US
Treasury rejects plan for slashing Teamsters pensions, calling for deeper cuts,
By Shannon Jones, 10 May 2016
The US Treasury Department rejected
Friday a proposal by the Teamsters’ Central States Pension Fund (CSPF) to cut pension
benefits for hundreds of thousands of retired workers. If implemented, the cuts
would have slashed benefits for retired truck drivers and other workers by up
to 80 percent.
The decision was handed down by
government fixit man Kenneth Feinberg, who invited pension fund directors to
submit a modified proposal in answer to his criticisms.
Feinberg cited several reasons for
his decision, in the first place that the cuts were based on unrealistically
optimistic projections of investment returns and were therefore not deep enough
to guarantee the fund’s long-term solvency. He also objected to the uneven
character of the proposed cuts and to the opaque language used in the
notification sent to pensioners.
At risk are the retirement benefits
of some 270,000 workers covered by the multi-employed pension fund. The attack
on their pensions is the result of the collaboration of the unions, the Obama
administration and the Democratic Party, which conspired to enact pension
“reform” legislation in 2014 giving multiemployer pension funds the ability to
petition the Treasury Department for permission to slash benefits. The CSPF was
the first to request cuts under the new law.
The proposed pension cuts evoked a
storm of outrage from retirees. In hearings in Detroit and Minneapolis earlier
this year, pensioners attacked the cuts, outlining their devastating
consequences. However, Feinberg was empowered to override the objections of
pensioners and impose the cuts anyway.
The CSPF case is being used to set a
precedent for a massive assault on pension benefits. It could open the
floodgates to petitions for pension cuts by dozens of other multiemployer
pension funds.
Feinberg is a trusted representative
of the US government and corporate interests, who has been involved in numerous
victim compensation cases. He is an expert at effusing false sympathy for
victims of corporate crimes—from the BP Oil spill to the GM ignition
scandal—while safeguarding the interests of executives and stockholders. In the
process he has saved the government and corporations billions by awarding
inadequate payouts.
Feinberg’s role in the CSPF is a
reprise of his earlier acts aimed at creating an aura of impartiality around
the decision to impose devastating cuts on retirees who have worked and struggled
all their lives.
A major factor in Feinberg’s
decision appears not to have been the objections of pensioners, but the
opposition of United Parcel Service and supermarket chain Kroger Co. Both
companies challenged the legality of the CSPF cuts. In the case of UPS, the
package delivery company stood to lose between $3.2 to $3.8 billion if the
pension cuts went through. That is because a “backstop” agreement in the 2007
Teamster contract required the company to provide a “supplemental retirement benefit”
to its retirees if the CSPF fund ever cut its benefit payout.
The deal came about as a result of
the agreement by the Teamsters to allow UPS, the CSPF’s largest employer, to
quit the plan. The decision, which undermined the solvency of the pension fund,
allowed the Teamsters to collect dues from workers at the UPS freight division.
The 2014 pension reform act imposed
a tiered benefit reduction process specifically for the CSPF. In its challenge
to the proposed pension cuts, UPS argued that the benefit reductions were not
legal because they impacted disproportionately workers in the third tier, which
comprise UPS participants. In his ruling, Feinberg cited the “larger benefit
suspensions” for some UPS truck drivers and loading dock workers.
Kroger and the Teamsters also filed
a legal challenge to the pending pension cuts on the grounds that they had
negotiated a proposal to remove Kroger retirees from the CSPF and create a new
plan, a move that would have further undermined the fund’s solvency. The Treasury
Department rejected the proposal, and both the company and the union sued for
reconsideration.
Feinberg’s decision to reject the
cuts drew fire from figures in the Democratic Party, including Joshua Gotbaum,
the former head of the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC).
Gotbaum, an Obama appointee, told Market
Watch that “it is a case of political cowardice.” He continued, “No
one wants to admit that pension benefits have to be cut, and therefore, in
public, no one wants to be seen supporting anything that cuts benefits.” Former
North Dakota Democratic Congressman Earl Pomeroy called the rejection,
“irresponsible.”
Obama’s Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew
warned Teamster retirees that Feinberg’s decision “does not resolve the issues”
threatening their pensions. “The Central States plan, like a number of other
multi-employer plans, remains severely underfunded and is projected to become
insolvent within the next 10 years.”
Thomas Nyhan, the executive director
of the CSPF lamented the decision, saying the cuts were the only “realistic”
decision to avoid bankruptcy because the PBGC is also projected to run out of
money if CSPF goes under.
Part of the motivation for
Feinberg’s ruling may well have been to delay any cuts until after the November
election. In election year posturing, more than 100 congressman, including
Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, signed off on a letter
asking for a review of the proposed CSPF pension cuts. The insincerity of these
objections, however, is demonstrated by the fact that no one is proposing any
additional funding to guarantee the solvency of the CSPF or other pension funds
facing bankruptcy. Indeed, many of those signing the letter backed the 2014
pension reform bill.
Teamster President James P Hoffa,
meanwhile, issued a statement hailing Feinberg’s decision. He went on to
assert, “This decision means that there won’t be any cuts to retirees’ pensions
this July or the foreseeable future.”
This is simply a lie. In fact
Feinberg’s rejection of the CSPF proposal for cuts is to all appearances purely
tactical. Nothing stops the CSPF from making a new application addressing
Feinberg’s objections.
The
author also recommends:
The looting of US workers pensions
[10 February 2016]
[10 February 2016]
Kenneth Feinberg and the victim compensation racket
[11 February 2016]
[11 February 2016]
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/05/10/pens-m10.html
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