I'm not a big fan of pensions to begin with and think that places that offer pensions should eventually move to a defined contribution plans.That aside, I've just recently started learning about gov pensions. Why the hell are we the taxpayers forced to pay for such lucrative gov pension plans? Some of them sound pretty sweet if you ask me. Work 20 years, then retire at 40 and receive 80-90% of salary while you pick up another job. A more comperable private sector benefit would be 66% of final three year salary after 30 years of service.
2/25/2007 9:45:13 PM
Yeah it's bullshit.But public employee unions have a lot of money and power. With a Dem-controlled congress, you can expect things to get worse, not better.
2/25/2007 9:48:10 PM
even more bs, I believe that all senators get their full salary for life. Not bad, esp if you dont get reelected.
2/25/2007 9:49:45 PM
i have no problem with government employees receiving pensions, i mean a career of service to the country i feel deserves a fitting rewards
2/25/2007 9:54:06 PM
The taxpayers aren't "forced" to pay anything. Often public organizations tend to favor pension/retirement systems over salary to attract and retain employees. Governments have to attract people too, or do you believe public employees couldn't do other things?
2/25/2007 9:59:20 PM
2/25/2007 10:05:52 PM
2/25/2007 10:21:29 PM
2/25/2007 10:24:56 PM
^^My point is that basic economics dictates that public organizations offer salary and benefits for many of the same reasons private businesses do: to attract and retain employeesAlso, most retirment plans I'm aware of provide reduced benefits at 20 years.
2/25/2007 10:34:07 PM
2/25/2007 10:34:21 PM
2/25/2007 10:35:55 PM
2/25/2007 10:42:12 PM
The Congressional Pension formula is:Avg3yrHighSalary * .017 * #yrsofservice(1st 20 yrs) + Avg3yrHighSalary * .01 * #yrsofservice(>20)So a senator with 6 years that is over 62 years of age would get 10.2% of his salary.http://www.senate.gov/reference/resources/pdf/RL30631.pdf[Edited on February 25, 2007 at 10:52 PM. Reason : ?]
2/25/2007 10:51:04 PM
2/25/2007 10:51:30 PM
You might want to learn more before posting. I don't think paying out 30% to a soldier who has served for 22 years is very "sweet."I'm still waiting to see a pension plan that is an affront to tax payers.[Edited on February 25, 2007 at 10:56 PM. Reason : ?]
2/25/2007 10:55:00 PM
I'll check tomorrow to see from where he got those #s.Considering I'll get 0% after 22 years, 30% seems pretty "sweet" to me.
2/25/2007 10:57:08 PM
You don't think we have any responsibility for people who serve in our armed services? Or are we simply paying them the market rate for their lives? Surely recruitment wouldn't suffer? Surely they can find high paying jobs?Don't act so put out. I'm sure the military will take you. Then you can get your sweet pension.[Edited on February 25, 2007 at 11:05 PM. Reason : ?]
2/25/2007 11:00:33 PM
2/25/2007 11:05:08 PM
2/25/2007 11:20:52 PM
2/26/2007 12:57:08 AM
2/26/2007 6:37:03 AM
2/26/2007 6:45:00 AM
2/26/2007 7:30:56 AM
1) Military guys pay taxes, too.Don't many of they get tax breaks or receive some type of non taxable income?2) You've obviously never been in the military.Duh.3) I couldn't give you specific numbers, but I'd venture to guess that the number of military retirees is fairly small compared to the number of people who serve.Good point.4) Who the fuck pissed in your cereal?I'm having yogurt for breakfast.
2/26/2007 8:12:34 AM
2/26/2007 8:18:10 AM
2/26/2007 8:30:47 AM
2/26/2007 8:40:19 AM
Here's the article I mentioned earlier.http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070211/news_lz1ed11top.html
2/26/2007 8:45:14 AM
I missed where you mentioned it, but that wasn't really a case of absurd pensions, it was double dipping and they've closed the loophole.
2/26/2007 8:50:42 AM
It was mainly about double dipping, but it also mentioned that 90% I referred to earlier and someone requested a source, so here it is.
2/26/2007 8:52:32 AM
This site describes how the military pensions work:http://www.dod.mil/militarypay/retirement/ad/01_whichsystem.htmlSo get that 90% stuff out. The max percentage one can get is 75%, but that is only after 30 years on active duty. Which is a hell of a lot of service.
2/26/2007 9:14:31 AM
Did you read the link I posted above?Besides, the thread is about gov pensions, not specifically military pensions.
2/26/2007 9:25:52 AM
To the original post:What they get in retirement they would get in salary at a private place of work. So, if we eliminate these benefits, we'll have to pay the employees more, and there will be no incentive for employees to stick around.
2/26/2007 9:29:11 AM
2/26/2007 9:33:42 AM
2/26/2007 9:42:21 AM
^And make salary equal as well?Cause salary is the problem.(Also, I didn't realize there were that many people in the private sector doing 30 years at the same employer.)
2/26/2007 9:57:38 AM
A lot of the baby boomers with pensions worked 30 years with the same employer.
2/26/2007 10:12:13 AM
Pensions work out poorly for everyone. Better to push for a higher salary sans-pension, invest your own damn money.
2/26/2007 11:02:09 AM
I don't know enough about California government to comment specifically about the pension of local firefighters in San Diego, but I can think of some general reasons why one would offer generous pensions. Perhaps there is fierce competition for the particular job skill in that region, forcing the city to make a more generous compensation package. This is true in particular for cities surrounded by large numbers of smaller suburban governments, where the number of skilled is small to begin with, and the best police and firefighters are being poached all the time. Think of it this way: you may be pissed that they're getting paid so much in theory, but if its your fire district that is only staffed at 50% because not enough people want to become firefighters and the few who do are going to work for your neighboring suburb, then you may start understanding how this situation could come about. Sometimes the unions may have a lockdown and can force the government into giving it compensations. Plenty of other possibilities as well.With the Federal government, you need to offer a good pension and strong job security to help recruit the best talent for civil service. At the national level, the government is not able to offer the sort of lavish salaries that private industry is going to be able to provide, particularly for the highly skilled and highly educated fields such as medicine, law, and engineering, and they can't simply rely upon the altruism and nobility of service to fill 100% of their manpower needs. So the government does what it can to leverage the advantages they do have to counter a raw salary and posh offices: long term security. You also need to provide incentives to stick around and endure the neverending suffering known as the Federal bureaucracy.
2/26/2007 11:13:42 AM
2/26/2007 11:15:31 AM
Ah, California. Are you aware that California has such attractive pension systems because many years ago (coincidentally when many baby boomers were starting their careers), many California state and local governments (elected representatives of their taxpayers) didn't want to fork out the increased salary needed to keep up with the fast-rising cost of living...and chose to provide attractive pension plans instead? A classic choice of don't pay now, pay later. Those obligations are now becoming due.I will not argue that California has an attractive pension system. My point is that you can't eliminate the pension systems, provide the same (lower) salaries, and expect to attract and retain qualified employees. You can't have it both ways.
2/26/2007 11:33:15 AM
2/26/2007 11:47:42 AM
^^Exactly. Work for the government is inherently unattractive; it almost always pays lower than comparable work in the private sector. The only reason it attracts anyone is that it compensates for low pay with high benefits, like good pensions.Which one do you think is going to cost you more: high pensions for the employees that work 20 or 30 years (which is certainly not all of them), or higher salaries for all of the employees?[Edited on February 26, 2007 at 11:52 AM. Reason : ]
2/26/2007 11:52:13 AM
2/26/2007 1:35:17 PM
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2/26/2007 2:51:40 PM