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Browsing Posts tagged early retirement

Fire Stations browned out, LAPD officers Furloughed and Civilian workers salary slashed, what next for Los Angeles?

LAFD & LAPD are in the latest battle over cuts and benefits and it keeps getting worse.

LA Times printed a storyon the pitfalls of the early retirement package and the growing budget issues.  Looks like SEUI local 721′s email campaign assuring people all was well seems to have only gotten to it’s membership because Council, the Mayors Office, Lacers and everyone else seem to accept the reality Early Retirement as written with the golden parachutes is not going to make it out of it’s first vote in council.

Excluding the Michael Jackson memorial the Council has given away over $500,000.00 this year alone on Special Event Fee Waivers seems everyone is sharing the sacrifice except the people having special events at taxpayer expense.

EAA Membership is still the only civilian group subject to mandatory furloughs while everyone else is allowed to wait on the sidelines for months. Critics have suggested that this was a vindictive action taken specifically to target MOU 08 membership which is scheduled to vote on decertifying and joining SEIU, who last we heard still says they have a deal and the CAO, Council, Mayor, Lacers, and everyone else is wrong. Looks like they just want to take their ball and go home it seems no one told them the game is about more then them yet. 

Zuma Dogg is running for City Council Everyone in CD2 that wants change keep an eye on him he might pull this off with Voter revolt and anger towards the same old situation in City Hall.His Blog is here

ERIP is in serious danger of falling apart simply because it doesn’t add up, SEIU and the Coalition of city unions Forced a vote prior to releasing any financial details on the plan, turns out some bargaining committee members didn’t get the memo and decided to e-mail assurances the plan was solid and it Turns out they had their own Study numbers they didn’t share with the membership at large PRIOR to voting.

 Layoffs are now inevitableas the Early Retirement Scam becomes known and other departments begin to look at there sacrifice, I said it when LAFD began there brownouts the numbers to save 39 million were big the numbers to save LAPD’s 130 million are HUGE!

Keep reading in our Forums section for more updates.

Recently several articles have come out bashing the early retirement plan and the risk to LACERS.

Enclosed a few links to some very interesting articles that bring up the point we all have, can we afford it?

Lacers is set to recommend it unless the pressure mounts.
Is this backroom CYA or more?

Citys pension debacle it is not us against them.

Keep your hands out of the cookie jar

We have worked very long and hard, been in contact with several council members, and we have published numerous articles on this issue.

It looks like our message has finally gotten through.

As always we failed to get any mention by the la times reporter on the story but that’s ok members of our site know we had a major role in this uprising.  We said it and have been for a while.

Here is the article. Thanks for the quote david.

Pension repayment plan could throw L.A.’s budget into disarray


The system’s general manager urges ‘prudent’ repayment in 5 years, not 15. The money would come from employees or the city’s general fund.

By David Zahniser
August 3, 2009

A high-level Los Angeles pension official has recommended that the city pay off the cost of an employee early retirement package 10 years sooner than previously planned — a move that threatens to throw the city’s budget into disarray.

Hoping to slash payroll costs and eliminate a $530-million budget shortfall, the City Council gave tentative approval last month to a deal that provides early retirement to 2,400 workers who belong to the Coalition of L.A. City Unions.

That agreement called for the city’s pension fund to be reimbursed over 15 years for the cost of giving retirement benefits ahead of schedule. The money was expected to come largely from higher retirement contributions from the remaining workforce.

But Sally Choi, general manager of the Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System, recommended Friday that her agency’s board require repayment within five years. Choi told the board, which is scheduled to vote today, that the faster payment schedule would be “more fiscally prudent,” based on a recently completed review of the plan.

The resulting higher payments would hike the cost of the city’s retirement package by at least $33.7 million in July 2010, the first year of payment. To cover that higher cost, city officials would be left with two choices: demand a considerably higher contribution from city employees or tap the city’s general fund, which is used to pay for police, fire protection and other basic services.
“This is not good news for the unions,” Councilman Dennis Zine said. “This is not good news for those who thought they had a deal for early retirement.”

