The Pantagraph | President of tax reform group calls for major changes to Illinois pensions

Findings from TUA’s pension project on Bloomington-Normal, Illinois, are featured in this story from The Pantagraph.
pantagraphBLOOMINGTON — Jim Tobin, president of Taxpayers United of America, is traveling throughout Illinois, including a stop Tuesday in Bloomington, pitching his ideas for pension reform.
“Illinois is in horrible financial shape and yet taxpayers are still expected to pour their hard-earned money into a failed government pension system,” said Tobin. “The state’s in such bad shape. It can’t sell bonds; it can’t borrow money.”
Taxpayers United of America, which its website says was founded in 1976 as National Taxpayers United of Illinois, suggests, “Without sweeping and immediate reform, Illinois’ pension system will collapse.”
Tobin said reform must include: raising the retirement age to 67; increasing employee contributions by 10 percent; increasing health care contributions to 50 percent; eliminating all cost-of-living adjustments; and replacing the defined benefit system with a defined contribution system for all new hires.
While he used to lobby for reform, Tobin said he’s now “letting taxpayers know” through the media and by direct mail to TUA members and other known “activists.”
Tobin said the results of his organization’s new pension study of government employees in Bloomington, Normal, McLean County, schools and Illinois State University will be available on its website www.taxpayersunited.org.
The Pantagraph also has detailed pension information from a December 2011 series which can be found by clicking here.
Linda Horrell, communications director for the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund that covers non-contract government employees in nearly 3,000 downstate local governments, said IMRF is not a state-funded pension system so it is not included in the state pension reform discussions.
IMRF is funded by employee and mandated employer contributions as well as investment income.  Horrell said IMRF does not include compounded cost-of-living adjustments and doesn’t offer retirees health insurance.  Recently adopted guidelines also change benefits for employees hired after Jan. 1, 2011, including raising the full pension age to 67 — up from 60.
Charlie McBarron, director of communications for the Illinois Education Association, said the IEA took part in a summit Monday to discuss the state’s pension problems.  He said the organization is bringing numerous ideas to the table to solve the pension problems in a “fair and constitutional” way.
Illinois has a $96 billion pension shortfall.

WGLT | National Taxpayers United campaigns against state pensions

Findings from TUA’s pension project on Bloomington-Normal, Illinois, are featured in this story from WGLT.
gltuniversityThe head of a conservative anti tax group is publishing pension benefit amounts for retired McLean County teachers and government officials.
“And the biggest problem with Illinois’s catastrophic financial system are these lavish gold-plated pensions.”
Jim Tobin, the head of National Taxpayers United, says eliminating defined benefit plans and putting all new government workers into 401k accounts is necessary to rescue the state from fiscal crisis.
But, representatives for workers point out the group’s allegations of pension millionaires assume that retirees will live to age 85. Most don’t. They also accuse NTU of cherry picking data and using only top earners as examples, not the average retiree who receives between $32,000 and $46,000 depending on which union workforce is involved. Larry Alferink heads the ISU Annuitants Association and says state pension costs are not exhorbitant when taken as a portion of total compensation.
The cost of the pension system to the state of Illinois was 9.1%, recognizing that the cost of social security is 6.2%. So the actual cost of the pension system above what every other employer pays is less than 3%.
State employees, Alferink says, do not get Social Security and the state does not pay into that system for its employees. Alferink says private universities average at least 5% retirement costs above the 6.2% of compensation they contribute to Social Security. Alferink also notes the state’s problems stem not from the size of the pensions but from the state’s failure to pay its share of the costs over decades.
During the anti pension campaign stop in Bloomington Tobin said recovery will require Illinois to convert state workers to 401k accounts moving forward.
“They have to stop the government pensions for new government hires. That will eliminate all unfunded liabilities in the long run”
Tobin also wants the retirement age raised to 67 and workers in the current plan to pay 10% of their income toward retirement. Alferink says 401k systems typically do not work out so well.
“One out of every six people outlive their benefits and then they have to fall back on the state. In this case, since the state is paying for the pension system it doesn’t work out so well because they end up paying a second time when those individuals are destitute.”
Tobin’s group likes to claim that only 2% to 4% of lifetime pension benefits are paid by direct state employee contributions. But, Alferink notes that is misleading because nearly 70% of pension payments come from earnings on worker contributions over decades.

Hundreds of Bloomington – Normal Government Retirees Become Pension Millionaires at Taxpayer Expense

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Bloomington—Taxpayers United of America (TUA) today released the results of a new pension study of the employees of the Cities of Bloomington and Normal, McLean County, McLean County government schools, and Illinois State University.
“Illinois lawmakers continue their abuse of taxpayers by ignoring the number one budgetary problem in the state,” stated Jim Tobin, president of TUA. “Illinois is in horrible financial shape, and yet taxpayers are still expected to pour their hard earned money into a failed government pension system.”
“While residents across McLean County face crushing tax increases, falling home values, high unemployment, and a painfully slow economic recovery, government employees continue to receive stunning pensions largely funded by taxpayers who, on average, collect only $14,800 a year from Social Security.”
“Illinois’ government bureaucrats have been draining taxpayers in McLean County and all across the state for the last 30 years, trading gold-plated pension benefits for the votes they need to stay in power. Across the country, millions of bureaucrats are being paid trillions, to do absolutely nothing! With their 3%, compounded cost of living adjustments (COLA), Illinois’ government retirees double their pensions after only 24 years of retirement.”
“The purpose of our study is to put some perspective around individual pensions, to put them in terms to which the average taxpayer can relate. Area taxpayers, whose average household income is $59,000, need to know how much local government retirees are being paid not to work and the astronomical accumulation of those payments over an average lifetime.”
“For example, Robert S. Nielson retired from Bloomington SD 87 at the ripe old age of 58 and collects an annual pension of $158,930. His estimated lifetime pension payout is a stunning $6,152,074*, 3.7% of which was his contribution.”
“At only 53 years of age, Thomas A. Hamilton retired from the City of Bloomington and has an annual pension of $119,696, with a staggering estimated lifetime payout of $5,750,607*. His contribution of the estimated lifetime payout would be only 1.8%.”
“Retired Normal government employee, John M. Callahan, has an incredible lifetime estimated pension payout of $3,296,426*, 2.9% of which he contributed, with an annual pension of $93,812, retiring at only 58.”
View pension amounts below:

“Illinois’ government pensions are in serious trouble with no end in sight. Government employees should be paid a fair wage for the work they do today so they can save for their own retirement.”
“Without sweeping and immediate reform, Illinois’ pension system will collapse. Reform must include raising retirement age to 67, increasing employee contributions by 10%, increasing healthcare contributions to 50%, eliminating all COLA’s, and replacing the defined benefit system with a defined contribution system for all new hires. It’s mathematically impossible to tax your way out of this problem. Illinois has more than 6,700 retirees collecting more than $100,000; in 2020, that will be over 25,000 six figure pensioners.”
*Lifetime estimated pension payout includes 3% compounded COLA and assumes life expectancy of 85 (IRS Form 590).