Cracks Starting to Appear in Public Pensions’ Armor

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Cracks Starting to Appear in Public Pensions’ Armor
By MARY WILLIAMS WALSHFEB. 25, 2015

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Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, left, on Tuesday after he proposed freezing his state’s public pension plans and moving workers into new ones. CreditMel Evans/Associated Press

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  • Chris Christie of New Jersey delivered the latest blow on Tuesday, when he proposed to freeze that state’s public pension plans and move workers into new ones intended not to overwhelm future budgets or impose open-ended demands on taxpayers.

    The first crack came in Detroit, where a judge ruled that public pensions could, in fact, be reduced, at least in bankruptcy. Then, just a few weeks ago, an opinion by the bankruptcy judge for Stockton, which emerged from Chapter 9 on Wednesday, called California’s mighty public pension system,Calpers, a bully for insisting in court that pension cuts were wholly out of the question.

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    RELATED COVERAGESuch dogma “encourages dysfunctional strategies,” wrote the judge, Christopher Klein, chief judge of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California. He said Calpers’s legal arguments were invalid, and he concluded that it lacked standing to dominate the courtroom discussion the way it had. Stockton did not even seek permission to freeze its pension plans, but the judge nevertheless wrote that it was entitled to do so and went on to cite steps that struggling cities in general should take to trim their pension costs legally.

    For starters, he recommended negotiating with their unions.

    It may be sheer coincidence, but New Jersey seems have taken Judge Klein’s instructions to heart, even though states cannot file for bankruptcy and thus lack that particular leverage. For months, a pension commission formed by Governor Christie has been working quietly with the New Jersey Education Association, normally one of the state’s most litigious pension adversaries. By talking to each other instead of battling in court again, the two groups managed to find enough common ground to issue what they called a “road map” toward solving New Jersey’s daunting pension problems.

    Many details remain in flux, and the union took pains on Tuesday to say it was not endorsing Mr. Christie’s full proposal and might never do so. But the road map identifies certain issues that are so important to New Jersey’s teachers that the union is willing to consider a pension freeze if that is what it takes to fully protect its members from the state’s looming pension collapse.

    To appreciate how unusual it is for a state to propose a pension freeze, it helps to understand the “vested rights doctrine,” the legal argument that public pension plans cannot be frozen or reduced. Most states uphold some form of this doctrine, though in some it is a matter of statute, in others it is enshrined in the constitution and in still others it stems from court precedent. Often, the provisions have been in place for decades and attracted little notice until recently, when baby boomers began to retire in large numbers, placing unexpected pressure on public pension funds and the state and local budgets that support them.

    People have sometimes suggested freezing public pension plans to keep the hole from getting deeper. But officials usually say that is impossible, and few want to mount a costly test of the doctrine, especially because the judges who would decide such a case usually participate in public pension systems themselves.

    Companies, by contrast, can legally freeze their pension plans and have been doing so for years. Since 1974, companies with pension plans have been governed by a single federal law, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or Erisa, which details how freezes must take place to pass legal muster. One basic requirement is that workers midway through their careers are entitled to keep whatever portion of a pension they managed to earn until the date of the freeze.

    The states have long argued that because they are legal sovereigns, federal pension law does not apply to them. When states, cities and other local governments try to rein in pension costs, they often create new “tiers” of much smaller benefits for workers they expect to hire in the future, and call it a reform. But there is no freeze for existing workers, who keep accruing the same benefits as before.

    In some places, it is increasingly clear that reducing benefits only for future hires does not save enough money to preserve overstretched pension plans, especially in places where retirees outnumber current workers.

    The clearest solution is to curb benefit accruals, but that runs directly into the vested rights doctrine. Seeing no other way out, officials often resort to issuing bonds to obtain cash for their pension funds, a risky strategy that has failed in Detroit, Stockton and other places.

    Detroit issued such debt in 2005, responding to what seemed a particularly strong rule against tampering with public pension plans: an explicit constitutional provision to that effect.

    But Detroit’s bankruptcy judge, Steven W. Rhodes, ruled that the state constitutional protection was not in force while the city sought a fresh start under Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code. In addition to cutting part of the retirees’ pensions, Detroit froze its existing pension plan and shifted its workers into a new plan that is supposed to have limited ability to tap taxpayers for any investment losses.

