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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Meredith Whitney Is Smiling

She's taken a lot of heat for her call on muni bonds, but it's a good call!

Case in point, Cook County. The unique thing about Cook County is that they are trying to make the local governments 'fess up. The details are ugly, and quite a few of the municipalities haven't reported. If about 50% of all municipal pension obligations are unfunded, where does that leave the hapless homeowners? There is a point at which you just can't tax property owners any more without throwing them out of their homes, and many municipalities (phone Chris Christie) are there.

The unkindest cut of all by Pappas, the anti-union criminal in Cook County who spearheaded the confession drive:
“This is not just about federal and state governments. Homeowners need to understand when they vote for a local bond deal what the financial burden is for their children. This is about educating them,” said Pappas.

The Treasurer’s Office analyzed the top 50 residential property tax amounts in each municipality from 1996 to 2009 and saw an increase on average of 121 percent. This means residential property owners are bearing enormous increases and wallets are stretched.

The Treasurer called for the state legislature to require all real estate brokers to disclose to prospective homeowners the “credit card debt” – how much local government owes – affecting any home before they purchase the property.

Pappas also said she would go to the Cook County Board again to refine the ordinance based on the figures she released today to deal with the following:

1. Requiring the 55 agencies that did not report their figures to upload their reports.
2. Requiring each agency to report the rate of return on which its figures were based – a five percent or eight percent rate of return.
3. Requiring agencies to report other post-employment benefits (OPEB), such as retiree health insurance.
Clearly, this lady is marked for electoral doom. I expect those waifs pounding on the drums in Madison, WI to show up in Cook County any moment. It will be interesting to find out what the unfunded liabilities on retirement medical benefits really are going to be. Maybe Cook County voters might be interested in what is happening in NJ?

Chris Christie has gotten a very strong pension reform bill through the NJ Senate. Now it will face the test of the NJ House. It ups government employee pension contributions, it increases proportion of medical benefits paid by the employee (lower paid employees pay less), and it cuts pension COLAs in order to get NJ's bankrupt pension systems back into balance eventually, AND it gives government employees a contractual right to court-enforced payment of the government side of their pension contributions! That is important in NJ! Here is the text of the bill.

This is the full text of the statement explaining the bill (for the use of legislators who ain't gonna look all that up, and it also could serve as an indication of intent in court):
STATEMENT

This bill makes various changes to the manner in which the Teachers’ Pension and Annuity Fund (TPAF), the Judicial Retirement System (JRS), the Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS), the Police and Firemen’s Retirement System (PFRS), and the State Police Retirement System (SPRS) operate and to the benefit provisions of those systems.

The bill establishes new pension committees as follows:

one 8-member committee for the TPAF and one for the SPRS;

two 8-member committees in the PERS, one for the State part of the PERS and one for the local part of the PERS; and

two 10-member committees in the PFRS, one for the State part of the PFRS and one for the local part of the PFRS.

Half of the members of each committee will be appointed by the Governor to represent public employers and half appointed by certain unions whose members are in the retirement system. When a target funded ratio for the system or part of the system is achieved, each committee will have the discretionary authority to modify the: member contribution rate; formula for calculation of final compensation or final salary; fraction used to calculate a retirement allowance; age at which a member may be eligible and the benefits for service or early retirement; and benefits provided for disability retirement. A committee will not have authority to change the number of years required for vesting.

The term “target funded ratio” means a ratio of the actuarial value of assets against the actuarially determined accrued liabilities expressed as a percentage that will be 75 percent in State fiscal year 2012, and increased annually by equal increments in each of the subsequent seven fiscal years, until the ratio reaches 80 percent at which it is to remain for all subsequent fiscal years.

The committees of these systems will have the authority to reactivate the cost of living adjustment on pensions and modify the basis for the calculation of the cost of living adjustment and set the duration and extent of the activation. A committee must give priority consideration to the reactivation of the cost of living adjustment.

The State House Commission will have the same authority with regard to JRS.

Each committee may also hire actuaries and consultants.

The bill establishes a process using a super conciliator to resolve an impasse on a decision or matter regarding benefits before any of the newly established committees in the TPAF, PERS, PFRS, and SPRS.

