pensions

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Too Much Pension News (and Some Useful Data)

The Regents Committee on Compliance and Audit is meeting via teleconference on Nov. 7 in advance of the general Regents meeting the following week. We will post the audio when it becomes available. The agenda for the full Regents meeting has not been posted yet, but the Regents are likely to have some discussion related to the governor’s pension proposals. Included in the Committee’s agenda is an audit of the pension plan. Below is a data summary taken from that audit. The full document is at: http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/regents/regmeet/nov11/a5attach4.pdf = = = = = = = = = = = = =…

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Statement by Academic Senate Task Force on Investments & Retirement on Governor’s Pension Plan

October 31, 2011 ROBERT ANDERSON, CHAIR, ACADEMIC COUNCIL RE: Governor Brown’s Twelve Point Pension Reform Plan Dear Bob Following circulation of the Governor’s Twelve Point Pension Reform Plan, the Senate Task Force on Investments and Retirement (TFIR) discussed the proposed reforms, and prepared the attached document: “TFIR’s Comments in Response to the Governor’s Pension Reform Plan”; TFIR would like to post this document on the TFIR section of the Senate’s web site, and hopes that you will place a link to the document on the main page. The goals of the TFIR statement are 1) to let Senate faculty know…

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Crane Likely to Pick Up on Pension Issue at Next Regents Meeting

Regent David Crane – a last-minute appointee to the Regents by Gov. Schwarzenegger – has been a public pension hawk and has made remarks about collective bargaining that ensured he would not be confirmed. Assuming he attends the November Regents meeting (Crane’s last given the non-confirmation), he is likely to say something about the pension issue. The Regents’ agenda for November is not yet posted. But even if the pension item is not a formal agenda topic, Crane can bring it up. That is not a Bad Thing. The Regents should be informed about the impact of the governor’s pension…

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Was that Jerry or Casey at the Bat (on pensions)?

Now that it is clear the governor wants UC to be part of his public sector pension proposal, you might be curious about what the Legislative Analyst thinks: LAO calls pension plan excellent start Duane W. Gang, Riverside Press-Enterprise 10/27/11 California’s nonpartisan legislative analyst praised Gov. Jerry Brown’s pension plan Thursday and said it deserves consideration by the Legislature. “I thought it knocked the ball out of the park,” Mac Taylor, who heads the Legislative Analyst’s Office, said during a lecture series at his alma mater, UC Riverside. “I think it is an excellent start.” … Full article at http://www.pe.com/local-news/politics/duane-gang-headlines/20111027-inland-lao-calls-pension-plan-excellent-start.ece…

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Things are Tough in Sacramento So We Don’t Yet Have Final Word on UC Coverage

We’re still waiting for the definitive answer as of Friday afternoon as to whether UC is covered by the governor’s pension proposal. But apparently, folks at the Dept. of Finance and Legislature are busy with other matters: California Finance Director Ana Matosantos arrested on DUI charge http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2011/10/california-finance-director-ana-matosantos-arrested-on-suspicion-of-dui.html (The budget must be worse than anyone imagined.) Folks in the legislature have also been busy: Assemblywoman Mary Hayashi arrested for shoplifting http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2011/10/report-assemblywoman-hayashi-arrested-for-shoplifting.html When things settle down up north and we get final info, we’ll post it. UPDATE: UC’s coverage by the governor’s pension plan has now been confirmed. More info will be…

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The Morning After (the Guv’s Pension Plan): What Do We Know?

It’s the morning after the governor’s press conference announcing his pension proposals – and we still do not have definite word as to whether UC is covered. The LA Times version says all state and local employees are covered. Excerpt: Who would be affected? All state and local public employees. Current workers would be expected to pay at least half of their retirement costs, but the higher retirement age and new savings plan would apply only to employees hired later. See http://www.latimes.com/news/local/politics/la-me-pension-qa-20111028,0,4930171.story And there is a lot of fuzziness in the announced plan. For example, how do you “cap” a…

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The Guv on Pensions: What did he say?

Governor Brown has now held his press conference on public pensions. His proposals clearly covered CalPERS and CalSTRS. Coverage of UC was not mentioned. But the governor did make an off-hand reference to UC’s long pension holiday, i.e., the two-decade period of zero contributions. The governor released a 12-point plan but one element, a kind of total cap on pension amounts, was not mentioned on the list of the twelve. [A cap is mentioned but not linked to defined contributions.] Yet, in response to a reporter’s question, he said a cap was intended but that it was complicated because of…

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UC or not UC? – That is the question (to be answered in a few hours)

Bits and pieces of Governor Brown’s public pension plan are leaking out ahead of his news conference later today. UC or not UC, that is the question, as Hamlet might say. But the leaked reports don’t provide the answer so we will have to wait a few hours more. The Capitol Alert report from last night and another from KCAL indicate that the reason Brown wants a ballot prop is to change the CalPERS board. Excerpt from Capitol Alert: Gov. Jerry Brown will propose a higher retirement age and a less generous pension system for newly-hired state workers, sources familiar…

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Stand By

As prior posts on this blog have noted, Gov. Brown has a public pension plan proposal – but no one quite knows what it is and whether, more specifically, it will cover UC (and possibly override the Regents’ pension revision of December 2010). Excerpt from Capitol Alert late yesterday: Gov. Jerry Brown will give lawmakers his plan for pension changes on Thursday, the governor said in a letter to legislators this afternoon, though it remains unclear what Brown will propose. “Given the paramount importance of pensions to both taxpayers and public employees, it is absolutely critical that we carefully examine…

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Rising Employee Pension Contributions

A note from the Daily Bruin of 10/20/11: Faculty and staff could be paying more toward retirement within two years in a proposal to be discussed by the UC Board of Regents in November. Under the proposal, employee contributions to the University of California Retirement Plan would rise to 6.5 percent of covered salary starting July 1, 2013. The UC, meanwhile, would pay 12 percent. Right now, faculty and staff contribute 3.5 percent and the UC pays 7 percent. This is the second time in about a year that the regents will vote to raise employee and UC contributions. Last…