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		Illinois governor's office warns of 
		crippling pension payment hike 
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		[August 27, 2016] 
		By Dave McKinney and Karen Pierog
 
  CHICAGO (Reuters) - Potential action this 
		week by Illinois' biggest public pension fund could put a big dent in 
		the state's already fragile finances, Governor Bruce Rauner's 
		administration warned. 
 A Monday memo from a top Rauner aide said the Teachers' Retirement 
		System (TRS) board could decide at its meeting this week to lower the 
		assumed investment return rate, a move that would automatically boost 
		Illinois' annual pension payment.
 
 "If the (TRS) board were to approve a lower assumed rate of return 
		taxpayers will be automatically and immediately on the hook for 
		potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in higher taxes or reduced 
		services," Michael Mahoney, Rauner's senior advisor for revenue and 
		pensions, wrote to the governor’s chief of staff, Richard Goldberg.
 
 When TRS lowered the investment return rate to 7.5 percent from 8 
		percent in 2014 the state's pension payment increased by more than $200 
		million, according to the memo.
 
 Illinois' fiscal 2017 pension payment to its five retirement systems was 
		estimated at $7.9 billion, up from $7.617 billion in fiscal 2016 and 
		$6.9 billion in fiscal 2015, according to a March report by a bipartisan 
		legislative commission.
 
		 
		The country's fifth-largest state's unfunded pension liability stood at 
		$111 billion at the end of fiscal 2015, with TRS accounting for more 
		than 55 percent of that gap. The funded ratio was a weak 41.9 percent.
 An impasse between the Republican governor and Democrats who control the 
		legislature left Illinois as the only state without a complete 2016 
		budget. A six-month fiscal 2017 spending plan was passed in June.
 
		Mahoney cautioned that "unforeseen and unknown automatic cost increases 
		would have a devastating impact" on Illinois' ability to fund social 
		services and education.
 One of Rauner's top Republican legislative allies, Senate Minority 
		Leader Christine Radogno, urged the TRS board to delay a vote Friday to 
		give the public time to weigh in on its possible actions.
 
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			Bruce Rauner and his wife Diana attend an interfaith prayer service 
			at First Presbyterian Church in Springfield at an interfaith prayer 
			service at First Presbyterian Church in Springfield, Illinois, 
			January 12, 2015. REUTERS/Nancy Stone/Chicago Tribune/Pool 
            
             
			"This issue is important enough at the very least to put the TRS 
			board on notice we don’t want them taking any action that could cost 
			taxpayers $200 to $300 million without appropriate scrutiny,” she 
			said.
 TRS spokesman Dave Urbanek said the pension system was not aware of 
			Mahoney's memo until Tuesday and that Rauner's office had requested 
			"information about the scenarios under consideration."
 
 He added TRS did not offer "potential scenarios" either to the 
			governor's office or legislative leaders and noted the TRS board has 
			not yet discussed the matter.
 
 (Reporting by Dave McKinney and Karen Pierog; Editing by James 
			Dalgleish)
 
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