Finance

Business And Labor In Promising Discussions For Future of Ports

Business And Labor In Promising Discussions For Future of Ports

The Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are essential to the economic health and well-being of the Southern California – as well as the State of California and the nation. The two ports are responsible for more than 300,000 jobs for our friends and neighbors. But the world in which the ports operate is...

By Gary Toebben

Minimum Wage Aftershocks Will Cause Public Sector “Wage Hike Tsunami”

Minimum Wage Aftershocks Will Cause Public Sector “Wage Hike Tsunami”

As it turns out, the impacts of the increase in minimum wage on workers at the very bottom of the pay scales might be just the tip of the iceberg in terms of the ramifications of the minimum wage increase. Nothing short of a “tsunami” appears headed towards state and local government balance sheets as...

By David Kersten

Gov. Brown Caved Too Easily to Labor on Minimum Wage Increase

Gov. Brown Caved Too Easily to Labor on Minimum Wage Increase

Initially, it looked like Governor Jerry Brown (D) was going to drive a much harder bargain with the public sector labor unions, but in the end he gave in too easily by granting concessions that would primarily benefit his legacy but not the State of California, California businesses and California taxpayers. I know the polling...

By David Kersten

Union Backed $15 Minimum Wage Falls Upon California Voters

Union Backed $15 Minimum Wage Falls Upon California Voters

California will be the first state in the nation to vote on the $15 minimum wage touted by labor activists after the proposal qualified for the November ballot. Backers of the $15 minimum wage announced on Tuesday evening that they had surpassed the 400,000-voter threshold to qualify for the ballot. The move was welcomed by...

By Bill McMorris

How the Tax System Favors Government Workers and Punishes Independent Contractors

How the Tax System Favors Government Workers and Punishes Independent Contractors

The 2016 tax filing deadline is now just one month away. Which makes it timely to point out how unfair our tax system is to middle class workers who want to prepare for their retirements. It is also timely to explain how there is a completely different set of retirement rules, far more favorable, that...

By Edward Ring

Unionized Government's Open Season On Taxpayers

Unionized Government's Open Season On Taxpayers

Even if one lives in a cave, it’s hard to avoid the publicity surrounding the high profile presidential debates that are a reminder that this is an election year. And California taxpayers know, from hard experience, it also means that it is open season on taxpayers as local politicians rush to put tax increases on...

By Jon Coupal

Right-To-Work States Enjoying Faster Job Growth

Right-To-Work States Enjoying Faster Job Growth

Establishing a right-to-work law, by which employees in unionized workplaces can opt out of paying union fees without being fired, has become a familiar topic in state legislatures in recent years. With West Virginia legislators considering their own right-to-work law this month and similar laws under serious discussion in Kentucky, Missouri, and elsewhere, a question...

By Jason Hart

Supreme Court Tone Appears to Favor Ending Agency Fees to Unions

Supreme Court Tone Appears to Favor Ending Agency Fees to Unions

Last month a group of California teachers fighting mandatory union fees at the U.S. Supreme Court had, by all appearances, a good day. Supreme Court justices seemed receptive to the arguments brought by teachers in the Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association case. If the case is successful, Rebecca Friedrichs and other government workers across the...

By Jason Hart

California's Pension Contribution Shortfall At Least $15 Billion per Year

California's Pension Contribution Shortfall At Least $15 Billion per Year

“Pension-change advocates failed to find funding for a measure during the depths of the 2008 recession and the havoc it wreaked on government budgets, so they won’t pass (a measure) when the economy is doing well.” –  Steve Maviglio, political consultant and union coalition spokesperson, Sacramento Bee, January 18, 2016 It’s hard to argue with...

By Edward Ring

A Union Bank with a Goal: Victory for the Left

A Union Bank with a Goal: Victory for the Left

Summary: Amalgamated Bank is America’s only union-owned bank. The latest chapter of its tumultuous history finds it specializing in political work that few financial institutions would dare risk. Funded by monies that unions compel their members to provide, the bank seems less devoted to maximizing returns for customers than to assisting left-wing candidates and causes...

By Sarah Westwood

Friedrichs Means Choice for Children and Teachers

Friedrichs Means Choice for Children and Teachers

It goes without saying that education and economics go hand in hand. For most parents, regardless of race or class, part of the American Dream is for our children to attend safe, family friendly, high-quality schools with great principals, teachers and support staff. As parents, we imagine that special day when our children graduate high...

By RiShawn Biddle

Why Investment Realities Will Compel Pension Reform

Why Investment Realities Will Compel Pension Reform

“For the first time in the pension fund’s history, we paid out more in retirement benefits than we took in contributions.” –  Anne Stausboll, Chief Executive Officer, CalPERS, 2014-2015 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report There are few examples of a seemingly innocuous statement with more significance than Stausboll’s admission, buried within her “CEO’s Letter of Transmittal,” summarizing the performance...

By Edward Ring

The Mechanics of Pension Reform – Local Actions

The Mechanics of Pension Reform – Local Actions

Part 2 of 2… Introduction In Part One, I enumerated reforms needed at the state level. That list was in part plugging up the “cheats” used to run up the statewide pension deficit of about a trillion dollars. Employee unions control the state legislature, the attorney general, all executive offices and all retirement administrators; therefore...

By John Moore

A Pension "Pledge" for State Politicians

A Pension "Pledge" for State Politicians

Earlier this week, noted pension reformer John Moore published “The Mechanics of Pension Reform,” listing specific principles of pension reform. Moore’s article focuses on state policy; he intends to focus on local pension reform policies in a later article. The list he has produced for state legislators is quite detailed; here’s is a partial summary...

By Edward Ring