Illinois pension consolidation law will help cities, but nagging
liabilities remain
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[December 20, 2019]
By Karen Pierog
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Legislation signed into
law on Wednesday by Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker to consolidate 649
local public safety worker retirement systems is a positive step, but
will not end funding problems for cities, credit rating agency analysts
said.
Ballooning pension liabilities for some Illinois cities have led to
budget cuts, credit rating downgrades, as well as the sale of city
assets to generate funding.
Illinois' Democratic governor hailed the measure's creation of two
statewide systems for police and firefighters as a "monumental
accomplishment" that will ease demands on local property taxes by
increasing investment returns by as much as $2.5 billion over the next
five years.
Tom Aaron, a Moody's Investors Service analyst, said the new law should
result in administrative cost savings, while potentially improving
long-term investment performance by pooling the funds' assets and
increasing the level of professional management.
"But at the same time it doesn't change the unfunded position of the
plans," he said. "It's not as though the better-funded systems are
somehow going to be providing a subsidy for the worst-funded systems."
Aaron said cities with big liabilities will continue to face the
challenge of dealing with rising pension costs while maintaining at
least a baseline level of services.
Because the Illinois Constitution prevents cuts to public sector worker
retirement benefits, the state and its local governments have been
struggling to find funding solutions.
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lllinois Governor J.B. Pritzker delivers remarks at the North
America's Building Trades Unions (NABTU) 2019 legislative conference
in Washington, U.S., April 9, 2019. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File Photo
Geoff Buswick, an S&P Global Ratings analyst, said "the funding
question is still out there."
"There is still a sizeable unfunded liability with so many cities
and towns across Illinois," he said, noting that credit challenges
will remain as a result.
Pritzker said his pension task force will turn its attention to the
state's five retirement systems, which ended fiscal 2019 with an
unfunded liability that climbed by $3.8 billion to $137.3 billion.
Chicago, which Moody's rates at the junk level of Ba1 due to
uncertainty over the long-term affordability of its "unusually
large" pension burden, will also be a focus of the task force. The
city's woefully underfunded police and firefighter retirement
systems were not part of the consolidation law.
The aggregate funded ratio for police and firefighter pension funds
outside of Chicago was 54.8% in fiscal 2018, down slightly from
fiscal 2017, while the combined unfunded actuarial liability grew by
7.1% to $12.3 billion, according to an Illinois Department of
Insurance report.
(Reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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