AJC article 1/25/19 page A1 reports Audit: Georgia could
save hundreds of millions on teacher pensions, by James Salzer, 1/24/19. See
Summary below:
The Teacher’s Retirement System pays benefits to 127,000
retirees and covers another 400,000 teachers and includes university employees. The average teacher pension is about
$37,000 a year.
Lawmakers changed the
pension system for state employees in the late 2000s. Instead of receiving a
standard pension — based on years of service and their highest 24 months of
salary — new hires after Jan. 1, 2009, got a hybrid retirement plan. It’s part
smaller pension, part 401(k). The audit said the changes for new hires has
saved about $71 million.
Eligibility
is based on 30 years of service. Less than 20 percent of state workers in the new system are
expected to stay on the job long enough to vest for a pension, just like many
new teachers don’t remain in the profession long enough to earn the TRS
pension. Social Security is
available in some Georgia school districts, but not all.
Changes
recommended in the Audit Report are:
Modifying
the annual 3 percent cost-of-living raises that pensioners receive. The audit
said that in 21 of the past 26 years, the cost-of-living increase for TRS
retirees has outpaced inflation. An independent actuarial analysis found that
modifying the COLAs could save $17 million to $700 million, depending on how
its done, such as by reducing it for new hires and/or those previously hired
after a certain date.
Cutting
the interest rate credited on employee contributions into the system. The
change could save the state several million dollars, depending on the new rate.
Basing
the pension on the highest five years of salary, rather than two years, as is
currently the case. Doing it over five years would likely mean a lower average
salary would be used in the pension calculation. The change could save $50
million annually.
Changing
the minimum age at which new hires would be able to draw a pension if they
worked less than 30 years. Raising it from age 60 to 62 could save $48 million
annually.
Some lawmakers want to
see changes because of rapidly rising costs. The state and school districts now
put about $2 billion a year into the teacher pension system. By 2025, auditors
put that figure at close to $2.4 billion, without changes. Actuarial
projections suggest that number could be more than $4 billion by 2045.
Comments
The proposals listed
above would not solve the real problems with this pension plan.
The GA Legislature
should require all GA school districts to enroll their employees in Social
Security to ensure that employees have at least one a portable retirement plan.
Next, the GA
Legislature should consider terminating the Teacher’s Retirement System plan to
establish a 401K plan with a 5 year vest for employer contributions. They
should also establish an Age Weighted Plan for those who are approaching
retirement to off-set the loss of the pension plan. The assets from the old
pension plan would be retained so that current retirees would continue to
receive benefits from the old pension plan.
I terminated the
pension plan at Electromagnetic Sciences, Inc. in 1993. EMS had already established a 401k plan with
a 5 year vest for company match contributions.
I established an Age Weighted Profit Sharing Plan to receive the 5% of
payroll we had been contributing to the pension plan. This was available to the
older employees who would be retiring soon after the pension plan
termination. Employees were given the
option to take their vested pension dollars in a lump sum, or have their
balances transferred directly to their 401k accounts. I did this to end the Gold Handcuff Ponzi
scheme, end the liability for expected higher PBGC costs and to accommodate any
future acquisition. Years later EMS was sold to Honeywell.
I worked at Washington
University in St. Louis Mo. from 1971 to 1975. We had a TIAA Retirement Plan
with a 6.5% employer match to our 5% employee contributions. My balance was
$5800 when I left, but I kept my TIAA account invested in fixed income through
the high inflation years. By 2013 my
TIAA account balance was $90,000. Universities should have their own retirement
plans and these plans should be compatible with the plans offered by comparable
universities.
The average Public School Teacher salary in
Georgia is $53,178 as
of January 16, 2019, but the range typically falls between $46,427 and $61,392. Entry level teachers are paid
around $32,000 per year for 10 months of employment.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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