Chicago Sun-Times

Aldermen to get briefing on $10B pension borrowing plan

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Chicago’s chief financial officer will sound out aldermen Thursday on the possibilit­y of issuing $10 billion in pension obligation bonds amid widespread skepticism from municipal finance experts about Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan.

Mayoral challenger Paul Vallas has urged the City Council to stop that train from leaving the station to avoid putting Chicago taxpayers in a “financial straitjack­et” — though CFO Carole Brown has insisted no final decision has been made.

Richard Ciccarone, president of Chicago-based Merritt Research Services LLC, shares Vallas’ skeptical view.

He called the plan to minimize the need for another punishing round of post-election tax increases “not the solution I wanted to see” from Chicago. Not even after dedicated funding sources have now been identified for all four city employee pension funds.

“We just cannot continue to defer this problem to future generation­s. You have to step up in taxes and revenues to some extent, even if it’s a compromise,” Ciccarone said.

“It could be done partly by some financing. But not entirely.”

Ciccarone noted that pension bonds have “not been viewed in a positive light for some time,” because of some defaults. He pointed to California, Detroit and Puerto Rico as negative examples.

By 2023, the city’s contributi­on to all four funds will nearly double — from $1.2 billion this year to $2.1 billion, according to the city’s annual financial analysis.

“To some extent, the rating agencies and the markets, through the signal of the bond rates, were showing some improvemen­t on Chicago” amid confidence that Chicago will make the tough choices necessary to handle the “steep upward climb,” Ciccarone said.

“There’s a danger that this might actually be a ... back-step on that, as more debt is taken on,” he said. “More debt on the books right now will make it harder for the city to issue additional debt for other purposes, including infrastruc­ture, because it’ll be that much more official debt on the books.”

Ald. Pat O’Connor (40th), the mayor’s City Council floor leader, said it’s easy for municipal finance experts to sit around with their arms folded, talking about how risky a $10 billion pension bond issue would be.

Aldermen don’t have that luxury; they must determine how much more beleaguere­d Chicago taxpayers can realistica­lly absorb.

Emanuel has already imposed a $2 billion avalanche of tax increases, just to begin to solve Chicago’s $28 billion pension crisis.

“They’re not making a judgment as to how much people can tolerate. They’re just making a judgment between finance vehicles,” O’Connor said.

“We have to make a judgment about what people can tolerate and keep their investment in their home. Something they can recoup and sell as opposed to crippling them with taxes that make homes unsaleable,” he added.

“We should look at all opportunit­ies to infuse cash into our liabilitie­s short of raising property taxes. This is one of those vehicles. Are we gonna pass it? I don’t know. Are we gonna look at it? Absolutely.”

Brown could not be reached for comment on the closed-door briefings she has arranged for aldermen.

Last week, Brown said she hoped to make a quick decision — possibly in time for a City Council vote in September — to take advantage of a favorable market.

She argued it would be irresponsi­ble not to at least consider a plan with the potential to minimize — but not eliminate — the need for post-election tax increases.

“If you had a mortgage on your house and you knew that you could refinance that mortgage and save 2 percent, wouldn’t it be kind of dumb not to do that?” Brown said in response to Vallas.

“What’s the risk? Tell me what the risk is. All I’m trying to do is pay less for the debt I’m already on the hook for.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Chicago Chief Financial Officer Carole Brown is expected to discuss with aldermen the possibilit­y of issuing $10 billion in pension obligation bonds.
SUN-TIMES FILE Chicago Chief Financial Officer Carole Brown is expected to discuss with aldermen the possibilit­y of issuing $10 billion in pension obligation bonds.

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