Chicago mayor pushes bond sale,
constitutional change to aid pensions
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[December 13, 2018]
By Karen Pierog
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Mayor Rahm Emanuel laid
out a multi-pronged plan on Wednesday to tackle Chicago's huge pension
burden, urging the city council to approve the issuance of $10 billion
of bonds to boost funding for the city's four retirement systems.
Emanuel, who leaves office in May after declining to run for a third
term as mayor, also called for changing the Illinois Constitution and
earmarking new revenue from a possible casino and legalized marijuana
for pensions.
"Issuing these bonds and depositing the proceeds directly into our
pension funds would immediately increase the health of our pension funds
to levels not seen in at least a decade before asking more of Chicago's
hard-pressed taxpayers," the mayor said in a speech to the city council.
Chicago's big unfunded pension liability, which stood at $27.6 billion
in 2017, along with years of structural budget deficits, led to
downgrades of the city's general obligation credit ratings and higher
borrowing costs.
Even after raising fees and taxes in recent years to save the retirement
funds from becoming insolvent, the third-largest U.S. city faces pension
contributions that will grow to $2.13 billion in 2023 from $1.02 billion
this year.
With the bond proceeds, the retirement systems' low funded ratio of just
26 percent would jump to 50 percent, while city contributions to the
funds would decline, saving taxpayers nearly $7 billion over 50 years,
Emanuel said.
Emanuel introduced an ordinance to securitize state-collected revenue
due the city, including income taxes, to back $7.7 billion of the debt,
which would be issued through a new Dedicated Tax Securitization
Corporation.
Chicago has already employed a similar bond structure to refund
low-rated outstanding debt through a securitization of sales tax revenue
with a statutory lien for investors that resulted in higher credit
ratings and lower borrowing costs.
The remaining $2.3 billion of bonds would be backed by a water and sewer
excise tax enacted in 2016 for the city's municipal retirement fund.
An economic adviser to Emanuel first introduced the idea of the bond
plan at a city investors' conference in August. However, the plan was
put on hold earlier this fall in the wake of Emanuel's September
decision not to run again and surging interest rates.
S&P Global Ratings in October cautioned the city that the move comes
with risk and could have negative rating implications depending on how
the bonds are structured and other factors.
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Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during an interview with Reuters
after taking part at the C40 Mayors Summit at a hotel in Mexico
City, Mexico December 1, 2016. REUTERS/Henry Romero/File Photo
Emanuel said even higher taxes would pose a risk to Chicago's
economy, while inaction on pensions risks more credit downgrades. He
urged the 50-member council to act on the bonds, warning that
interest rates are heading up and the market window for doing the
deal will close.
It was unclear if aldermen would move forward with the bond plan
before a new mayor takes office. Scott Waguespack, chairman of the
city council's progressive reform caucus, said the plan should be
"vetted when the next mayor comes into office."
One of the 21 candidates vying for mayor, Paul Vallas, a former
Chicago budget director, said on Wednesday the bond plan "is just
kicking the can down the road."
There was immediate pushback from labor unions against Emanuel's
proposal to amend protections for public worker retirement benefits
in the Illinois Constitution to lower a costly 3 percent annual
compounded cost of living adjustment given to city retirees.
Leaders of the Chicago Federation of Labor and the Illinois AFL-CIO
issued a joint statement that said: "Those pushing to repeal the
Illinois Constitution’s pension clause ignore the real problem,
which is not the cost of benefits but the decades-long habitual
failure of politicians to pay the employer’s share."
Citing the clause, the Illinois Supreme Court rejected past attempts
by the state and the city to reduce retirement benefits.
The Democratic-controlled Illinois General Assembly would have to
approve the placement of an amendment on an upcoming state-wide
ballot, as well as pass bills authorizing a Chicago casino and
legalizing marijuana to complete Emanuel's proposal.
(Reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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