By practicing fiscal responsibility, Mayor Reed has worked to preserve core city services when faced with chronic budget deficits.
San José's Pension Problems
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Did you know that San José expects to spend about $245 million in FY 2011-12 to pay for lifetime pension and retiree healthcare benefits for employees? That is three times more than it paid a decade ago!
In addition, retirement costs now take up more than 20% of the city's General Fund and are one of the primary drivers of San José's structural budget deficit.
Unfortunately, the City's retirement costs are expected to continue rising in the years ahead. Without significant retirement reform, these skyrocketing costs threaten the City's ability to provide basic city services and the long-term sustainability of the retirement funds.Learn more about the City's retirement systems and their escalating costs:
San José has two retirement systems. The Police and Fire Department Retirement System serves sworn public safety employees. The Federated City Employees’ Retirement System serves all other employees.
The City’s retirement systems offer defined benefit plans, meaning retirees receive a guaranteed pension for the rest of their lives. There are different pension formulas for police officers, firefighters and civilian/non-sworn employees. However, all plans feature:
A base pension determined by an employee's years of service and highest annual earnings (see chart below or pension calculator to the right).
A guaranteed 3% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) every year.
Bonus payments through the plans’ Supplemental Retiree Benefit Reserves (SRBR) when the plan’s investment returns exceed actuarial projections.
In addition, City employees with at least 15 years of service qualify for free healthcare benefits when they retire.
Many of these benefits are the result of enhancements awarded to employees over the past 20 years. As a result, City employees' retirement benefits have become extremely generous as well as extremely expensive.
Note: Employees who participate in the City’s pension plans do not contribute to Social Security and do not earn credit for Social Security benefits while working for the City. The Mayor, City Councilmembers, and non-benefited (i.e. part-time, temporary, contract) employees do not participate in the city’s pension plans.
Current Base Pension Formulas for the City’s Retirement Plans
Police
Fire
Federated
Eligibility
age when employee can begin collecting benefits
55 after 20 years
50 after 25 years
Any Age after 30 years
55 after 20 years
50 after 25 years
Any Age after 30 years
55 after 5 years
Any Age after 30 years
Benefit Formula
based on employee’s final compensation
2.5% per year for the
first 20 years of service
4% per year for every year after 20 years of service
2.5% per year if employee works 20 years or less
3% per year if employee works more than 20 years
2.5% per year for
every year of service
Maximum Benefit
90% of final compensation
90% of final compensation
75% of final compensation
Police officers and firefighters with 10-19 years of service also qualify to receive benefits. However, they can not receive benefits until 20 years have passed from their initial employment date (no earlier than age 55).
Source: San José Retirement Services Department. Visit the Additional Resources section for retirement benefit fact sheets.
Both the City and employees make contributions into the retirement funds. However, the City is responsible for a significantly larger share of the costs than employees.
In fact, the City is currently paying about 3/4 of the total cost of employee retirement benefits.
Retirement contributions can include two different components. "Normal cost" contributions, along with investment earnings, are expected to pay for all future benefits. However, if retirement investments lose money in the market or don’t meet actuarial projections, additional contributions are needed to pay down the resulting "unfunded liability" (Read more about the retirement plans' unfunded liabilities).
The City’s and employees’ contribution rates (see below) are set annually by San Jose’s two independent Retirement Boards based on annual actuarial valuations and the cost-sharing formulas described below.
2011-2012 Contribution Rates * Percent of Employee's Base Salary
Retirement Plan
City
Employee
Police Plan
56.90%
17.47%
Pension Benefits
49.29%
10.46%
Retiree Healthcare
7.61%
7.01%
Fire Plan
56.32%
15.62%
Pension Benefits
51.05%
10.76%
Retiree Healthcare
5.27%
4.86%
Federated Plan
35.50%
11.20%
Pension Benefits
28.34%
4.68%
Retiree Healthcare
7.16%
6.52%
Source: Office of Employee Relations, January 2011
Cost-Sharing for Pension Benefits: The City and employees split the normal cost for pension benefits on an 8 to 3 ratio (for every $8 the City pays, an employee contributes $3). However, the City is responsible for paying off 100% of any "unfunded liabilities" in the pension plans. As a result, taxpayers assume all of the risk for the pension plans' investments.
Unlike some governments, the City of San José has consistently made its annual retirement contribution (ARC) for pension benefits.
Cost-Sharing for Retiree Healthcare Benefits:
For retiree medical benefits, both the normal cost and the cost of any unfunded liabilities are split 50/50. Retiree dental benefits are split between the City and employees on either a 3:1 ratio (for police/fire employees) or an 8:3 ratio (for federated employees).
Both the City and employees are still in the phase-in period for paying the full annual retiree healthcare contribution. Once the phase-in is complete, there will be dramatic increases in retiree healthcare contributions for both the City and employees.
It is important to note that the current contribution rates are based on optimistic assumptions adopted by San Jose’s independent retirement boards, including a 7.5% assumed rate of return. Using a more realistic investment assumption would significantly increase the City’s and employees' annual contribution rates.
Unfortunately, the City’s retirement systems are significantly underfunded.
