Posted by Carol Coletta on October 14, 2009 |
From the Baltimore Sun comes this sickening and all-too-frequent news:
"There are plenty of problems with Baltimore's fire and police pension system, but probably the most egregious is an unusual benefit retirees there receive. When the stock market does well and the pension fund grows by more than 7.5 percent, retirees get a share of that extra money -- every year for the rest of their lives. When the stock market does poorly and the pension fund doesn't grow -- or, as in recent years, declines in value precipitously -- they don't get additional increases, but they still get the bonus payments determined when times were good. That gives retirees all the up-side of the stock market and none of the downside, an enviable, but unsustainable, position.
"What's the impact? To keep up, the city would need to double its contribution to the retirement system this year and cough up $165 million at a time when it is already furloughing employees, cutting services and facing more revenue shortfalls to come. To pay for this benefit, city property tax rates would have to go up by almost 25…