    Judge Rhodes’s ruling was groundbreaking and so unnerved Calpers over 2,000 miles away that it immediately issued a statement that it had no bearing in California. Unlike Detroit, which operated its own pension fund, many cities and other local governments in California participate in big pooled pension systems, the largest of which is Calpers. Once they join, Calpers makes it extremely difficult to withdraw, demanding a huge termination payment. It also claims to have an enforceable lien it would use to seize the assets of any city that tried to leave without paying.

    In his legal analysis in the Stockton case, Judge Klein dissected Calpers’s lien and found that it was flawed and unenforceable in any municipal bankruptcy.

    “The bully may have an iron fist, but it also turns out to have a glass jaw,” he wrote.

    His opinion seems likely to play a role in other fiscal hot spots. Already, two creditors have referred to it in the continuing bankruptcy case of San Bernardino, Calif. The creditors, a European bank known as E.E.P.K. and the bond insurer Ambac Assurance, are arguing that the city is playing favorites, something not allowed in bankruptcy, where sacrifices are supposed to be roughly equal. Specifically, San Bernardino has been paying its bills to Calpers while leaving E.E.P.K. and Ambac in the lurch.

    And while bankruptcy is limited to cities, the ruling may also inform a pension battle in Illinois, where in November a county judge found that a state-led effort to restructure its ailing pension system was illegal because of a constitutional provision that says: “Membership in any pension or retirement system of the state” or its instrumentalities “shall be an enforceable contractual relationship, the benefits of which shall not be diminished or impaired.”

    The state’s attorney general, Lisa Madigan, is appealing that decision, arguing in essence that public pensions can in fact be reduced in Illinois, despite what the constitution says, if that is what it takes “to protect the general public welfare.”

    “This is one of those things where there’s a learning curve,” said Karol K. Denniston, a bankruptcy lawyer with Squire Patton Boggs in San Francisco who represented a local taxpayer group in Stockton’s case. “People will try things that don’t work quite right at first, then build on them. We’ve added to the municipalities’ tool kit.”

  • http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/26/b...sailable-start-to-look-vulnerable.html?ref=fb
gut the middle class, brehs
 

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CalPERS fund drops by $15 billion amid market plunge and coronavirus fears

The value of California’s largest public pension fund dropped by at least $15 billion this week as U.S. and international markets fell amid coronavirus fears.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System’s portfolio, which rode a hot stock market to reach a milestone of $400 billion last month, stood at $385 billion at the end of Thursday, according to a tracker on the fund’s website.

A sudden market swing does not affect the benefits CalPERS provides to its 2 million members, but it could become problematic if the fund does not recover from the losses.

In that case, the pension fund could become obliged to raise the amount of money it charges to local government agencies in California to make up for long-term debts.

The major U.S. stock indexes, including the S&P 500 and the Dow, fell this week by amounts not seen since the financial crisis of 2008. About half of the CalPERS fund is made up of U.S. and international stocks, most of which track general market performance as part of passive indexes.

Bonds, which make up about 28 percent of the fund, also fell.

“CalPERS is a long term investor,” spokesman Wayne Davis said. “We monitor the markets, we pay attention to the news, but we focus on our long term strategy.”

Davis said the fund has been diversifying its investments over the last two to three years to prepare for a market downturn, adding more long-term bonds and investing in indexes that select stocks based on factors other than market capitalization.

The California State Teachers’ Retirement System declined to disclose the value of its fund Friday. It stood at $254 billion at the end of December, the most recent number the fund has made available.

“CalSTRS is a long-term investor and we think in terms of decades — not days, weeks or months,” spokesman Thomas Lawrence said in an email. “We are keeping an eye on the impact of the coronavirus, but are not making any dramatic changes to investment strategy. If necessary, we can make subtle course corrections to our portfolio.”

CalPERS is about 70 percent funded, meaning it has about 70 percent of the assets it would need to pay all its short- and long-term liabilities. CalSTRS is about 64 percent funded.

Since both the funds are long-term investors, the short-term losses don’t represent a crisis.

“The market was priced for perfection just nine days ago, but the rapid spread of coronavirus and the unknowns surrounding its magnitude and impact have spurred a market correction in the days since,” Greg McBride, chief financial analyst for personal finance company Bankrate, said in a written statement. “Expect volatility to continue until there is a better handle on the impact and spread of it, but like so many other triggers of market turmoil this too shall pass.”

In October 2007, before the last recession, CalPERS hit what was then a record high value of $260 billion. As the crisis deepened, the fund’s value hit a record low of $165 billion in February 2009. That June, it was about 61 percent funded.

The fund recovered by April 2013, when its value surpassed the 2007 peak. Its value generally has been growing since, but so have its liabilities.