The union coalition, which represents 22,000 employees, launched a last-minute lobbying effort against Choi’s recommendation Sunday, calling her recommendation “irresponsible” and saying that it would harm the city’s ability to deliver services. In a letter to board members, six union leaders said a 15-year payment schedule would be fiscally prudent.

Choi’s “recommendation is not only ill-timed and ill-conceived, but threatens to further burden city coffers in these extraordinarily hard economic times,” they wrote.

Choi said the pension board’s primary responsibility is to safeguard the financial health of the retirement system, which is charged with delivering benefits to 15,000 retired employees and 30,000 active employees. Any effort to relieve the city’s budget woes should be secondary, she said.

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who selects four of the pension board’s seven members, plans to ask the board to delay a vote on the payment schedule. Mayoral spokesman Matt Szabo repeated Villaraigosa’s support for early retirement, which he hailed last month as a way to cut costs by $500 million within two years.

“The mayor continues to believe that an early retirement package is better than layoffs,” Szabo said. “The question now is, how much will it cost and how much will we save?”

City officials fear that a five-year repayment plan would cost so much that it would no longer save enough money to bring the city’s budget into balance.

The City Council still must cast two more votes on the early retirement deal. On Friday, it received a report from a city-hired actuary who looked at two early retirement scenarios, one that involves the departure of 2,229 employees and another involving 2,763.

Under the second scenario, the five-year payment schedule could increase the cost of the retirement package by $48.9 million in the first year of payment, according to a report issued to the pension board.

Choi said the payments to the pension fund should occur only during the period when the city is deriving the cost savings from a smaller workforce. Choi said the actuary defined that period as five years.

The coalition’s members ratified the early retirement plan last week, partly as a way of shielding themselves from layoffs and furloughs. As part of the agreement, workers agreed to increase their employee contribution from 6% to 6.75% starting in July 2011.

If city workers had to cover the cost of early retirement within five years, their contribution would increase to 8.86%. Under the more aggressive retirement scenario — the one allowing 2,763 workers to leave — the employee contribution would jump to 10.7%.

Coalition spokeswoman Barbara Maynard said early retirement would provide a benefit to the city over 15 years, not five.

Maynard warned that the coalition’s members have no intention of contributing more toward their retirement.

“We are not going to reopen the agreement that we just ratified,” she said.

Based on the current debate, Councilman Bernard C. Parks said he would have “grave difficulty” in moving ahead with early retirement.

Councilwoman Jan Perry said she was alarmed by the latest developments but did not yet know what the council’s next step should be.

“Obviously, putting ourselves in a deeper hole would not be a viable option,” she said.

david.zahniser@latimes.com

Deadwood, not the mayors finest moment.

  Maybe it was a tactic to make employees feel unwelcome or unappreciated, to demoralize the older workers,either way it worked.

Now with the ERIP in place and many of the city’s oldest and most experienced workers ready to leave, is the city ready ?

 Sure I agree with the mayor and all of us have seen that worker who has 40+ years on and does as much work as your pencil, but there are countless other employees who handle areas of expertise the city may not be so quick to part with.

 Claims Investigators, City Attorneys, Investigators, Management Analysts, Supervisors and Superintendents. Many of these people handle very complex issues dealing with civil liability, Airport operations, libraries,  personnel law and civil service regulations, emergency preparedness, and homeland security.

 Letting these people simply walk away will create a huge knowledge gap that if not properly prepared for could lead to civil judgments against the city, security gaps, and violations of law.

 It is important to remember many civilians hold high ranking vital positions in the LAPD and LAFD, proper training is essential for there replacements, these workers and there importance to the city should not be overlooked.

 Council should take a long hard look at this process and make certain that the knowledge and skill they posses will be transferred as much as possible to there replacement, although there is no substitute for experience.

To those workers who care, and have dedicated there life to a prosperous career with the City of LA, Thank You for all you have done.