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States basically have two options: Come up with the money or reduce what they owe. Coming up the money could mean raising taxes or making deep cuts elsewhere in the budget. "This growing bill increasingly competes for dollars with other important priorities like education, human services and infrastructure," Urahn told reporters. Reducing what states owe would require cutting the benefits they've promised to employees
-- by giving them less money, making them work longer before retiring or perhaps requiring them to contribute more toward their pension and health costs. That option is filled with legal and contractual complications. Reducing benefits for future employees can be done relatively easily, while reducing them for people who have already retired is almost impossible, Urahn said. Cutting benefits for current employees is a gray area that some states are exploring, she said. She and Brainard, from the pension administrators group, agreed that states are taking steps that will cut their long-term costs. "Those changes are having, or will have, a meaningful impact," Brainard said. But both said the key is for states to make their full contributions to pension systems each year. That's what let New York reach 101 percent funding, Urahn said. "Given the size of the problem and the challenges of reform, there are no quick fixes," she said. "But there is considerable momentum for change." ___
[Associated
Press;
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