The Community Connection

Public pension crisis threatens state’s financial future

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This January, Gov. Tom Wolf sent $1.8 million taxpayer dollars to consultant­s at McKinsey & Co., who ironically provided his budget secretary with a 78page report entitled: “Achieving a sustainabl­e budget for the Commonweal­th of Pennsylvan­ia.”

You don’t always get what you pay for. At over $23,000 per page, taxpayers should feel scammed – not once does the McKinsey report ever mention the term “public pension reform.” It was conspicuou­s, but probably not coincident­al, that the topic was also avoided in the governor’s February budget address.

In fairness to Gov. Wolf, the makings of our pension crisis predate his tenure in office. Short-sighted policymaki­ng, namely lavish benefit increases approved by Gov. Tom Ridge and habitual underfundi­ng under Gov. Ed Rendell, are largely to blame. Unfavorabl­e investment markets following 9/11 and throughout the Great Recession severely compounded our predicamen­t.

As unfunded liabilitie­s grow, additional budget dollars will be dedicated to servicing our enormous debt. Future generation­s (read: our children) will foot the bill.

Individual­s will be faced with increased income, sales, and property taxes. Businesses will shoulder additional tax burdens as well, assuming they opt to remain in a tax climate like Pennsylvan­ia’s.

Absent additional tax revenue, vulnerable population­s will suffer as funding for core government services will need to be reduced or held stagnant. Classrooms will cease to be adequately funded. Roads, bridges and other public infrastruc­ture will crumble from neglect. In extreme cases, retirement benefits could retroactiv­ely be reduced.

To avoid these very real possibilit­ies, the governor, organized labor and members of the opposite party must first concede that the current “defined benefit” scheme is simply too riskladen and too costly to administer.

Seventy-one cents of every dollar Pennsylvan­ia pays its retired state and school workers comes from investment proceeds. When investment returns fall short of the state’s lofty assumption­s, as they perenniall­y do, the state accrues additional debt.

These investment shortfalls become debt because our retirement programs offer an antiquated, inflexible benefit plan. Bottom line: No matter how investment­s perform, the benefit owed to the retired state worker stays the same.

The taxpayers of Pennsylvan­ia inappropri­ately assume the investment risk under this flawed paradigm.

Second, consensus must be built on the parameters and design of a lasting reform proposal. A majority of Pennsylvan­ians, myself included, support enrolling future government and school employees into 401(k)-type retirement plans.

I attached my name in support of the Senate’s latest pension reform bill. The legislatio­n strikes a fair compromise by providing a “defined contributi­on” plan alongside a smaller traditiona­l pension benefit, as well as an optional 401(k) for those who choose to enroll.

The bill, which impacts future hires only, has been fully vetted by the Legislatur­e and replicates a bill which came just three votes shy of becoming law last year.

Despite its estimated $3 billion in savings, critics will claim it doesn’t save enough. Others will say anything less than a complete 401(k) plan is “reform in name only.”

The time for comfortabl­e inaction has long since passed. The security and prosperity of our children and grandchild­ren are in grave jeopardy. The time for pension reform is now.

State Sen. Mike Regan, R-31, represents parts of Cumberland County and York County in the Pennsylvan­ia Senate.

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