Chicago Sun-Times

McCarthy supports retirees fighting for health care, rips Rahm

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

Mayoral candidate Garry McCarthy showed up Tuesday at a jam-packed Daley Center courtroom to demonstrat­e his support for former city employees fighting to restore the 55 percent retiree health care subsidy abolished by Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

If he is elected mayor, McCarthy said he is determined to find the $130 million a year needed to restore the subsidy for retirees, 10,000 of whom started working for the city prior to April 1, 1986, and, therefore, are not eligible for Medicare.

“Emotionall­y, it disturbs me greatly that this is the way we treat retirees. It’s not fair. You’ve heard me say we need more compassion­ate government. This is exactly what I’m talking about,” McCarthy said.

“Underneath my being a cop for 35 years, I’m kind of a sensitive person, which a lot of people don’t realize it. The more time I’ve spent with the retirees, the more it’s gotten to me. I wanted to know more about it and show my support for them. I don’t think this should have happened. It needs to be corrected. It’s just another fiscal challenge we’re gonna have to face.”

This month, Circuit Court Judge Neil Cohen ruled that the four city employee pension funds were not obligated to provide coverage for 22,000 retirees. Their only obligation was to provide a small subsidy for retirees to purchase coverage on their own.

During Tuesday’s hearing, Cohen provided the legal language that will enable retirees’ attorney Clint Krislov to immediatel­y appeal that ruling to the Illinois Appellate Court.

Cohen also ordered a briefing schedule aimed at determinin­g how the subsidies will be brought current, at a cost that Krislov estimated at $13.2 million dating back to January 2017, when the city cut them off, and $600,000 a month going forward.

Krislov was asked who would be on the hook to pay that money. Will it be the pension funds or, ultimately, beleaguere­d Chicago taxpayers?

“It’s not our problem. The city and the funds can figure out between themselves how to finance that,” Krislov said.

Last year, a private email written by Emanuel bragging about the phase-out of the retiree health care coverage took center stage in the ongoing legal battle to restore the program and a 55 percent city subsidy.

On Tuesday, McCarthy said the “callous” exchange was par for the course for the boss who fired him.

“That goes to his mindset. It’s that simple. He just doesn’t care about people,” McCarthy said.

“But I’m really done bashing him. I’m turning the page on him. He’s gone . . . . The problems that he left behind are still here, and we have to deal with them. That’s really what we’re doing. Planning to correct all of the things that are now broken.”

Pressed on where he would find the $130 million a year needed to restore the retiree health care subsidy, McCarthy pointed to Emanuel’s controvers­ial plan to build a $95 million police academy “that I don’t think we need in the first place” in West Garfield Park.

Not to be outdone, mayoral candidate Paul Vallas reiterated an earlier pledge to restore the retiree health care subsidy and make the specific amount the “product of strategic bargaining” with union leaders.

“There are multiple pathways . . . for providing a subsidy that will not impose a permanent, long-term funding mandate on the city,” Vallas said.

Possibilit­ies include diverting “a portion of the salary increase in the next contract” to fund retiree health care and requiring a “small annual contributi­on from active employees, which could be tied to income,” Vallas said.

 ?? COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Mayoral candidate Garry McCarthy says “I’m turning the page” on Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES FILE Mayoral candidate Garry McCarthy says “I’m turning the page” on Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

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