CalPERS’ value dropped a lot when markets fell at the end of 2018, yet it ended up with a 6.7 percent annual return by the end of the fiscal year in June, just short of its 7 percent annual target.

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Coronavirus: Some U.S. companies eliminate employee 401(k) matches to cut costs

As the U.S. economy staggers under drastic government measures to curb the COVID-19 pandemic, some employers are evaluating ways to cut costs. One strategy that’s emerging: Eliminating 401(k) matching contributions.

While Vanguard and Fidelity — both of which manage employer-sponsored retirement plans — haven’t seen widespread adoption of this yet, Yahoo Money identified a handful of companies that have recently done away with their matches or are considering the move.


“I completely understand the employees’ perspective,” said Nicholas Tzoumas, president of Clearscope HR, an employee benefits firm. “But if you ask them if you would have your employer reduce the match and increase your odds of retaining a job or have your employer keep the match and the [reverse] happens, most employees would rather take a temporary elimination of their match.”

On March 29, Tenet Health, an operator of more than 60 hospitals nationwide, sent a notice to employees informing them that 401(k) employee contributions were being postponed, so it could allocate more resources to its coronavirus efforts. Yahoo Money obtained a copy of the notice.

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Yahoo Money obtained a copy of the memo Tenet Health sent out employees alerting them their 401(k) matches would be postponed.

“Every effort is being made to help bring us all through the crisis,” a company spokesperson, told Yahoo Money. “And we have made the decision to direct additional resources to meet the increased demand for healthcare services, address evolving patient needs in our hospitals, and protect front-line staff.”

The spokesperson said the company plans to revisit the decision to temporarily postpone the 401(k) match program later in the year.

The CEO of Situs AMC, a real estate consulting firm, told its employees on March 26 in a town hall that the company 401(k) match would be suspended for the rest of the year, according to a recording obtained by Yahoo Money.

After Yahoo Money requested comment, Situs AMC sent out a notice to employees saying it’s not suspending the matching but reserves “the right to reevaluate this decision during the remainder of 2020."

“My company had us [working] over time going back to maybe even October,” said one of the company’s underwriting analysts who asked not to be named out of concern for her job. “Business seemed good for us, but now there’s some uncertainty with what’s going to happen.”

She’s worked for the company for almost a decade, taking home a 2% match every paycheck. On average, her company contributes $50 per paycheck to her retirement savings.

“I’m in my 40s. I don’t have a lot of years to save,” the employee and mother of three said. “And so that match is not much, but it still helps.”

Making ‘difficult, cost-cutting decisions’
As state and local governments shut down non-essential businesses and stores, many retailers are turning to their retirement plan matching as a way to reduce spending.

For instance, Half Price Books, a Texas bookstore chain with 10 locations in the state, sent out a notice earlier this week suspending its 5% match on its safe harbor contribution plans, starting May 1, according to a memo shared with Yahoo Money.

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A memo from an anonymous Half Price Books employee alerting Yahoo Money about the 401(k) match cut

“Like all retailers, our sales have been hit hard due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Kathy Doyle Thomas, the chief strategy officer at Half Price Books, in an emailed response to Yahoo Money. “Because of this, we are in the midst of making some difficult, cost-cutting decisions with the purpose of saving our company in the long term so we can come out on the other side of this unprecedented crisis,”

The company noted it will reevaluate how it will proceed with 401K matches in 2021 later this year.

Tzoumas noted that these companies are making the same moves he’s advising his clients to do: “Take the temporary action now and kick the can down the road,” he said. “As much as it does hurt people, reducing [the 401(k) match] is much better than the alternative.”

Take Macy’s, for example.

On March 25, the retailer sent out a notice to employees cutting its 401(k) matches, a move that was a temporary deferral until later this year, according to Blair Fasbender Rosenberg, a Macy’s spokeswoman. But five days after eliminating its match, Macy’s also furloughed thousands of workers.

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ORLANDO, FLORIDA: A Macy's store is seen on the day the company announced it is furloughing most of its 125,000 employees because of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, which has sunk sales, and forced the closing of stores.

“They started cutting people, then registers, and now hours,” said one Delaware employee who requested anonymity out of concern for her job. “I don’t even know if I’ll have a job after this.”

The reduction of benefits and now the furlough remind her too much of the Great Recession when she was laid off from another company and was homeless for two years.

“I really did not expect that they were going to do this, this fast,” the woman, who is in her late 60s, said. “I really did not expect we would get two weeks pay and that’s it.”


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