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The Illinois Pension Scam: State Officials (Including Conservatives) Have Known About it for Many Years

Last time when we focused on the writings of government employee compensation expert Bill Zettler, I failed to mention that Bill had some great lines over the years, such as:

“Economics always wins.”

Despite the wishes and dreams of people on both the political left and political right, the day of accounting always comes. We are at that day right now as taxpayers face hundreds of billions of dollars in unfunded pension liability. (Read this if you think that under-funding is due to a failure on the part of taxpayers. It’s not.)

“If something is impossible,” Bill also said, “it’s not going to happen.” There is no way all the state pensions will be paid. In fact, those government employees who are already retired and collecting their generous pensions are stealing from future pensioners.

Were you aware of the fact that twenty-five percent of our state’s budget currently goes to fund government employee pensions? In other states the number is about four percent.

The math doesn’t work and cannot be made to work. If you want to learn more about just how bad the pension system currently is, I would encourage you to check out the annual pension study conducted by Taxpayers United of America. One of the best resources they provide is the list of retired government employees whose pensions are over $100,000.

Are you ready for this? There are currently 17,000 of them — and the number goes up every year.

Here are the leaders from each of the top five levels — $500k, $400k, $300k, $200k, and $100k:

Leslie Heffez’s current annual pension is $581,227. Leslie paid in $768,611, and can expect to get out $21,945,104 in lifetime benefits based upon life expectancy averages.

Das Gupta’s current annual pension is $494,773. It took only one year for Das to recoup everything he paid into the system, which was $475,331. He could receive $5,290,301 before the grim reaper comes calling.

Herand Acarian gets $392,682 every year. Not bad for having paid in only $628,987, and with a good long life, Herand could get back $6,843,239 or more.

Eddie Williams wins the $200k column, bringing in six times the annual average Illinois household income (which is approximately $50k) at $299,991. Eddie coughed up a whole $277,792 to invest into the system, and has already received $842,452 in benefits.  (Please read those numbers again.) If he stays healthy, he could cash in for as much as $5,527,649 over his lifetime.

After flipping through over four full pages of pensions exceeding $200,000, Rick Taylor tops off the $100-k’ers at an annual pension of $199,909. For the record, Ricky paid in $229,400, has already received $1,162,854 (he retired at age 56), and life expectancy charts could gift him $7,267,441 or more if he eats right and gets enough exercise.

Hello?

For the most up to date information about where the state’s pension systems stand now the place to go is the Illinois Policy Institute’s website. For several years now, their researchers have been firing off warning flares about the dangers ahead. How Republican and conservative state legislators, let alone our Republican governor, have failed to notice, is a mystery.

If they had noticed, the problem would constitute a big part of their message to their constituents and the hard working families around the state.

There are proposed reform bills, but they all fall way short. To be honest, it’s as if the authors are not reading the works of Bill Zettler or the Illinois Policy Institute.

As for Governor Bruce Rauner, he boasts continually about wanting to spend more money on the K-12 system.

Where does he think a lot of that money is going?

I’ll give you one guess. That level of ignorance is almost incalculable. More money for the worst run level of government in the state?

The solution is a push for universal school choice where the money follows the student. That is where the savings will come, as Illinois families will be freed from the government school monopoly, and move to more economical and effective education options. Short of that, Rauner will never fulfill his constitutional duty to propose a balanced budget.

If Republican leaders had truly noticed those IPI and Bill Zettler warning flares, they would have spent the past many years making sure that enough Illinois taxpayers would be informed and thus demanding that the problem be fixed.

Read Part 1 — There is No Excuse for the Failure of Reform

Up next: More about the Illinois pension scam.

 


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The Illinois Pension Scam: There is No Excuse for the Failure of Reform

In preparation for the recording of an IFA Spotlight weekly podcast, executive director Dave Smith asked me to do some research about the Illinois government’s employee pension problem. For me, it is not a fun topic to delve into because for a dozen years now I’ve watched elected conservative state legislators completely ignore the seriousness of the legalized theft that has been going on in Illinois for decades as it pertains to pensions.

Yes, legalized theft. How else can you describe someone paying into a fund about $154,000 over the course of their working years and then expect $2,200,000 in pension benefits from taxpayers during their retirement years? Those are just the Teachers Retirement System numbers, as you can see on the chart below from the Illinois Policy Institute.

