Why you can't trust Government.....

Zander

Platinum Member
Sep 10, 2009
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Los Angeles CA
Look at these poor schlubs! The wonderful leftist state of California is sticking it to their retirees.....Apparently rainbows and unicorns are as real as the promises made to these retirees.... This is just the tip of the iceberg!




With the stroke of a pen, California Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation that gave prison guards, park rangers, Cal State professors and other state employees the kind of retirement security normally reserved for the wealthy.

More than 200,000 civil servants became eligible to retire at 55 — and in many cases collect more than half their highest salary for life. California Highway Patrol officers could retire at 50 and receive as much as 90% of their peak pay for as long as they lived.

Proponents sold the measure in 1999 with the promise that it would impose no new costs on California taxpayers. The state employees’ pension fund, they said, would grow fast enough to pay the bill in full.

They were off — by billions of dollars — and taxpayers will bear the consequences for decades to come.

This year, state employee pensions will cost taxpayers $5.4 billion, according to the Department of Finance. That’s more than the state will spend on environmental protection, fighting wildfires and the emergency response to the drought combined.

And it’s more than 30 times what the state paid for retirement benefits in 2000, before the effects of the new pension law, SB 400, had kicked in, according to data from the California Public Employees’ Retirement System.

Rest of article ..
How a pension deal went wrong and cost California taxpayers billions

This lady is going from 48K per year to 19K.....



 
When there is no money....There is no money no matter what promise you made. Population loss in IL is accelerating l would expect the same here as the burden increases.
 
Look at these poor schlubs! The wonderful leftist state of California is sticking it to their retirees.....Apparently rainbows and unicorns are as real as the promises made to these retirees.... This is just the tip of the iceberg!




With the stroke of a pen, California Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation that gave prison guards, park rangers, Cal State professors and other state employees the kind of retirement security normally reserved for the wealthy.

More than 200,000 civil servants became eligible to retire at 55 — and in many cases collect more than half their highest salary for life. California Highway Patrol officers could retire at 50 and receive as much as 90% of their peak pay for as long as they lived.

Proponents sold the measure in 1999 with the promise that it would impose no new costs on California taxpayers. The state employees’ pension fund, they said, would grow fast enough to pay the bill in full.

They were off — by billions of dollars — and taxpayers will bear the consequences for decades to come.

This year, state employee pensions will cost taxpayers $5.4 billion, according to the Department of Finance. That’s more than the state will spend on environmental protection, fighting wildfires and the emergency response to the drought combined.

And it’s more than 30 times what the state paid for retirement benefits in 2000, before the effects of the new pension law, SB 400, had kicked in, according to data from the California Public Employees’ Retirement System.

Rest of article ..
How a pension deal went wrong and cost California taxpayers billions

This lady is going from 48K per year to 19K.....




Yet college professors there get several hundred thousand a year in their government paid retirement.
 
Zander, I would strongly advise getting the hell out of Dodge before the state goes belly up.

Don't you mean. . . . sinks into an ocean of debt?

Newsweek from 2095. . . :badgrin:
1470335510619
 
CALPERS is going tits up thanks to government ineptitude and incompetence.

So the natural reaction by the leftists is s to RAISE TAXES!!!!

:cuckoo: .......amazing how daft these clowns are.

The only revenue source that could address the size of the pension funding shortfall is Proposition 13. That is why Assemblyman Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) introduced union-backed Assembly Bill 1040 as a 2016 initiative that has the potential of generating a +$4.5 billion increase in annual tax collections.
 
While it is unclear which state will collapse first or how many will ultimately go under when federal taxes go down it will get quite ugly in CA, IL, NY, RI and MA for sure will be on that list.
 

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