14 billion to $15 billion.

The effects of the deficit are rippling into the budgets of cities, school districts, universities and social-service agencies throughout the state.

Why is the deficit so large?

Illinois incurs huge retirement costs each year for members of state pension funds.

If you work for the state of Illinois, with enough years of service you can retire at age 55 with a full pension of about 50 percent of your final average salary. You then receive a pension each year for the rest of your life. After 12 years (ages 55 to 67), the pension grows (3 percent per year) to about 71 percent of final salary.

You also receive Social Security, so that by age 67 you could be earning more each year than your salary the last years that you worked. (In Chicago, the retirement age is 50).

Also, when you retire at 55 you receive Cadillac-style retiree health care (no managed care) -- any doctor, any procedure, any place, any time -- and the state pays, in effect, 100 percent of the premium cost.

As a result, the annual cost of the pensions and the retiree health care to the state or its pension funds now exceeds $10 billion per year.

The unfunded liability for the pensions -- using the state's numbers -- is roughly $80 billion. Professor Joshua Rauh of Northwestern University's J. L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management says the state funds use the wrong discount rate, and that a more accurate estimate of the unfunded liability exceeds $200 billion.

The unfunded retiree-health liability adds another $40 billion.

So -- the system isn't fair, and Illinois can't afford it.

Illinois must reform the system, not just as to "new" employees -- who haven't even started to work for the state yet -- but also for current employees. That's where the savings are.

This can (and must) be done without reducing any benefits that the employees have already earned.

But the state can -- and should -- prospectively require that people have to work longer to receive future benefits.

The fittest answer

The best solution would be to freeze the current benefits and move -- prospectively -- to a defined contribution system. Alternatives are hybrids or cash-balance plans -- or even pared-back defined-benefit programs where employees make larger contributions to cover the cost of the plans.

The IRSI says the state won't be able to attract and retain people if we reform the pensions. Let's find out. The private sector long ago shifted from defined pension plans to defined contribution plans.

Virtually nobody in the private sector has a defined-benefit plan like that of the state -- one that lets you retire with a full pension at 55.

The state pension funds are now only about 41 percent funded. Some of the funds may run out of money in 10 years or so, depending on the performance of the assets. If the fund for state employees runs out of money, the retirees may well be stuck.

Neither the state Constitution nor any statute makes the state the guarantor of the pension obligations.

It will be an awful mess, and it's a mess that can be avoided if we act in time. What is needed is reform and adequate funding.

Reform is a key component -- otherwise the cost will be too great. The increased state taxes needed to pay for continuing the present, unreformed retirement programs would be far beyond what any state political figure is willing to admit.

The longer we postpone the needed reforms, the greater risk that these pensions will bring down the entire state's financial house of cards.

R. Eden Martin lives in Glencoe and is president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, a member of the nonpartisan Illinois is Broke campaign (www.IllinoisIsBroke.com).

Higher Education Hurt By Illinois Fiscal Crisis

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Without Budget Reform Colleges and Universities Will Continue To Suffer

By Stanley Ikenberry


The people of Illinois and our state government are in the midst of an unprecedented crisis. Illinois is unable to pay its bills. We are heavily in debt and face the prospect of borrowing even more. And yet the state budget approved on July 1st does little to lift us from the chaos that threatens our entire state and our future.  

 

How does all of this touch higher education in this state?  It's no small question since

the University of Illinois and other colleges and universities touch almost every family and community in Illinois - our hospitals and law firms, our schools and businesses, our neighborhoods and every corner of civic life.  The University's fingerprints can be found in homes, at work, and on farms and communities all across Illinois.

 

And yet our University and other public universities in Illinois are owed hundreds of millions of dollars by the State of Illinois.  Just as State appropriations have been cut for next year, it's not clear when last's year's obligations will be paid.  In the mean time campuses have instituted hiring freezes, faculty and staff furloughs, deferred repairs and maintenance, raised tuition, and made plans to borrow - all in an attempt to keep the doors open.  

 

For public colleges and universities in Illinois this comes on top of a decade-long erosion in state support.  While other states increased support for their universities by 17 percent over the last 10 years, Illinois cut state support for higher education by 10 percent, and an additional 6 percent cut was levied this July.

 

This leaves Illinois public universities in a weakened position to meet obligations to students, to attract and retain top faculty and maintain the quality that has been the hallmark of Illinois higher education for generations. Moreover, the current crisis worries our students and parents who wonder if classes will be interrupted or if one or more state universities will actually close?

