Porterville Recorder

As California economy booms, cities struggle with pensions

- By ADAM BEAM

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — While California’s economy is booming, a new analysis shows pension obligation­s continue to weigh on the state’s cities as nearly three quarters of them don’t have enough money to pay the future health benefits for retired workers.

State Auditor Elaine Howle ranked the financial condition of 471 California cities on Thursday, with Compton topping the list for local government­s labeled “fiscally challenged.” More than half of the cities were listed as moderate to high risk for financial problems.

The cities’ struggles contrast with California’s overall economy, now in its 115th month of growth, breaking a record set in the 1960s. Unemployme­nt is at historic lows and the state has so much tax revenue that the Legislatur­e approved a budget earlier this year with a $21.5 billion surplus.

Howle said 337 out of 471 cities have not saved enough money to pay for future retiree health benefits. Nearly half of the cities are not saving enough money to pay pension benefits in five years. She also said she was alarmed to see some cities borrowing money to pay for pension obligation­s.

“Right now, we’re in strong economic times, but everybody is expecting that recession to hit,” Howle said. “So hopefully this informatio­n will trigger some discussion­s and decision-making that better prepare cities to be able to respond to that recession, without cutting services.”

The auditor’s office used 10 indicators to measure cities’ financial health, including whether they had enough money to pay their bills, how much debt they have how much money they have in savings and if the city has enough money to pay retirement obligation­s. The office used those indicators to score cities in a ranking from worst to best.

The rankings are displayed on the auditor’s website, which Howle hailed as the first of its kind in the nation to show such a level of detail about city finances. But the League of California Cities characteri­zed the analysis as a data dump without context and analysis, making the rankings “irresponsi­ble and misleading.”

“There is not a one-sizefits all template on how to run a city’s finances,” said Jill Oviatt, director of communicat­ions and marketing for the league. She noted the data was from 2017, and many cities have since approved new taxes and other measures to improve their finances.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States