As of June 30, 2011, the City’s two retirement systems had about $3 billion in unfunded liabilities. These unfunded liabilities are the result of retroactive benefit enhancements, changing demographics, and overly optimistic assumptions that haven’t held true (note: these factors are discussed further in: Why Retirement Costs Have Grown So Much).
The plans’ growing unfunded liabilities have been accompanied by a decline in the plans’ funding ratios. In particular, the plans only have a small fraction of the money needed to fund retiree healthcare benefits. This is largely due to the fact that the City and employees have only been partially pre-funding their retiree healthcare benefits. However, both are now in a “phase-in” period for fully-funding their annual healthcare contributions.
These unfunded liabilities represent a huge debt that must be paid off in the future. This not only shifts the costs for today’s employees onto future generations, it also ends up costing more in the long run. And the larger the unfunded liability grows, the greater the risk that the retirement plans will not be able to pay retirees the benefits they have earned and accrued.
Sources: June 30, 2011 Actuarial Valuations for the Police and Fire Retirement Plan & the Federated Employees Retirement Plan (available on the Office of Employee Relations website )
Providing these generous retirement benefits and paying down the plans’ unfunded liabilities have taken a significant financial toll on the City of San José.
The City's retirement costs have more than tripled over the past decade, growing from $73 million in FY 2001-02 to $245 millioninFY 2011-12. Retirement benefits now cost more than 50% of base payroll and consume more than 20% of the City's entire General Fund.
While the City’s FY 2012-13 retirement costs are expected to stay flat (due to recent layoffs and pay cuts), the City’s annual retirement contribution is projected to increase to $320 million in FY 2015-16and continue rising for many more years after that. In addition, retirement costs could grow much larger than currently projected if the independent retirement boards adopt more realistic actuarial assumptions (for example, the boards currently assume a 7.5% annual return on investments).
Retirement costs are also escalating for city employees. In particular, both the City and employees will see dramatic retirement cost increases once they complete the phase-in period for paying the full annual retiree healthcare contribution.
There are a number of factors that have contributed to the City’s growing and unsustainable retirement costs. Listed here are three of the factors that have had a particularly large impact on retirement costs.
1. Retirement Benefits Have Been Continually Enhanced
The City Council - and in some cases, outside arbitrators – have enhanced pension benefits numerous times over the past two decades. Among these fiscally irresponsible actions:
The maximum pension benefit for San José police officers and firefighters was increased multiple times: first to 80%, then to 85%, and finally to 90% of compensation.
The cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) was changed to a guaranteed 3% annual adjustment.
The definition of "final compensation" (which is used to calculate pension benefits) was changed from the highest average over a 3 year period to the highest 12 consecutive months, for the Federated Plan.
Even worse, some of the above enhancements were made retroactively. This is what happened when police officers (in 2006) and firefighters (in 2008, via outside arbitration) were awarded a maximum pension benefit equaling 90% of final compensation. These retroactive increases immediately added more than $70 million in unfunded liabilities that the City has been obligated to pay.
Scroll over or click on the above image to enlarge.
Overall, retirees are receiving significantly larger pension payments today than they did 20 years ago. Even after adjusting for inflation:
The average annual pension benefit has increased by 75% for Police and Fire retirees.
The average annual pension benefit has increased by 54% for Federated retirees.
Furthermore, total annual pension benefit payments from the retirement funds have grown seven-fold over the past 20 years (see chart to right).
2. Employees Are Living Longer and Retiring Earlier.
The average life expectancy continues to rise (currently 78 years in the U.S.) and more individuals are opting to retire at an early age. This means thatretirees are collecting benefits for a longer period of time. In fact:
The average retiree in the Police and Fire plan receives a pension benefit for 21 years.
The average retiree in the Federated plan receives a pension benefit for 18 years.
In addition, the overall number of retirees receiving benefits is now 2½ times greater than 20 years ago.
These changing demographic factors have had a significant impact on the cost of providing the City's retirement benefits. It has also meant that past actuarial assumptions (i.e. those based on a lower life expectancy) haven’t held true, resulting in new unfunded liabilities.
3. Investment Gains Have Not Kept Up with Projections
Any time that retirement fund investments fall short of their projected returns, a new unfunded liability is created. Most recently, investment losses between 2007 and 2009 created a $978.8 million unfunded liability.
However, the retirement funds were experiencing gaps between projections and actual returns long before the current economic downturn. That’s because, over the past 30 years, the retirement systems have assumed an unrealistic rate of return - typically between 8.0% and 8.25% annually - that has outpaced its actual investment earnings (note: the retirement boards have begun to gradually reduce the assumed rate of return).
Paying off these unfunded liabilities drives up retirement costs in future years. And in the case of the pension plans' unfunded liabilities, the burden falls completely on the taxpayers.
Office of Mayor Chuck Reed
200 East Santa Clara Street San José, CA 95113
tel. (408) 535-4800 fax (408) 292-6422 mayoremail@sanjoseca.gov
The City of San Jose is committed to open and honest government and strives to consistently meet the community’s expectations by providing excellent service, in a positive and timely manner, and in the full view of the public.