With regard to employee benefits, the bill provides for increases in the employee contribution rates: from 5.5% to 6.5% plus an additional 1% phased-in over 7 years beginning in the first year, meaning after 12 months, after the bill’s effective date for TPAF and PERS (including legislators, Law Enforcement Officer (LEO) members, and workers compensation judges); from 3% to 12% for JRS phased-in over seven years; from 8.5% to 10% for PFRS members and members of PERS Prosecutors Part; and from 7.5% to 9% for SPRS members. New members of TPAF and PERS will need 30 years of creditable service and age 65 for receipt of the early retirement benefit without a reduction of 1/4 of 1% for each month that the member is under age 65. TPAF and PERS members enrolled before November 1, 2008 are eligible for a service retirement benefit at age 60 and members enrolled on or after that date are eligible at age 62. New members will be eligible for a service retirement benefit at age 65. A new PFRS member’s special retirement benefit will be 60% of final compensation, plus 1% of final compensation multiplied by the number of years of creditable service over 25 but not over 30, instead of the current benefit of 65% of final compensation plus 1% for each year of service over 25 but not over 30.

The bill repeals N.J.S.A.43:15A-47.2 and 43:16A-5.1 which provide that a member of PERS or PFRS may retire while holding an elective public office covered by PERS or PFRS and continue to receive the full salary for that office, if the member’s PERS or PFRS retirement allowance is not based solely on service in the elected public office. It also provides that the PFRS or PERS retirees who were granted a retirement allowance under those sections prior to the bill’s effective date and are currently in an elective office covered by either of those systems may continue to receive their pension benefit and salary for the elective office.

Under the bill, the automatic cost-of-living adjustment will no longer be provided to current and future retirees and beneficiaries, unless it is reactivated as permitted by the bill.

For the PERS, TPAF, SPRS, PFRS, and JRS, the bill changes the method for the amortization of the system’s unfunded liability.

One section of the bill provides that each member of the TPAF, JRS, Prison Officers' Pension Fund, PERS, Consolidated Police and Firemen's Pension Fund, PFRS, and SPRS will have a contractual right to the annual required contribution made by the employer or by any other public entity. The contractual right to the annual required contribution means that the employer or other public entity must make the annual required contribution on a timely basis to help ensure that the retirement system is securely funded and that the retirement benefits to which the members are entitled by statute and in consideration for their public service and in compensation for their work will be paid upon retirement. The failure of the State or any other public employer to make the annually required contribution will be deemed to be an impairment of the contractual right of each employee. The Superior Court, Law Division will have jurisdiction over any action brought by a member of any system or fund or any board of trustees to enforce the contractual right set forth in this bill. The State and other public employers will submit to the jurisdiction of the Superior Court, Law Division and will not assert sovereign immunity in such an action. If a member or board prevails in litigation to enforce the contractual right set forth in this bill, the court may award that party their reasonable attorney’s fees.

That section also provides that the rights reserved to the State in current law to alter, modify, or amend such retirement systems and funds, or to create in any member a right in the corpus or management of a retirement system or pension fund, cannot diminish the contractual right of employees established by this bill.

In addition, the bill increases the membership of the State Investment Council from 13 to 16 members. It eliminates one representative from the SPRS, but adds one member from the State Troopers Fraternal Association. Two additional members are appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate, and one additional appointment is added to the current one by the Governor from persons nominated by Public Employee Committee of the New Jersey State AFL-CIO, specifying that one of the two will be a representative of a police officers’ or firefighters’ union. The bill also provides that an elected member, as opposed to any member, of the boards of trustees for TPAF, PERS and PFRS will be eligible for designation to serve on the State Investment Council.

This bill requires all public employees and certain public retirees to contribute toward the cost of health care benefits coverage based upon a percentage of the cost of coverage.

Under the bill, all active public employees will pay a percentage of the cost of health care benefits coverage for themselves and any dependents. However, lower compensated employees will pay a smaller percentage and more highly compensated employees will pay a higher percentage. In addition, the applicable percentage will vary based upon whether the employee has family, individual, or member with child or spouse coverage. The rates gradually increase based on an employee’s compensation, at intervals of $5,000. These rates will be phased in over several years for employees employed on the contribution’s effective date who will pay ¼, ½, and ¾ of the amount of the contribution rate during the first, second and third years, respectively, meaning during the three 12-month periods after the contribution rates become effective. The bill establishes a “floor” for employee contributions so that no employee will pay an amount that is less than 1.5% of the employee’s compensation. Employees who pay for health care benefits coverage based upon a percentage of the cost of coverage will not also be required to pay the minimum contribution of 1.5% of compensation, as provided by other laws. The contribution will commence on the bill’s effective date for certain public employees and upon the expiration of a collective negotiation agreement for others.

