|
With taxpayers already on the hook for almost $260 million to
the city’s four retirement systems as part of the 2026 budget,
Mayor Brandon Johnson recently announced his administration
would be making a partial payment in January while pushing a
second down the line in hopes of loosening cash flow.
Ugaste argues nothing about the new plan gets at the root of
what is causing so much stress for taxpayers.
“This is no way to run a government or if you were running a
business,” Ugaste told TCS. “You don't do things this way. You
set aside the money you need for your obligations, and then you
determine what’s left over for discretionary spending. The city
of Chicago is doing just the opposite. They've decided the
programs they want to spend on, then they're trying to figure
out ‘how do we find enough money to pay our obligations.’”
As it is, the city’s annually required pension contribution tops
$2 billion, accounting for about 38% of overall revenue, while
the state has long been home to some of the highest unfunded
pension debt in the country.
“You have to look at it and say are they even going to have the
money in the future to pay the other part they’re talking about
paying down the line,” Ugaste said. “That’s got to be your
biggest concern, especially given the history of pension
payments, not just in Chicago but in the state. You did not set
aside enough money to pay something that your own Supreme Court
has told you you're going to have to pay and cannot avoid it.”
In the end, Ugaste adds every taxpayer foots the bill for what
he sees as ongoing mismanagement.
“It makes it more difficult to get people to work for your unit
of government because it looks great to promise I'm going to
give you a pension, but if you don't fund your pension so that
you can afford it, people may not want to come work there,” he
said. “Two, you’re going to run into problems with making the
payment and funding your pensions and that will ultimately
affect how much people have to pay in taxes and at the end of
the day because of mismanagement you're chasing people away,
chasing businesses away.”
City officials are on the record with a goal of bringing
pensions to 90% funded over the next three decades.
|
|