Los Angeles Times

Costs push cities toward the brink

- By Judy Lin

RICHMOND, Calif. — When the state auditor gauged the fiscal health of California cities in 2015, this port community on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay made a short list of six distressed municipali­ties at risk of bankruptcy.

Richmond has cut about 200 jobs — roughly 20% of its workforce — since 2008. Its credit rating is at junk status. And in November, voters rejected a tax increase that city leaders had hoped would help close a chronic budget deficit.

“I don’t think there’s any chance we can avoid it,” said former City Councilman Vinay Pimple, referring to bankruptcy.

A major cause of Richmond’s problems: relentless growth in pension costs.

Payments for employee pensions, pension-related debt and retiree healthcare have climbed from $25 million to $44 million in the last five years, outpacing all other expenses.

By 2021, retirement expenses could exceed $70 million — 41% of the city’s general fund.

Richmond is a stark example of how pension costs are causing fiscal stress in cities across California. Four municipali­ties — Vallejo, Stockton, San Bernardino

and Mammoth Lakes — have filed for bankruptcy protection since 2008. Others are on the brink.

“The truth is that there are cities all over the state that just aren’t owning up to all their problems,” said San Bernardino City Manager Mark Scott.

Increasing­ly, pension costs consume 15% or more of big-city budgets, crowding out basic services and leaving local government­s more vulnerable than ever to the next economic downturn.

The bill comes due

Richmond is a racially diverse, working-class city of 110,000 whose largest employer is a massive Chevron oil refinery. Like many California municipali­ties, Richmond dug a financial hole for itself by granting generous retirement benefits to police and firefighte­rs on the assumption that pension fund investment­s would grow fast enough to cover the cost.

That optimism proved unfounded, and now the bill is coming due.

City Manager Bill Lindsay insists that Richmond can avoid going off a cliff. Last year, financial consultant­s mapped a path to stability for the city by 2021 — but at a considerab­le cost in public services.

The city cut 11 positions, reduced after-school and senior classes, eliminated neighborho­od cleanups to tackle illegal trash dumping, and trimmed spending on new library books — saving a total of $12 million.

City officials also negotiated a four-year contract with firefighte­rs that freezes salaries and requires firefighte­rs to pay $4,800 a year each toward retirement healthcare. Until then, the benefit was fully funded by taxpayers.

“I’ve seen some of my good friends go through it in Vallejo and Stockton, and what we found out during those [bankruptci­es] is that your union contracts aren’t necessaril­y guaranteed,” said Jim Russey, president of Richmond Firefighte­rs Local 188.

Richmond’s consultant­s said the city had to find $15 million more in new revenue or budget cuts by 2021. Lindsay said the city has been looking hard for additional savings, and the police union recently agreed to have its members contribute toward retirement healthcare.

“If you look at the fiveyear forecast, with reasonable assumption­s, even with the growth in pension cost, it does start to generate a surplus,” Lindsay said.

Joe Nation, a former Democratic state legislator who teaches public policy at Stanford’s Institute for Economic Policy Research, is not so sanguine. He reviewed Richmond’s retirement cost projection­s and said they leave little room to maneuver.

Over the next five years, every dollar the city collects in new revenue will go toward retirement costs, leaving little hope of restoring city services, Nation said.

“If there is an economic downturn of any kind, I can imagine that they could be pushed to the brink of bankruptcy, if not bankruptcy,” Nation said.

Last month, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), the state’s main pension fund, lowered its projected rate of return on investment­s from 7.5% to 7% per year. That means Richmond and other communitie­s will have to pay more each year to fund current and future pension benefits.

The change is expected to increase local government pension payments by at least 20% starting in 2018, according to CalPERS spokeswoma­n Amy Morgan.

Budget management

An analysis by the nonprofit news organizati­on CALmatters indicates that Richmond’s retirement-related expenses could grow to more than $70 million per year by 2021. That represents 41% of a projected $174-million general fund budget.

Lindsay said the city’s estimates of future pension costs are lower because of different assumption­s about salary increases and other costs.