Similar provisions in the bill apply to retirees of the State, employers other than the State, and units of local government who accrue 25 years of service after the bill’s effective date, or on or after the expiration of an applicable collective bargaining agreement in effect on that date, and retire after that, who will be required to contribute a percentage of the cost of health care benefits coverage in retirement, but as based on their retirement benefit. These provisions will not apply to public employees who have 20 or more year of service in one or more State or locally-administered retirement systems. A 1.5% “floor”, for those retirees to whom the 1.5% contribution in current law applies, will also be applicable to these retirees.

The bill allows boards of education and units of local government, that do not participate in the SHBP or SEHBP, to enter into contracts for health care benefits coverage, as may be required to implement a collective negotiations agreement, and agree to different employee contribution rates if certain cost savings in the aggregate over the period of the agreement can be demonstrated. The savings must be certified to the Department of Education or the Department of Community Affairs, as appropriate. The departments are to approve or reject the certification, within 30 days of receipt. The certification is deemed approved if not rejected within that time. The agreement cannot be executed until that approval is received or the 30 day period has lapsed, whichever occurs first.

The provisions concerning contributions for health care benefits will expire four years after the effective date.

A public employer and employees who are in negotiations for the next collective negotiations agreement to be executed after the employees in that unit have reached full implementation of the premium share set forth in the bill must conduct negotiations concerning contributions for health care benefits as if the full premium share was included in the prior contract. The public employers and public employees will remain bound by the health care contribution provisions of the bill, notwithstanding the expiration of those sections, until the full amount of the contribution has been implemented in accordance with the schedule set forth in the bill.

Employees subject to any collective negotiations agreement in effect on the effective date of the bill, that has an expiration date on or after the expiration of the health care contribution provisions of the bill, will be subject to those provisions, upon expiration of that collective negotiations agreement, until the health care contribution schedule set forth in the bill is fully implemented.

After full implementation, those contribution levels will become part of the parties' collective negotiations and will then be subject to collective negotiations in a manner similar to other negotiable items between the parties.

A public employee whose amount of contribution in retirement was determined in accordance with the expired sections of law will be required to contribute the amount so determined in retirement, notwithstanding that the law has expired, with the retirement allowance, and any future cost of living adjustment thereto, used to identify the percentage of the cost of coverage.

The increased employee contributions under the bill for pension benefits and the contributions for health care benefits will begin upon the implementation of necessary administrative actions for collection and will not be applied retroactively to this bill’s effective date.

The bill also creates two new committees, one for the State Health Benefits Program and one for the School Employees’ Health Benefits Program and confers on the committees the responsibility for plan design. Half of the committee members will be appointed by the Governor to represent public employers and half by certain unions who represent public employees in the State.

The bill requires the committees for both programs to set the amounts for maximums, co-pays, deductibles, and other such participant costs; provide employees with the option to select one level of at least three levels of coverage each for family, individual, individual and spouse, and individual and dependent, or equivalent categories, for each plan offered by the program differentiated by out of pocket costs to employees including with regard to co-payments and deductibles; and provide for a high deductible health plan that conforms to the Internal Revenue Code Section 223.

The bill contains a section, to begin January 1, 2012, to limit coverage for certain medically necessary tertiary health care services performed by certain out of State health care providers.

The bill repeals a provision of law that provides that the State Health Benefits Commission must not enter into a contract for the benefits provided pursuant to the contract in effect on October 1, 1988, including, but not limited to, basic benefits, extended basic benefits, and major medical benefits unless the level of benefits provided under the contract entered into is equal to or exceeds the level of benefits provided for in the contract in effect on October 1, 1988, or unless the benefits in effect on October 1, 1988 are modified by an authorized collective bargaining agreement made on behalf of the State.

