Chicago Sun-Times

AGENCY LIFTS CHICAGO’S BOND RATING, CREDITS RAHM

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Chicago’s general obligation bond rating jumped two notches Monday, thanks to the progress Mayor Rahm Emanuel has made in reducing the city’s structural deficit and creating a “roadmap to pension fund solvency.”

The decision by Kroll Bond Rating agency to raise Chicago’s bond rating from BBB+ to A with a stable outlook could translate into savings for beleaguere­d Chicago taxpayers by reducing the interest rate the city will have to pay to borrow money.

In a 17- page report explaining the upgrade, Kroll credited Emanuel with identifyin­g “permanent ramp- up revenue sources” for all four city employee pension funds. Kroll also cited “significan­t progress toward achieving structural balance through greater efficienci­es and reduced reliance on non- recurring revenue sources.”

Chicago taxpayers have paid a heavy price for the solution to the city’s $ 36 billion pension crisis.

They have already endured $ 1.2 billion in property taxes for police, fire and teacher pensions; a 29.5 percent tax onwater and sewer bills for the Municipal Employees Pension Fund, the largest of the four; and a pair of telephone tax increases for the Laborer’s pension fund.

More tax increases are on the way. By the city’s own estimates, police and fire pension costs will rise by $ 297.3 million or 36 percent in 2020. The Municipal and Laborers plan costs will grow by $ 330.4 million or 50 percent in 2022.

In outlining its “key rating concerns,” Kroll acknowledg­ed the city’s heavy debt levels, rising public safety costs and need to “identify funding sources once the interim period ends and full actuarial funding begins.”

The rating agency noted that the four pension funds are “severely under- funded” — with revenues to cover anywhere from 19 to 32 percent of liabilitie­s — and that those ratios “will deteriorat­e before underfunde­d liabilitie­s are stabilized and eventually reversed.” But Kroll’s managing director Harvey Zachem said the mayor and City Council have already demonstrat­ed the political will to confront the challenge.

For Emanuel, the report has political as well as financial benefits.

Last week, potential mayoral challenger Paul Vallas accused the mayor of “punting” Chicago’s $ 36 billion pension crisis during his first term in office, making the problem infinitely worse.

That’s apparently why the mayor couldn’t resist crowing about the double- upgradeMon­day.

“It shows that all of the hard work we have done as a city of fixing our public finances— taking on the past challenges thatwere left to actually prepare for the future” has been worth it, Emanuel said.

“That’s a vote of confidence in the work thatwe have done. But it means we have morework ahead of us.”

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Rahm Emanuel

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