Voters approved a sales tax increase in 2014 to help stabilize the city’s finances. But in November, voters rejected an increase in the property transfer tax that was expected to bring in an additional $4 million to $6 million annually.

Lindsay said the city was never counting on the property transfer tax in its fiveyear plan. If the city needs more cash, he says, Richmond has properties it can sell.

“Budget management is much more difficult in Richmond than in Beverly Hills, but you still manage it,” Lindsay said. “To say it’s spiraling out of control into bankruptcy does incredible damage to our community, and it’s just not accurate.”

Richmond is especially hard hit by personnel costs because of high salaries for public employees. The city’s average salary of $92,000 for its 938 employees was the fifth-highest in California as of 2015, according to the state controller. The city’s median household income is $54,857.

Police officers and firefighte­rs in Richmond make more than $137,000 per year on average, compared with an average $128,000 per year for Berkeley police and firefighte­rs, where housing prices are more than 60% higher than in Richmond.

Public safety salaries averaged $115,000 in Oakland and $112,000 in Vallejo.

Richmond Mayor Tom Butt, an architect and general contractor who has served on the City Council for two decades, says the city, which once was among the state’s most dangerous, has little choice but to pay higher salaries to compete for employees with nearby communitie­s that are safer and more affluent.

“You can’t convince anyone here that they deserve less than anybody in any other city,” Butt said.

Lindsay said the decision to offer higher salaries for public safety employees was strategic.

“The City Council made a conscious decision to put a lot into public safety, in particular reducing violent crime. And largely, we’ve been successful,” Lindsay said.

Violent crimes have been declining in the city over the past decade, with homicides dropping to a low of 11 in 2014. But Richmond is experienci­ng an uptick, recording 24 homicides in 2016, according to the Police Department.

Part of the challenge with public safety costs dates to 1999, when Richmond, like many local government­s, matched the state’s decision to sweeten retirement benefits for California Highway Patrol officers.

CHP officers could retire as early as age 50 with 3% of salary for each year of service, providing up to 90% of their peak salaries in retirement. Other police department­s soon asked for and got similar treatment.

Richmond firefighte­rs are eligible to retire at age 55 with 3% of salary for each year of service. Recent hires will have to work longer to qualify for a less generous formula under legislatio­n passed in 2013.

Richmond’s actuarial pension report shows there are nearly two retirees for every police officer or firefighte­r currently on the job.

Preview of future

In a way, Richmond is a preview of what California cities face in the years ahead. According to CalPERS, there were two active workers for every retiree in its system in 2001. Today, there are 1.3 workers for each retiree. In the next 10 or 20 years, there will be as few as 0.6 worker for each retiree collecting a pension.

Because benefits have already been promised to today’s workers and retirees, cuts in pension benefits for new employees do little to ease the immediate burden. It “means decades before the full burden of this will be completely dealt with,” said Phil Batchelor, former Contra Costa County administra­tor and former interim city manager for Richmond.

Today, Richmond’s taxpayers are spending more to make up for underperfo­rming pension investment­s. CalPERS projects that the city’s payments for unfunded pension liabilitie­s will more than double in the next five years, from $11.2 million to $26.8 million.

Now, the lower assumed rate of investment return is projected to add nearly $9 million to Richmond’s costs by 2021.

“It’s a huge mess,” Butt said. “I don’t know how it’s going to get resolved. One of these days, it’s just going to come crashing down.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Robert Durell CALmatters ?? RICHMOND, located on the east shore of San Francisco Bay, is a racially diverse, working-class city of 110,000 whose largest employer is a massive Chevron oil refinery.
Photograph­s by Robert Durell CALmatters RICHMOND, located on the east shore of San Francisco Bay, is a racially diverse, working-class city of 110,000 whose largest employer is a massive Chevron oil refinery.
 ??  ?? OVER THE next five years, every dollar Richmond collects in new revenue will go toward retirement costs, leaving little hope of restoring city services like the Fire Department training facility, left, that’s up for sale or repairing city streets.
OVER THE next five years, every dollar Richmond collects in new revenue will go toward retirement costs, leaving little hope of restoring city services like the Fire Department training facility, left, that’s up for sale or repairing city streets.
 ??  ??

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