The News-Times

Debate continues on sharing teacher pension costs with towns

- By Keith M. Phaneuf CT MIRROR

Cities and towns have been on the defensive for the past three years, trying to avoid getting billed for a portion of the scariest expense in the state budget — the annual contributi­on to the teachers’ pension fund.

And while municipali­ties successful­ly blocked another attempt to bill communitie­s this legislativ­e session, leaders also are aware they remain in the crosshairs, and that a local payment toward this state expense may be inevitable in a few years.

The legislatur­e agreed this year to refinance contributi­ons to the teachers’ pension, smoothing the projected cost spike somewhat between now and 2032. Taxpayers between 2033 and 2049, though, will have to make up the deferred payments plus an effective interest charge.

But even with this change, the contributi­on to the teachers’ pension will remain one of the largest line items in the state budget and costs still will rise — albeit in a more controlled fashion — for years to come.

“I don’t think this is the last we’ve heard of this idea,” said Joe DeLong, executive director of the Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties. “But I hope this year was the last time we deal with it without having a serious conversati­on, without having all of the players at the table trying to come up with a serious solution.”

Former Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and current Gov. Ned Lamont proposed very different cost-sharing systems in 2017 and 2019, respective­ly, but both had one key element in common, DeLong said. That was that municipal leaders played no role in developing the concept, and only could react to a system many felt was unfair.

Ridgefield First Selectman Rudy Marconi, president of the Connecticu­t Council of Small Towns, said he also is skeptical that legislator­s and governors are done trying to shift pension costs onto municipali­ties.

But, like DeLong, Marconi said the cost-shift only would be harmful to taxpayers if it’s not part of a more holistic analysis of state and local finances.

“Obviously we don’t want to have to raise local property taxes, but until somebody builds a better mousetrap, we have to rely on that,” when state expenses are transferre­d onto towns, he said.

The $1.3 billion Connecticu­t must contribute this fiscal year to the teachers’ pension represents about 7 percent of all General Fund spending. Contributi­ons into all pension and retirement programs combined with payments on bonded debt eat up nearly 30 percent of the budget — roughly three times what they consumed 20 years ago.

Connecticu­t’s pension funds suffer from more than seven decades of inadequate contributi­ons between 1939 and 2010.

Malloy, who took office in 2011 and tried to raise awareness of the pension debt problem, first proposed sharing teacher pension costs with municipali­ties in 2017, asking communitie­s to cover one-third of all the total bill — more than $400 million per year.

Municipal leaders fought back vociferous­ly, arguing the state dramatical­ly boosted teacher pension costs through its fiscal irresponsi­bility, and therefore should bear the cost of fixing it.

But Malloy argued teachers’ pensions reflect the salaries they earn while on the job, and those salaries are negotiated by municipal school boards. He also said the current system is highly regressive.

To make his point, the former governor cited Greenwich — one of Connecticu­t’s wealthiest municipali­ties — and New Britain, which is one of its poorest.

Both have similar population­s and school enrollment totals, but Connecticu­t spent $24 million more last year to cover pension costs for retired Greenwich teachers than for those from New Britain.

In simple terms, Greenwich can afford to pay much higher salaries than New Britain can, yet it gets more help from the state on a per capita basis to provide pensions for its retired teachers.

But municipal leaders have argued things aren’t that simple. Some have argued legislator­s should consider scaling back the pension benefits offered to new teachers.

Local school boards and teachers’ unions frequently take their salary negotiatio­ns to binding arbitratio­n — a process establishe­d by the legislatur­e, and one municipal leaders have argued for years is skewed in teachers’ favor.

But Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, co-chairwoman of the legislatur­e’s Appropriat­ions Committee, said the binding arbitratio­n system is fair — and municipali­ties should accept some portion of paying for local teachers’ pensions.

“It’s not the state that establishe­s the cost of the pension,” she said. “It’s the local board of education. Having the towns, the employers, be a partner in paying pensions for teachers is the way to go.”

Osten also noted that Lamont and the 2019 legislatur­e have moved dramatical­ly away from the cost-sharing that Malloy initially proposed.

The proposal they considered this year, but ultimately scrapped, only would have required cities and towns to pay a small fraction of the contributi­on, a portion of the “normal cost.”

This is an actuarial term referring to the amount that must be set aside annually to cover the future pensions of present-day teachers.

According to Comptrolle­r Kevin P. Lembo’s office, the “normal cost” represents just 15 percent of the annual payment.

The remaining 85 percent of the annual contributi­on — and the part that’s projected to skyrocket over the next decade-and-a-half — involves covering Connecticu­t’s past fiscal sins. This would remain the state’s responsibi­lity.

And Lamont didn’t even ask towns to cover the full normal cost, a little less than $200 million per year. Under his plan, towns would collective­ly pay a maximum of $49.2 million by 2021.

Osten and Lamont aren’t the only ones who have expressed support for asking communitie­s to share some portion of the cost.

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin and House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, and Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, all have expressed a willingnes­s to ask communitie­s to pay a modest portion of this “normal cost.”

But local leaders respond this only would be a starting point.

The state budget has struggled with deficit projection­s frequently since the last recession ended nine years ago, and legislator­s and governors have a track record of not keeping their promises to towns, municipal leaders say.

Deputy House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, R-North Branford, an opponent of passing pension costs onto towns, said municipali­ties are right to fear the state will ask local taxpayers to pick up more costs over time.

“The proposals we’ve seen haven’t come with spending reforms,” Candelora said. “If we’re going to shift the cost, we need to reform policies” like binding arbitratio­n. “But too many legislator­s are afraid of the next election cycle.”

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