Various provisions of the bill contain a number of changes to the law that are necessary to maintain the qualified plan status of the retirement systems under the federal Internal Revenue Code; for compliance with Statements Nos. 43 and 45 of the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, Accounting and Financial Reporting by Employers for Postemployment Benefits Other Than Pensions (GASB 43/45); and to bring the defined contribution plans into compliance with U.S. Department of Treasury regulations affecting administration of plans administered under section 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code. Modifications pertaining to the Supplemental Annuity Collective Trust are also being made by the bill.
Important stuff not included: This bill establishes a special trust fund set up to take contributions for non-pension retirement medical benefits:
66. (New section) a. Post-employment benefits other than pensions under the State Health Benefits Program, P.L.1961, c.49 (C.52:14-17.25 et seq.), for retired employees, and their dependents, of employers other than the State that are participating in the State Health Benefits Program pursuant to section 3 of P.L.1964, c.125 (C.52:14-17.34), as non-State participating employers, shall be funded and paid by means of contributions to a separate trust fund.
And these are the health insurance contribution amounts:
for family coverage or its equivalent -

an employee who earns less than $25,000 shall pay 3 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $25,000 or more but less than $30,000 shall pay 4 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $30,000 or more but less than $35,000 shall pay 5 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $35,000 or more but less than $40,000 shall pay 6 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $40,000 or more but less than $45,000 shall pay 7 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $45,000 or more but less than $50,000 shall pay 9 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $50,000 or more but less than $55,000 shall pay 12 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $55,000 or more but less than $60,000 shall pay 14 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $60,000 or more but less than $65,000 shall pay 17 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $65,000 or more but less than $70,000 shall pay 19 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $70,000 or more but less than $75,000 shall pay 22 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $75,000 or more but less than $80,000 shall pay 23 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $80,000 or more but less than $85,000 shall pay 24 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $85,000 or more but less than $90,000 shall pay 26 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $90,000 or more but less than $95,000 shall pay 28 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $95,000 or more or but less than $100,000 shall pay 29 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $100,000 or more or but less than $110,000 shall pay 32 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $110,000 or more shall pay 35 percent of the cost of coverage


for individual coverage or its equivalent -

an employee who earns less than $20,000 shall pay 4.5 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $20,000 or more but less than $25,000 shall pay 5.5 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $25,000 or more but less than $30,000 shall pay 7.5 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $30,000 or more but less than $35,000 shall pay 10 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $35,000 or more but less than $40,000 shall pay 11 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $40,000 or more but less than $45,000 shall pay 12 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $45,000 or more but less than $50,000 shall pay 14 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $50,000 or more but less than $55,000 shall pay 20 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $55,000 or more but less than $60,000 shall pay 23 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $60,000 or more but less than $65,000 shall pay 27 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $65,000 or more but less than $70,000 shall pay 29 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $70,000 or more but less than $75,000 shall pay 32 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $75,000 or more but less than $80,000 shall pay 33 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $80,000 or more but less than $95,000 shall pay 34 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $95,000 or more shall pay 35 percent of the cost of coverage;


for member with child or spouse coverage or its equivalent -

an employee who earns less than $25,000 shall pay 3.5 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $25,000 or more but less than $30,000 shall pay 4.5 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $30,000 or more but less than $35,000 shall pay 6 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $35,000 or more but less than $40,000 shall pay 7 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $40,000 or more but less than $45,000 shall pay 8 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $45,000 or more but less than $50,000 shall pay 10 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $50,000 or more but less than $55,000 shall pay 15 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $55,000 or more but less than $60,000 shall pay 17 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $60,000 or more but less than $65,000 shall pay 21 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $65,000 or more but less than $70,000 shall pay 23 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $70,000 or more but less than $75,000 shall pay 26 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $75,000 or more but less than $80,000 shall pay 27 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $80,000 or more but less than $85,000 shall pay 28 percent of the cost of coverage;
an employee who earns $85,000 or more but less than $100,000 shall pay 30 percent of the cost of coverage.
an employee who earns $100,000 or more shall pay 35 percent of the cost of coverage.

The NJ bill would go a long way toward fixing a lot of damaged pension systems. The screaming over COLAs alone should create seismic shocks all the way to California.


Comments:
MoM, why the actuarial ratio of 75% or 80%? Why not 100%?
 
Our county is not a tax lien county. So, if you own a house outright and are three years behind on the taxes, they will foreclose. They will give you the option to pay all three years plus foreclosure fees before the auction date. After the auction, you have no further claim to the property.
 
NJCommuter - the purpose of that calculation is to compare funds accrued to future benefits accrued.