 

The State of Illinois needs a quick and meaningful solution to this crisis.  For example, Illinois can do a better job controlling state Medicaid costs.  The state's pension systems which are both a manifestation of Illinois' financial crisis and a contributing cause should be reformed.  Pension income should be taxed along with other personal income.  And state employees and retirees should contribute appropriately to the cost of their health insurance.

 

Even after making these painful reforms Illinois must generate more state revenues and act quickly on all fronts.  The journey to fiscal health will be a long, hard climb.  There is no quick fix, so the more quickly we begin, the better.  Much hangs in the balance for the University of Illinois. And even more hangs in the balance for families, communities and businesses from one end of Illinois to the other.  Each of us has a responsibility to push for, support and contribute to a solution that will rescue the present and safeguard the future.


Stanley Ikenberry is the former President of the University of Illinois.


Do furlough days make sense?

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Recently, under attack for giving big raises to his staff, Governor Quinn issued an order requiring all State nonunion employees to take off 12 more days of unpaid work this year - which now makes a total of 24 unpaid "furlough" days. These days of non-work are said to translate to a 9.2% reduction in pay.   Governor Quinn said he would take these
furlough days just like everyone else.

The order applies to about 2,700 non-union employees - but does not touch the 48,000 unionized workers.

Mayor Daley announced a similar reduction several weeks ago: Chicago's non-union employees, including the Mayor himself, will take 24 unpaid "furlough" days.

The Governor and the Mayor are not talking about reducing pay for work.  People will just work less.  In the case of State employees - that's about a month out of the year less.  Since they won't work, they won't be paid. 

Suppose you managed a professional firm and you need secretaries to support your lawyers, or accountants, or consultants. Would you tell your office manager to fire 9% of the secretaries - even if it meant the briefs and letters didn't get typed or the tax returns didn't get filed? Would it make any difference if, instead of firing 9% of the secretaries, you made them all take 9% of the days off? The briefs and letters still wouldn't get typed.

There is one set of circumstances in which a furlough makes sense:  this is where the work - or the time at work - wasn't used or needed anyway.    If 10% of the state's employees sit on their hands all the time, or if all of them sit on their hands 10% of the time, then the furlough makes all the sense in the world.

But then one asks:   why did the Governor and the Mayor wait for a budget crisis to reduce the unneeded amount of time they were buying from their employees?

The overriding problem is that in state and municipal service - just as in the Chicago Public School system - the ordinary incentives that exist in the private sector are missing.  State and local government - like CPS - are monopolies.  They are largely bureaucracies, and largely unionized.  (Gov. Quinn's order applies only to the 2700 non-unionized State employees - not the 48,000 unionized workers.)   This means it's next to impossible to get rid of incompetent or sleepy workers, or to incentivize them to do better.  Collective bargaining protects the incompetent, precludes meaningful job performance evaluation, and makes it impossible to reward the strong performers - or stimulate the weak ones - through compensation adjustments.   In such an environment, it's likely that 30 or more of the time spent "at work" is effectively wasted.  Perhaps the percentage wasted is larger.  Nobody knows for sure.  The system is not friendly to anyone trying to find out.

There are no doubt exceptional employees in state government who work hard and well -- just as there are within CPS.  One place appears to be the Governor's Budget Office, where much of the ruckus started.  The Governor had granted a generous raise to his chief Budgeteer, along with others; that led to the public furor over the raises - which in turn led to the political defense tactic of granting an additional 12 days of furloughs.

Personally, I'd have preferred he give the Budget Office a bigger raise - and then tell them to work harder to figure out ways to save the State from fiscal calamity - rather than order them all to take a month off from work during the coming year.



Illinois Budget News: July 23

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Another day, another dollar - make that dollar(s)...billions of them. If Rome is burning, then Illinois is blazing and it's spreading like wildfire. To schools and universities, health care providers, and social service agencies - everyone is feeling the consequences of Illinois' fiscal crisis.

 

Recognized as the state most likely to default, Illinois' fiscal standing has become a national embarrassment.

 

The fact of the matter is our debt is big and growing bigger every day. If we don't get control of this quickly, like a rampant fire, it will continue to spread and more will feel the impact of its destruction.

