Recent Online Media
CalPERS: There is No Arrogance in Following the Law
Public Pension Unfunded Liability: Fact Versus Fiction
OPINION: Don’t condemn pension commitments to public workers
Courthouse News Service: Attorney Just Made Things Worse, Client Says
He worked for it
http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/openforum/article/California-pension-reform-needs-thought-3739150.php
California Safety Officers Band Together Against Pension Legislation
U-T San Diego: Pension costs squeeze San Diego budget
Contra Costa Times Letters to the Editor of Note by Police Veteran
Huffington Post: 5 Myths About Public Employee Pensions
National Conference on Public Employee Retirement Systems (NCPERS) Letter to the Washington Post
Los Angeles County Coalition of Unions Opposes Pension Legislation
Modesto Bee: TIETJEN: False claims overshadow progress in bargaining pension reform
Potential Impact of Governor Brown’s Pension Reform Plan on Low Wage Workers
San Diego Business Journal: County Pension Fund Boasts 6.42 Percent Return
Dave Low in Fox & Hounds: Costa's Pension Initiative: Devil is in the Details
Senate GOP’s Sudden Interest in Fixing Pensions
Sacramento Bee: California pension fund earnings outpaced other states in 2011
CRS Member Maricruz Manzanarez in La Opinión: Las pensiones son justas
Fact Check: Public Employees Already Are Giving at the Office for their Pensions
Mercury News: State Auditor calls San Jose pension estimates 'unsupported'
Flawed Report by Marcia Fritz
Pension 'reformers' distort facts on benefits
San Francisco Chronicle: Pension reform not priority with voters, poll says
Pension scare tactics ignore the changes already made
The Devil is in the Details
Fox and Hounds: Pension Reform Needs to Be Done Right, Not Just Right Now
"Pension Truth Squad" kicks off statewide tour in San Francisco
Opinion: It's time to tell the truth about public pensions
CRS Chairman Dave Low in the Los Angeles Times: Public pension security for California
Why Pension Plans Are Good For Workers
The Sky is Not Falling
NBC Investigation: San Jose Pension Estimates Questioned
Assemblyman Sandre Swanston in Oakland Tribune: Middle Class Under Attack
Secret Out-of-State Donor Financing Assault on California's Middle Class
CRS Ron Cottingham in the North County Times
Californians Need Debate on Retirement Security Based on Facts, Not Scare Tactics
Pot, Meet Kettle
CRS Chairman Dave Low in the Sacramento Bee: Public employees support pension fix
Pension Reform Reality Check
Fact Check: Pension Givebacks
UC Berkeley Study: Half of Californians will Retire in Poverty
In Sacramento, a need for 'reform' school
KPSP Local: Pension Truth Squad Comes to Valley
Roger (Niello) & Me
The Maddy Report Discusses Public Employee Unions
Are State Workers Overpaid?
KPSP Local 2: Pension Truth Squad Comes to Valley
Studies: Pension “Crisis” a Myth
Palm Springs Desert Sun: Statewide effort counters drive to slash budget
Sacramento Bee: Study calculates savings from 'pension reform' proposals
Bloomberg: Enron Billionaire Bankrolls California Advocate for Public Pension Changes
Calaveras Enterprise: CalPERS benefits stimulate economy
Capital Public Radio: Pension Overhaul Efforts Face Big Hurdles
Sacramento Bee: Six factors are working against getting a statewide public pension "reform" initiative on the ballot next year:
Fresno Bee: Public employees/retirees say their pensions are fair
Sacramento Bee Viewpoints: Public pension vitriol is in fashion – and unfair
Sacramento Bee State Worker Blog: Biggest obstacle to pension reform may be pension reformers
Sac Bee State Worker Blog: Union coalition hammers latest pension study
Sac Bee: Unions challenge 'pension-gutting agenda' amid budget talks
Voice of San Diego: The 401(k)'s Sticker Shock
San Francisco Chronicle: Bargaining, not balloting, to fix Oakland pensions
Capitol Weekly Opinion: Time for the pension-reform boogeymen to face the facts
SALINAS CALIFORNIAN SPECIAL REPORT: Average Monterey County pensioners may not warrant the headlines
Sacramento Bee State Worker Blog: Niello abandons pension initiative
Riverside Press-Enterprise: Labor coalition counters what it calls pension myths during Riverside stop
Teachers, Women & Americans Need Pensions
Capitol Weekly Opinion: Corporate, right-wing interests demonizing public workers’ pensions
California Public Fund Says Stocks Led Investment Gain of 18.6%
"Pension Truth Squad" and "DontScapegoatUs.com" Debut in California Pension Reform Fight
Squeezed in the Public Sector
POLITCAL NOTEBOOK: Pension reform group pulls rally switcheroo
California corporations pay far less than nominal tax rate
Have the heroes of 9/11 become today's scapegoats?