80-90% is considered decent because depending on the structure of the plan, more future payments are necessarily going to come in, not just in the form of new contributions from future retirees, but also in terms of accumulated yields on assets in the plan which will come in before future payments out kick in.

After that calculation is done, the next issue would be to investigate whether the expected return on assets is realistic under changing circs. For example, if we have an extended period of Japanese-like returns on money, the expected yield rates used in a lot of plans are too high.

After that, one needs to model changing contribution/participation effects.

In some cases, plans are underfunded at 90%.

It's also important to look at stability of actual benefit accruals against actual benefit determination. In plans that allow final futzing in the last couple of years (last year overtime is used to determine retirement benefit, etc) higher funding ratios should be required.

Accounting for public retirement funds has been tragically inept, which is contributing to the problem in many cases.

One reason that so many municipality funds are severely underwater are that benefits are routinely futzed, so contributions are always lower than they should be.
 
Teri - that is true in many areas.

No one talks about that - all the claims of affordability have ignored what has happened to property taxes in many localities. When you take property taxes into account, affordability still is very poor in many areas.

I made the mistake of watching the Bernanke presser, and I am still reeling from the shock. That is just one of his mistakes.
 
It's just pay cuts spread out over several years while
The cost of living rises. New Jersey will find out that
while it cuts the deficit at first, the tax revenues will
fall as households cut back. They are hoping tax
revenue will rise eventually so they buy time. Unless
there are radical trade and tax policy changes it won't
buy too much time. Unfortunately the Feds set those
rules.

Sporkfed
 
Detroit has huge problems with property tax. All those "cheap" abandoned houses for $6,000 have MASSIVE taxes attached to them. Like $600 a month or more if you buy one. PLUS back taxes owed, in some cases $7,000+) NY cities have identical problems.

So you see why they just bulldoze.

For me, the biggest crime is the waste of all the labor and materials that went into these houses and buildings for the last 100 years. The US can't afford to squander it's resources...as everyone is finding out.
 
My Cook County property taxes have increased 100% in 10 years. My wages in that span have increase around 35%.

And this is residential property, which in Cook County is taxed a lot lower than commercial and industrial property. That means the property tax bite on business property is REALLY bad, which will push more jobs to suburban counties and make it more costly more Cook residents to get to work and will eventually mean even higher residential property taxes.

We have not yet begun to fail.
 
Charles - that's the classic error. Make it fiscally imprudent for businesses to stay, and then when they inevitably disappear you have no chance of recovery.

People are living in a dream world about much of this. They don't understand how so much of the bubble has yet to pop.

We have an entitlement bubble.
We have a (mostly) state and local retirement benefits bubble.
We have a higher education bubble. We have a student loan bubble.
We have a new health care entitlement due to take effect in 2014 for which we cannot possibly pay.

We are FOOLS.
 
The pension imbalances must be fixed, but you'd probably do the public employees a big favor by preserving a COLA, and making up for it by a much larger cut in salary now. Many public employees know what they will receive per month in retirement, and plan around it . Of course without COLAS, the real value of their monthly payment declines if their is any inflation over 0 percent. If inflation is at 3 per cent, their monthly check has half it's original value in about 22 years, and at that point,if not before, your retired public servant will be in poverty, and will become another public finance problem ( to say nothing of their personal financial hardship ). It would be better from both a public finance view and welfare view to leave the COLAS, but chop the salary as required of those still working. There is of course one drawback in this scheme. It of course would require actual fiduciary integrity on the part of the legislators, and it seems Americans are not serious enough people to require this of their elected officials.
 
NJ has such a huge problem that there is no way to chop current salaries and catch up.

I'd prefer limited COLAs - some public employees have a fixed COLA not linked to inflation - but the most important is to not leave the retirees absolutely destitute.

One good think about this bill is that it forces NJ to make their contributions! That will be a help.
 
MoM,

One thing that goes on around here of which I have no idea what its true impact really is - Tax Increment Financing districts. These are almost exclusively commercial property deals which I suspect is the game being played to make residents feel like they are paying less than commercial property owners but probably don't. What happens is the TIF property tax basically gets put into a slush fund instead of dispersed like typical property tax and then the agencies are short of funds and the non-TIF property tax rates are increased to make up the difference.

This may be more of a municipal scam than a county scam; like I said I don't know enough about it and I suspect it would be a full-time job learning how they all work.
 
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