 

The state budget issues will come to a head over the coming months, which is why we need to be a part of the solution. Visit IllinoisIsBroke.com to find out more about REAL budget reform and write the candidates and incumbents, letting them know we need budget and pension reform now - we need their help and yours to put out this fire. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

Illinois Budget News: June 23

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Illinois finances have become a national embarrassment, as promptly featured on the front page of Sunday's New York Times: In Budget Crisis, States Take Aim at Pension Costs.

So, when will our elected officials wise up and understand the state's crushing debt cannot be resolved without addressing its retirement-related debt? This story posted by The Fiscal Times shows there are some states getting their pension systems right, perhaps we need to take a page out of their books.

Further proof of Illinois' insolvency? An article branding Illinois the "New California" - and as we all know, when referring to finances, this is not a particularly welcomed title. An excerpt we found interesting:

Illinois's crisis is unique in that it is purely a creature of mismanagement by elected officials.
With that being said, we couldn't agree more with The Pantagraph's call for legislators to address Illinois' fiscal issues head on, putting people before politics.

The priority given to politics over people is appalling. People are losing their jobs. People are losing their businesses. People are losing needed services from agencies that aren't being paid by the state.
One of those social service agencies, Meals on Wheels, where it was announced this week that the 12-year old program would no longer be able to provide its services due to the state's dismal financial situation.


Illinois Budget News: June 2

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Star Chicago economist Diane Swonk delivered a no-nonsense analysis on the nation's "slow and painful" emergence from the Great Recession to the Executives' Club of Chicago yesterday.

Per today's Sun-Times, Swonk predicted the possibility of "later retirements, higher taxes and more sacrifices..."

Among her local concerns: Illinois' ability to compete with other states and retain residents.

Bottom line: Swonk says to fasten your seatbelts:


"It will be a very challenging next couple of decades."
Meanwhile, Gov. Quinn said yesterday he's ready to make "cuts across the board" to resolve Illinois' $13 billion budget shortfall - but refused to say where - except that he's hoping to avoid deep cuts to human services and education.

"I'm not going to let those school children down."
Too late? in its final part in a four-part series on education, the Peoria Journal-Star profiles a local school hit hard by the state's funding crisis.

Illinois Budget News: May 28

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Illinois is facing a $13 billion budget deficit and doesn't have enough money to pay its bills...and our lawmakers have skipped town.


Faced with the opportunity to address the financial problems burdening our state, our elected officials - respectively - declined, staving off a vote on the pension borrowing bill and sending an unbalanced budget back to the Governor to try and make due.  


The Governor expressed his unhappiness with lawmakers' inability to act in a statement
today.


"I remind members of the General Assembly that the people of Illinois are depending upon their elected officials to promptly and squarely address the serious fiscal issues confronting our state."

A date hasn't been set for lawmakers to reconvene, right now it's anybody's guess.


"It's not urgent, like we have to do it next weekend, but it has to be done relatively soon. That's why we're going to come back in the next few weeks." - Senate President John Cullerton.

Not urgent? We all know there's no "i" in "team" ....but, there is in "legislator."

Illinois Budget News: May 25

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CivicCommittee

The Civic Committee functions as a private, not-for-profit organization whose mission is to stimulate and encourage the growth of the area's economy and its ability to provide for its people.

Budget discussions resumed yesterday in Springfield with Gov. Quinn still pitching a "long shot plan" to borrow $3.7 billion for a pension payment. However, Sun-Times reporter Steve Contorno writes that without Republican support, the pension payment is likely to get skipped, ultimately costing the state billions more in the future - ahem, billions more?


While Quinn may not be thinking of a back up plan, it seems House Dems are:


To entice Republican support to get the 71 votes needed for approval, they would tie pension borrowing to approving new bonds to pay for road and school construction.

We've said our peace on budget and pension solutions, which you can find here.

Meanwhile, the House Democrats also proposed a slew of cuts to "spread the pain" of Illinois' budget crisis, as reported in today's Daily Herald - including massive cuts to education and charging retired state employees premiums for their health insurance, finally acknowledging state workers' plans are far too generous.

"As much as we love our retirees, this is a tough-love exercise," said Rep. Karen May. "They have to feel the pain."

Anyone in the private sector 'feel the pain' for the state employees? Didn't think so.

According to Chicago Public Radio, Quinn wants a budget by Friday before the Memorial Day weekend.With Democrats and Republicans unable to agree on pension payments and spending cuts, we think the outlook is bleak.

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