On reading the entire article, I learned that many states gave automatic, yearly cost of living adjustments to their retired employees - and now are considering eliminating them. I've been a retired PA state employee for 7 years and never gotten a COLA. Given the dire straits of our state budget, I have zero expectations of seeing a COLA in my lifetime.
Pennsylvania, a "blue state" is dead last in taking care of its pensioners.
According to this link:
http://www.psea.org/general.aspx?ID=2354"Other states have prioritized a COLA
Among the fifty states, 80 percent grant yearly COLAs. There are ten states that do not offer annual COLAs. Nine of these ten states enact a COLA every other year. Pennsylvania is finishing dead last in assisting its state retirees in comparison to other states that have made it a priority."
Pennsylvania retirees need a COLA
* There are approximately 162,000 retirees in the PSERS system and approximately 60,000 individuals receive less than $1,000 a month and pay over $300 a month for heath insurance.
* Retirees who retired before the increase in the multiplier are in serious financial need of a COLA.
* The average retiree will live 25 to 35 years following retirement and inflation can double or triple the dollars needed to maintain their living conditions.
* The average pension benefit for former male state employees is $600 a month more than for female retirees.
The economy has changed since PA's last COLA in 2002.
* The Consumer Price Index has risen by almost 14 percent since the last COLA in 2002.
* Since the last Cola, health care costs have dramatically risen. Retirees have waited since 2002 for a COLA while shouldering a greater percentage of out-of-pocket medical costs.