Lodi News-Sentinel

CalPERS surveys show drop in confidence

- By Adam Ashton

Call it the Loyalton effect. CalPERS’ decision in late 2016 to slash pensions for four retirees from the tiny mountain town startled the state’s public workers so much that their confidence in the $354 billion fund began to plunge to its lowest level in five years.

It showed in an annual survey conducted by the California Public Employees’ Retirement System that gauges how public employees, retirees and local government leaders feel about the state’s largest pension system.

“You’re looking at your retirement and you’re seeing CalPERS is reducing pensions, which is something that had never happened before,” said CalPERS board member Richard Costigan, who has paid close attention to the surveys since he joined the board in 2010.

Each CalPERS survey captures a moment in time, and last year’s results might not be repeated.

It unfolded in a dramatic window. CalPERS in November 2016 cut the Loyalton pensions because the town had not paid a CalPERS bill in three years.

In December 2016, CalPERS acknowledg­ed that it expected to earn less money over time from its invest- ment portfolio. That meant government agencies had to kick in more money to fund their employees’ pensions.

In early 2017, CalPERS cut retirement benefits again for nearly 200 former employees of another local government organizati­on that had stopped paying into the fund.

Costigan said each vote was meant to strengthen the pension fund, but the cumulative effect of the news sent a distressin­g signal.

“We are honoring our financial obligation. You can’t have other people pay in the fund for these guys,” he said, referring to the two organizati­ons that saw cuts to their pension plans last year.

The drop in confidence last year was especially pronounced among local government executives.

Their confidence in CalPERS declined by more than 10 percentage points when they were asked whether they believed their retirement money was “safe.”

Almost 80 percent of respondent­s from 2015 gave CalPERS high marks on that question. Last year, fewer than twothirds of them expressed that kind of confidence.

Public employees, too, appeared to be worried. About 65 percent of current employees indicated they believed their retirement money was safe, down from 83 percent in 2014.

CalPERS is considered underfunde­d because it has about 70 percent of the assets it would need to pay everything it owes today.

Its critics argue that it’s unsustaina­ble because of its liabilitie­s. Supporters say it’s on the mend from the recession, and it recently passed a milestone in which its leaders no longer believe they have to sell assets to pay benefits.

“It’s not going to go broke. It’s in better shape than it was 40 years ago and probably better than it was in 2008 and 2009,” said Dave Low, president of the California School Employees’ Associatio­n, a union that represents classified workers in public schools.

The Bee reviewed four years of surveys conducted by CalPERS and the California State Teachers’ Retirement System. Here’s a look at how different participan­ts view the two pension funds.

The boss is worried — Senior government executives are very worried about CalPERS.

In last year’s survey, a majority of them said they lacked confidence in the safety of their retirement money. They were the only group of survey participan­ts to express that level of concern.

CalPERS surveys in 2014 and 2015 previewed those fears. CalPERS in those years hired a private firm to conduct the survey. It included a couple of questions gauging whether members worried that their employers would have enough money to pay pension obligation­s in the future.

In both years, survey participan­ts indicated they were concerned that their employers might have trouble paying future pension bills.

CalPERS members “are very highly convinced that local public employers’ current and future abilities to pay their pension and other obligation­s will affect CalPERS members, their families and their communitie­s,” the 2015 survey reported.

Retirees are content — At both CalPERS and CalSTRS, retirees have fewer worries about pensions than current employees.

In the most recent CalPERS survey, for instance, 80 percent of pensioners felt their retirement money was “safe.” Only 65 percent of current employees expressed similar confidence.

CalSTRS has a similar split. Almost 90 percent of retired teachers consistent­ly say they’re satisfied with their pension fund.

By contrast, fewer than twothirds of teachers younger than 60 express that kind of satisfacti­on with CalSTRS.

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