Baltimore Sun Sunday

Politician­s’ pension fund performs well

-

The pension fund for Baltimore’s elected officials outperform­ed those for city workers and police and firefighte­rs in 2017, according to new reports.

Last fiscal year, during a sustained stock market rally, the fund for city politician­s grew in value by 14.2 percent — compared to 11.8 percent growth for the pension funds for city workers and police and firefighte­rs.

The pension fund for Baltimore’s elected officials is now funded at 167 percent of long-term costs and is carrying a nearly $10 million surplus.

By contrast, the Fire and Police Employees’ Retirement System is funded at just 71 percent of long-term costs and is carrying an unfunded liability of more than $1 billion.

The Employees’ Retirement System — on which thousands of rank-and-file workers and retirees rely — is funded at 73 percent of long-term costs and has an unfunded liability of $644 million.

City Councilman Eric T. Costello recently attended a hearing on the fiscal health of the pension funds called by Council Vice President Sharon Middleton in the finance committee.

“The health of ERS is in a good place and they’ve got a long-term plan to address it,” he said. “They want to get to 100 percent funded by 2031.”

City police and firefighte­rs pay 10 percent of their salaries into their pensions. Other municipal workers pay 5 percent of their salaries into their pension plans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States