Since policemen and firefighters put their lives on the line for the communities they serve….they must be realistic when it comes to the question of whether their pensions can be properly funded.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/33190358/How-Chapter-9-Can-Solve-the-Pension-Shortfall-CrisisYou are a firefighter. Everyday, you put your life on the line, in order to protect your fellow citizens. While other people flee from the sites of disasters---fires, explosions, earthquakes, terrorist attacks---you rush in.
Due to the physically demanding nature of your work as a firefighter, you are likely to retire in your 50s---if you are lucky enough to avoid breaking your spine while rescuing a child from a burning building in your 30s or 40s. Once you are too old to work, you have 10 to 15 years to go before Social Security and Medicare kick in. No problem. The citizens who hired you to protect them promised that they would pay you a pension to help you get by when you could no longer do the job. So, you put on your uniform and grabbed an axe and got to work.
It isn’t as if you had no other career options. You could have joined the military, and defended your country abroad. As a career military retiree, you would have been entitled to a pension and health care guaranteed by the U.S. government. However, you wanted to protect Americans at home---
Now, your local government says that it is bankrupt. It can not pay its bills. Oh, and by the way, the money it was supposed to have paid into your pension fund? That money was spent on something else. Too bad for you. Maybe you would have been better off dying in the line of work….
Another thing. Did I mention that you are a greedy bastard, who has driven your fellow citizens to the verge of bankruptcy?
Vallejo is a Bay Area community of 121,000 that two years ago became the state's largest city to declare bankruptcy. Like other municipalities, its public-sector unions had driven its budget deep into the red. A report issued by the Cato Institute last September noted that 74% of the city's general budget was eaten up by police and firefighter salaries and overtime along with pension obligations.
snip
Police and fire officials can retire at age 50 with a pension that pays them 90% of their final year's salary every year for life and the lives of their spouses.
Stephen Greenhut in WSJ Opinions Online
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703625304575115551578762006.htmlA financial investor recently told me that bonds are a safe investment. He must not have heard about the recent trend of cities declaring bankruptcy in order to void their pension agreements. Or maybe Wall Street thinks that tossing retired firefighters onto the garbage heap is
good for American business. I wonder if the businessmen in the World Trade Center on 9/11 thought the firefighters were too highly paid.
Some links about cities in default:
Prichard, Alabama, 1999 and 2010. Note that the city has not made pension payments to any of its 140 retirees since 2009, even though there is $600,000 in its pension fund.
http://www.allbusiness.com/government/government-bodies-offices-us-federal-government/13482313-1.htmlhttp://blog.al.com/live/2010/09/after_bankruptcy_case_gets_tos.htmlVallejo, California, 2008-10
http://www.vallejobankruptcyupdate.com/Harrisburg, PA 2010
http://www.cnbc.com/id/37354955/More_Cities_on_Brink_of_Bankruptcyhttp://www.upi.com/Business_News/2010/09/02/Harrisburg-tense-on-edge-of-bankruptcy/UPI-59151283438237/