Jamaica Gleaner

Puerto Rico seeks court’s help to save public pension system

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PUERTO RICO is seeking help from federal court to restructur­e the debt of the US territory’s public pension system, which is projected to run out of money this year.

A federal control board overseeing the island’s finances said on Monday that the move was taken in part to shield the government from a flurry of lawsuits.

“The government’s liquidity and solvency problems are massive, and Title III has now become necessary to protect the people of Puerto Rico,” the board said in reference to the courtsuper­vised restructur­ing process.

Governor Ricardo Rossello said late Sunday that his administra­tion requested that the board approve a court-supervised process because it had been unable to reach a deal with creditors to whom it owes some US$3 billion.

“Given the system’s uncertain situation ... its eventual insolvency in upcoming months, and the inability to reach a deal with creditors ... I have no other option to protect our retirees,” he said.

The US territory is increasing­ly turning to the courts to restructur­e portions of the US$73 billion public debt it Governor of Puerto Rico, Ricardo Rossello. holds as it struggles to emerge from a island’s Highway and Transporta­tion decade-long recession. The board on Authority. Monday also said that it would seeking Rossello said retired workers would to restructur­e via courts more than still receive their pensions, and that the US$4 billion in debt held by the government would dip into its general fund once the pension system itself runs out of money.

Roberto Aquino Garcia, president of the Associatio­n of Retired Puerto Rico Government Workers, said he doubts a court-ordered restructur­ing would bring substantia­l relief to the more than 150,000 former government workers who depend on a system underfunde­d by some US$50 billion.

WORSE FATE

“We hold very little hope because unless the system receives a significan­t cash infusion to stay afloat, it will collapse,” he said in a phone interview.

Aquino said many retirees worry that the general fund will not be able to fund their pensions because it is already low on cash.

“We don’t know what the government’s priorities will be,” he said. “Do we fall under essential services?”

The government is Puerto Rico’s largest employer, and the overall liability of its three main retirement systems grew by US$10 billion from 2009 to 2013, prompting the previous administra­tion to increase retirement ages, reduce benefits and increase employer and employee contributi­ons.

Puerto Rico’s average public pension is roughly US$1,100 a month, but more than 38,000 retired government employees get only US$500 because of the type of job they had and the number of years worked.

A federal control board overseeing the island’s finances is now seeking more cuts. It has said the system would switch to pay-as-you-go funding, and that teachers and public safety workers would be enrolled in social security by 2020. Currently, teachers and police officers in Puerto Rico do not receive social security.

Aquino said a non-profit group representi­ng nearly 100,000 retired Puerto Rico government workers has hired the same attorney who represente­d retired workers in Detroit, which had less than US$20 billion in debts when it filed for bankruptcy in 2013 in the biggest US municipal bankruptcy ever.

“There’s going to be a humanitari­an crisis,” Aquino warned. “The government made a commitment to us since 1951 when it created the pension system. It’s a contract that all of us have held up on our end.”

Puerto Rico economist Vicente Feliciano has said that it’s unlikely that the government will be able to fulfil that contract.

He noted that retirees in Detroit were hit with a 5 per cent cut and anticipate­d that those in Puerto Rico would be facing a similar or worse fate.

“The majority of retirees will get their pensions cut,” he said. “Everybody must take a hit.”

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