President Joe Biden announced Dec. 8 the federal government will use nearly $36
billion to stabilize failing Teamsters union pension plans nationwide,
preventing severe benefits cuts for more than 350,000 union workers.
The funding for the Central States Payment Fund is the largest allocation of
American Rescue Plan dollars for pensions to date.
Without federal assistance, the Biden administration projected Teamster members
would see their retirement benefits reduced by an average 60% as the plans
approached insolvency in 2026. The new pandemic relief is expected to keep the
system solvent until 2051.
Illinois is home to more than 20 Teamster’s chapters and the nation’s worst
pension debt, estimated at nearly $140 billion by state authorities in 2022.
Private investor services projected that debt as high as $313 billion, using
more realistic assumptions on returns.
In September these state pension funds had just 47 cents for every dollar in
promised pension benefits.
Springfield lawmakers cannot routinely rely on federal authorities to bail out
overly generous and underfunded state and local pensions. Illinois public
servants deserve to receive the retirements they’ve been promised in full – not
the 40% that would remain after default.
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The proposed “hold harmless” pension reform developed by the Illinois Policy
Institute would tie all pension cost-of-living adjustments to inflation rather
than a fixed rate of annual growth, saving more than $50 billion by 2045. It
would also increase required government contributions to fund 100% of promised
pensions rather than the current 90% target.
A ‘hold harmless’ pension reform plan similar to one originally developed by the
Illinois Policy Institute – based loosely on bipartisan 2013 reforms – could
help to eliminate the state’s unfunded pension liability and achieve retirement
security for pensioners.
Previous analysis showed that changes such as capping pensionable salary,
replacing cost-of-living adjustments with true cost-of-living increases, and
adjustments to realigning benefits with historical inflation rates would have
saved the state $2.4 billion in the first year alone, and more than $50 billion
by 2045. It would also target 100% funding to fully secure retirements for those
relying on pensions.
Pension reform would ensure thousands of Illinoisans relying on a public
retirement receive what they’ve been promised. .
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