Ever wonder why so many kids have trouble with math? From these figures, not even the math teachers seem to understand arithmetic. If they did, we would have heard from the thousands of them spread throughout the public (government-run) K-12 and college systems. Certainly with math that far off they would have organized and spoken up to warn of the coming collapse of the impossible scheme.

But nope. Nothing. Silence. Why should they mess with a good thing? Why not keep your mouth shut and profit handsomely off of the taxpayers?

Thanks to several sources, especially the Illinois Policy Institute, it is difficult to not be drowned in an ocean of terribly disturbing facts.

There are a handful of organizations that have done and continue to do great work on this issue. In the following articles I’ll focus on the Illinois Policy Institute and Taxpayers United of Illinois. In this post, I have to give credit to business owner and government employee compensation expert Bill Zettler. A dozen years ago Bill wrote a letter to the editor at the Daily Herald which was titled, “Yes, Illinois needs pension reform.” Here was the opening sentence:

Give ’em a million, save a billion.

From the article:

My new slogan “Give ’em a million and save a billion” comes from a simple mathematical fact. The average teacher in Illinois who retires after 34 years retires with a pension worth well in excess of a million dollars cash. So if we taxpayers just give them a check for $1 million when they retire (whatever happened to a gold watch?) we will save tens or hundreds of billions over the next 40 years.

That was 2005. As you can see from this IPI chart, the numbers have skyrocketed since. (Click image to enlarge.)

There is so much material that a book could be written on the topic. Actually, a book has been written. A few years ago, Bill Zettler penned “Illinois Pension Scam,” with a forward by the late Jack Roeser. Buy a copy and read some of what your conservative legislators have been ignoring since Bill started to provide a free seminar on what is one of the biggest crisis facing our state.

Over the years Bill investigated and laid out the facts from several angles — and each article could have and should have sparked outrage on a scale large enough to begin a movement to force reform.

Why didn’t it happen? There are several reasons. You can be the judge about which might be the leading factor:

  • State legislators deal with a lot of issues, and asking them to learn about the Illinois pension scam is too much to ask.
  • State legislators would rather avoid the controversy that would arise when they would confront the army of government employees who benefit from the Illinois pension scam.
  • In order to win public support for genuine reform would require state legislators to learn how to become public opinion leader regarding the Illinois pension scam.
  • Illinois legislators have their own generous pension plan, so they don’t want to rock the boat and thereby risk having their own pension thrown overboard.

Bill Zettler also knew how to write effective headlines. Here are just a handful of examples for your reading pleasure:

This first post is from 2007 — and because it’s loaded with numbers I just link to the first part. Note — even back then the numbers were outrageous. Conservatives in Illinois have had plenty of time to learn about it and make the case:

Total Pension Liability for One School District: D300

Does Your Employer Contribute $69,000 a Year to Your 401k Retirement Plan?
Answer: I don’t think so. And it’s not because your employer is greedy but simply because it would be impossible to pay that amount and stay in business. They would be bankrupt.

This one is from 2009:

Gov. Quinn: Raise Taxes on $10/hr Workers by 41% to Pay for $10 Million Pensions
73,000 State University Employees Pay Zero for Pensions or Healthcare

Did you know that? The fact is, the count is many times that number when it comes to cushy teacher contracts.

Bill asked a lot of good questions over the years — here are two:

Should A Public Employee Have A Yearly Pension Greater Than His Career Pension Contributions?

Should Part-time Public Employees with Partial Careers get Six-figure Pensions?

Bill covered many anecdotal examples — here are three:

Work for the State 5 Years, Pay in Zero, Get $130,000 Pension
Work for Yourself 45 Years, Pay In $260,000 Get $28,000 Social Security. Anybody see a problem here?

Is $224,000 Per Year Too Much Compensation for a Drive’s Ed Teacher?
How about $1,174 per day for an Art teacher or $149/hr for an English teacher?

Pension Insanity: $75,000 Salary Turns Into $155,000 Pension for One Kindergarten Teacher
I guess it’s OK though; it’s for the kids.

As Bill Zettler wrote in 2008, it’s time to  solve the Illinois public pension problem.

Bill Zettler’s archive can now be read at my website.

Up next: More details about the Illinois pension scam.


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