Forget the scary pension future; study confirms the crisis is hitting now

By Steven Greenhut
10/10/2017
Sacramento — Debates about California’s pension crisis almost always focus on the big numbers – the hundreds of billions of dollars (and, by some estimates, more than $1 trillion) in unfunded liabilities that plague the public-pension funds. For instance, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System is only 68 percent funded – meaning it only has...

TAGS: CalPERS, pensions

How Fraudulently Low “Normal Contributions” Wreak Havoc on Civic Finances

By Edward Ring
09/29/2017
Back in 2013 the City of Irvine had an unfunded pension liability of $91 million and cash reserves of $61 million. The unfunded pension liability was being paid off over 30 years with interest charged on the unpaid balance at a rate of 7.5% per year. Irvine’s cash reserves were conservatively invested and earned interest...

TAGS: CalPERS, normal contribution, normal pension contribution, pension reform

Cities facing fiscal mess plead with CalPERS as pensions consume local budgets

By Steven Greenhut
09/26/2017
Sacramento – If you ask the union-controlled California Public Employees’ Retirement System about the state’s looming pension crisis, you’re likely to get this answer: What pension crisis? But the story was much different at CalPERS’ own Finance and Administration Committee meeting held Sept. 19. City officials from across California warned CalPERS board members about the...

TAGS: CalPERS, pensions

TAPped out: The method to CalPERS’ madness toward tiny Sierra County city

By Steven Greenhut
08/22/2017
Sacramento — Observers have wondered in recent months why the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the nation’s largest state pension fund and one of Wall Street’s most muscular financial players, has taken such a hamfisted approach toward one of California’s tiniest and least-powerful cities. There’s a rational, albeit troubling, reason for its approach. After the...

TAGS: CalPERS, Loyalton, pensions

Same old story as Loyalton’s woes echo growing pension crisis

By Steven Greenhut
08/08/2017
Sacramento The tiny Sierra Nevada mountain town of Loyalton, Calif.—population: 862—has become the poster child for cities that want to check out of the California Public Employee’s Retirement System, but can’t swallow the insurmountable cost of leaving. Loyalton’s oft-repeated tale appeared again this week, on Sunday in the Los Angeles Times. All the familiar characters are there,...

TAGS: CalPERS, Loyalton, pensions

California should follow Michigan’s lead on pensions

By David Schwartzman
07/17/2017
California’s previous attempts at pension reform have had a negligible impact. We should look to solutions from other states to tackle our growing pension problem. Last week, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder signed a landmark school pension reform bill that will cap the growth of pension liabilities. California legislators need to follow Michigan’s lead to save...

TAGS: CalPERS, Michigan, pension reform

California government retirement plans are more than 50% underfunded

By David Schwartzman
07/12/2017
California is failing its employees and its citizens. Documents show that the state and local governments in California do not have enough money saved up to pay for the retirement of its current employees. The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) is facing future insolvency. These findings come from the 2015 CalPERS Actuarial Report for...

TAGS: CalPERS, OPEB, pensions

Expect unions to use good returns to deflect attention from growing problem

By Steven Greenhut
07/12/2017
Sacramento California’s fiscal watchdogs are bracing for the forthcoming press statements from the nation’s largest state-run pension fund, and from the public-sector unions that depend on the system to pay their members’ generous retirement packages. Expect something to this effect: “The California Public Employees’ Retirement System’s investment earnings for the fiscal year ending June 30...

TAGS: CalPERS, Pension liabilities

CalPERS: High expectations come with high risks for public agencies

By David Schwartzman
07/10/2017
Later this month, we should hear some rare good news from CalPERS. Portfolio returns for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017 may exceed 10%. The strong performance on the back of Donald Trump’s bull market that many think has ended may provide a respite for state and local governments struggling with increased pension contributions....

TAGS: CalPERS, pensions

CalPERS victimized as California Treasurer John Chiang seeks union support for his campaign for Governor

By Kevin Dayton
06/26/2017
With California Governor Jerry Brown termed out in 2018, prominent Democratic Party politicians crave the highest executive position in the country’s most influential state. They’re figuring out which campaign strategies will allow them to become one of the two top finishers in the June 2018 primary elections and thus advance to the November 2018 general...

TAGS: CalPERS