Illinois Finalizes Move to Consolidate 650 Pensions

Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs legislation to merge hundreds of pensions to improve operational efficiencies and funding ratios

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a measure to consolidate 649 distinct public pension funds throughout the state in what he’s calling a “monumental accomplishment.”

The governor issued a task force earlier this year to study the benefits and feasibility of pulling off such a feat. The task force concluded that by remaining partitioned entities, the pensions were missing out on potential for investment opportunities and operational efficiencies.

“This [assembly] has achieved what none of their predecessors have been able to do: Consolidate 650 downstate and suburban pension funds into just two, amplifying their investment power, and reducing the burden on property taxpayers,” Pritzker said during a news conference coupled with the bill’s signing.

The task force conducted simulation runs of investment gains under a hypothetical consolidation, and found that together, the pensions would generate an additional $160 million to $288 million in investment returns, or 6.73% to 7.62%, a comfortable lead over a measured 5.61% over the same period.  

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The funds collectively stand at 55% funded, with $11.5 billion in unfunded liabilities.

“Once the consolidation is completed, we’re going to be saving $160 million annually, which will allow that money to be better invested in the services of which the people of Illinois can rely on,” said state Sen. Cristina Castro.

Pritzker earlier this year denounced the idea of consolidating the downstate pensions into the state’s funds, citing that the state’s credit rating was already sitting just above junk status and was sensitive to being downgraded. Moody’s rates the city of Chicago at the Ba1 junk level due to uncertainty over the long-term affordability of its ballooning pension burdens.

“The greatest financial issue facing these systems is that the growth in liabilities has been consistently diverging from the growth in assets. … A fixed 90% funded level target date, market experiences vastly different from actuarial assumptions, and insufficient contributions into the system, have compressed remaining unfunded actuarial accrued liabilities into a shorter and shorter timeframe,” the task force said. “This has led to unsustainable growth in required employer contributions and has consistently increased the burden on state and local government operating revenues.”

“Decades of underperformance, high administrative expenses, and duplication demanded change. The status quo was unacceptable,” said William Brodsky, former chairman of the Chicago Board Options Exchange. “While there’s more to do, we strongly believe that these recommendations are a significant step in improving the performance of these funds and hence the funding of these many pension funds.”

The legislation garnered overwhelming bipartisan support from both chambers of the Illinois General Assembly. The average number of participants per plan is 67, with 24 plans having only one active participant. Only five plans have more than 500 active members.

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US Supreme Court Declines to Review Cranston Pension Case

Rhode Island city had been sued for suspending police, firefighter COLAs.

The US Supreme Court has declined to hear the case of Cranston, Rhode Island’s decision to suspend cost of living adjustments (COLAs) for some of the city’s police officers and firefighters.

The decision not to hear the case could have implications for other municipalities that are seeking to reduce previously promised benefits in order to shore up city finances.

“This gives people in other communities a little pathway to hopefully follow when they are facing similarly dire circumstances financially and a looming pension problem,” Cranston Mayor Allan Fung said, the Providence Journal reported.

The Cranston Police Retirees Action Committee had sued the City of Cranston, Fung, and the members of the Cranston City Council after the passage of two 2013 city ordinances. Both included a 10-year suspension of COLAs for retirees of the Cranston Police and Fire Departments enrolled in the city’s pension system.

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Cranston’s finance director testified during court hearings that the COLA suspensions were necessary as raising taxes wasn’t a feasible option. He said the city would have had to raise taxes so substantially that it would have been unfair and unsustainable.

The Rhode Island Retirement Security Act, passed in 2011, includes a provision that allows for the suspension of COLAs if a system falls below 80% funded status in order to prevent changes to the core benefits package. During the trials, Fung testified that at the city’s pension system’s lowest point it was funded at only 16.9%, with $256 million of unfunded accrued liability.

The case made its way to the Rhode Island’s Supreme Court, which in June reluctantly upheld a superior court ruling that found that the city’s financial crisis made the move necessary and legally justified.

“It is with a decided lack of enthusiasm and only after prolonged research and reflection and hesitation that I concur in the result reached in the opinion of the court in this case,” Rhode Island Justice William Robinson, wrote in his opinion, “and I do so in a decidedly dubitante frame of mind.”

Fung said the pensions are currently funded at 23%.

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