The State Worker: With pensions under attack, unions fight back
Combatants in California pension battle trade blows
State worker group speaks out on pension reputation
Labor coalition on pensions to launch website
Pension reform undertaken by Assembly panel
California public employees defend 'modest' pension benefits
Out of Balance?
Public pension fund assets nearly $3 trillion: study
For union families, a loss of value beyond bank accounts
Teacher Pensions Aren’t Budget Busters
Calpers Officer Urges Money Manager Pension-Bashing Donation Disclosure
Cutting public pensions now won't save California.
CalSTRS honored by investor magazine
Elias: No Wisconsin here, but California unions are taking cuts aplenty
State Pension Woes: Not as Bad as They Seem?
Pensiones públicas generan tensiones
Who’s behind the effort to gut California pensions?
New reports says state workers are not overpaid.
Sacramento Bee: Unions call for protest, urge boycott of Niello dealerships
Orange County Registrar: Police and firefighters are making pension sacrifices
Battered Public Pensions Do Better
An Overblown 'Crisis' For State Pension Funds
Most retirees live modestly
Why employee pensions aren't bankrupting states
Who funds the pension Chicken Littles?
Public employees and retirees protest dealership
The Shameful Attack on Public Employees
New Research: Pension Gutting Proposals will Unduly Harm Low-Wage Workers and cost Taxpayers More
For Immediate Release
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Californians for Retirement Security
New Research: Pension Gutting Proposals will Unduly Harm Low-Wage Workers and cost Taxpayers More
SACRAMENTO - New national and academic research reveals that the hybrid pension plans that Gov. Jerry Brown and Republicans want to force on California’s public employees would strap taxpayers with higher costs and place an unfair burden on the state’s lowest paid public employees.
According to a new University of California, Berkeley, study, the hybrid pension plan included in Gov. Jerry Brown’s pension proposals would “have a disproportionate impact on the retirement security of lower wage workers and those in occupations requiring higher levels of physical activity.” The governor’s plan, along with a pair of proposed pension-gutting ballot measures, would force public employees into a hybrid plan that combines stable defined benefits with risky 401 (k)-style investment plans. “401(k) type plans entail a host of risks and costs that lower-wage workers are ill-equipped to absorb,” the Berkeley study reports.
The analysis also finds that Brown’s proposal to raise the minimum retirement age to receive a full California pension to 67 could “have significantly greater impacts on workers at the bottom of the wage spectrum.”
“When combined with important differences in career timing and life expectancy by income and occupation, the costs of this policy will be borne disproportionately by low-wage workers and blue collar workers who start their working lives earlier and who die younger than professional workers,” the study finds.
A full copy of the report is available at http://www.letstalkpensions.com/newsroom/memos. For more information, contact study author Nari Rhee, Ph.D., Associate Academic Specialist, UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education at
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or Ken Jacobs, Chair, UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education Institute for Research on Labor and Employment at
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.
Meanwhile, a new national report concludes that defined benefit pension plans with reasonable fixes, including many long supported by public employees in California, are the best option for taxpayers. According to the Center for American Progress Action Fund, “the smart money in any state pension-reform plan would go toward smaller-scale changes.”
“While proponents argue that these alternative defined-contribution plans are good for taxpayers, in most cases taxpayers are better off making relatively minor reforms to the current defined-benefit pension system rather than scrapping it entirely. Why? Because the defined-benefit pensions held by public employees are much more cost effective than 401(k)-style retirement plans, costing roughly half as much to provide the same level of retirement benefit to workers such as police officers and firefighters, librarians and teachers, and other public-sector workers.”
Read the entire the issue brief at http://www.americanprogressaction.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/defined_benefit.pdf
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