This is an archive of a past election. See http://www.smartvoter.org/ca/scl/ for current information. |
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Measure B Pension Reform City of San Jose City Charter Amendment - Majority Approval Required Pass: 95,716 / 69.02% Yes votes ...... 42,964 / 30.98% No votes
See Also:
Index of all Measures |
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Results as of Jul 3 3:58pm, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (415/415) |
Information shown below: Impartial Analysis | Arguments | Full Text | ||||
Shall the Charter be amended to modify retirement benefits of City employees and retirees by: increasing employees' contributions, establishing a voluntary reduced pension plan for current employees, establish pension cost and benefit limitations for new employees, modify disability retirement procedures, temporarily suspend retiree COLAs during emergencies, require voter approval for increases in future pension benefits? Yes No
Background. The City administers "defined benefit" retirement plans for its employees. The City and employees each contribute to the plans. Employees who reach retirement age and complete sufficient years of service become eligible for monthly retirement benefit payments using a formula based on years of service and a percentage of salary. Contributions. The Charter requires the City and employees to make contributions towards the "normal cost" of the City's retirement plans in a ratio of 8 (City) to 3 (employee). The City also makes contributions towards the "unfunded liabilities" that result from insufficient plan assets to pay projected retirement costs. Beginning July 23, 2013, the Measure would require employees to make additional contributions to help pay the City plans' unfunded liabilities Employees would contribute from 4% of pay, up to a maximum of 16% per year, but no more than half the yearly cost to pay retirement system unfunded liabilities. If a court determines this section to be unenforceable, equivalent savings would be obtained through compensation reductions. Alternative Plan. The Measure would require the City Council to adopt a Voluntary Election Program ("VEP"), subject to IRS approval. Under the VEP, employees who "opt in" would not be required to make the additional contributions towards retirement plan unfunded liabilities. The VEP retains some existing benefits and reduces others. If the VEP has not been implemented, or employees do not elect to participate, employees would make additional contributions. New Employees. The Measure would require the City to adopt a retirement plan for new employees that could include social security, a defined benefit plan and/or a defined contribution plan. The measure would limit City costs and retiree benefits. Disability Retirement. The Measure would limit disability retirements to cases where the employee could not perform the work the employee did before or any other work in the City's classification plan (or in the case of safety employees, in the employee's department). COLA. The Measure would authorize the City Council to temporarily suspend cost of living adjustments paid to retirees for up to five years if the Council adopts a resolution declaring a fiscal and service level emergency. Supplemental Payments. The Measure would discontinue the Supplemental Retiree Benefit Reserve, which permits the allocation of excess plan investment income to fund supplemental benefits for retirees. Retiree Healthcare. The Measure would require employee contributions to fund a minimum of 50% of the cost of retiree healthcare, including both normal cost and unfunded liabilities. Oversight. The Measure reserves to the voters any future change in post employment benefits. Neither the City Council nor any arbitrator under Charter Section 1111 would have authority to provide for increases. The Measure sets retirement plan actuarial and investment standards. A "yes" vote is a vote to approve the changes described above. A "no" vote means that no changes would be made to the Charter's retirement provisions.
Dennis D. Hawkins, CMC
The above statement is an impartial analysis of Measure B. If you would like to read the full text of the measure, see http://www.sanjoseca.gov/clerk/elections/2012Election/measures.pdf or call 408- 535-1252 and a copy will be sent at no cost to you.
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Official Information City of San Jose Mayor's Office San Jose City Manager San Jose City Clerk Google News Search
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Arguments For Measure B | Arguments Against Measure B | ||
Annual retirement costs skyrocketed from $73 million to $245
million over the last decade, causing service cuts throughout the
city. The City's share of retirement costs exceeds 50% of
payroll, far more than the 6.2% of payroll private employers pay
for social security. Retirement costs consume more than 20% of
the general fund and are projected by independent actuaries to
increase for years. This is unsustainable.
Many city retirees receive more than $100,000 per year, plus healthcare benefits. Future generations of taxpayers will have to pay billions of dollars for unfunded liabilities created by the retirement plans. Measure B would protect retirement benefits already earned by current employees but would reduce the cost to the city by making changes going forward. It would not cut current payments to retirees. It would prohibit spiking of pension benefits. Current city employees will pay a larger share of the cost of retirement benefits, a step already taken by over 200 California cities. New employees and the city would share the cost of retirement benefits with a 50/50 match in a new lower-cost plan. Over 100 California cities have adopted lower-cost plans for new employees. City employees are presently paying less than 1/4 of the cost of their retirement benefits. Private sector employees usually pay 1/2 of the cost. Measure B will require current city employees to pay more than 1/3 of the cost of their retirement benefits and new city employees to pay 1/2 of the cost of their retirement benefits. The City Charter gives the voters the right to change retirement benefits. The city will seek judicial review before changes are implemented to minimize legal disputes. Mayor Reed, Vice Mayor Nguyen, and Councilmembers Constant, Herrera, Liccardo, and Oliverio support Measure B. Vote yes on Measure B for pension reform. http://www.sanjosefiscalreforms.com
Chuck Reed
City employees don't receive Social Security and the average federated pension is $37,885; employees rely on their pension for retirement security. How would you feel if Congress slashed your Social Security? It's just not right. Recently, city employees took pay cuts of 10% to 18%. They contribute up to 17% of pay toward retirement and Measure B could boost that to 33%. When combined, about half an employee's paycheck evaporates before paying for taxes, groceries, rent, mortgage or gas. That's not fair and that's not what was promised. City politicians tried to declare a "fiscal emergency" even though there's now a budget surplus and made up pension projections that were inflated by hundreds of millions over actual costs. Politicians continue to recklessly spend on fixing roads near a proposed sports stadium and on supporting the Downtown Association. The California State Auditor has been ordered to get to the bottom of San Jose's fiscal shenanigans in an attempt to bring sanity to local budgeting.
Tell the City to negotiate legal pension reform - Vote No on B!
http://www.sanjosecandobetter.com
Helen Chapman
| Here's what Measure B backers aren't telling you: It could
eliminate disability retirements for police and firefighters
injured on the job and unable to perform their previous
duties, it increases by thousands of dollars the amount
widows and seniors pay for promised health care, and the
City admitted that Measure B may not be constitutional
because it violates employees' vested rights.
Measure B is riddled with legal risk. Read what City Hall told Wall Street bond investors about its pension scheme: "Finally, existing law regarding vested rights and impairment of contracts may limit the City's ability to change retirement benefits for current employees and retirees...". But city officials never even tried to offer taxpayers a way to achieve any savings that would stand up in court. Legal pension reform is important, but so are facts. City workers recently took 10%-18% pay cuts and don't receive Social Security. The average federated pension is approximately $37,885. Employees proposed dozens of legal pension reforms that would have increased retirement ages, reduced benefit levels, and lowered COLA's. Police and fire even proposed to cut pensions back to 1972 levels. Putting politics above policy, politicians said "NO". Now, these same politicians want you to gamble with our City's financial future. In December, as an excuse for putting this measure on the ballot, politicians unsuccessfully tried to declare a fiscal emergency and described catastrophic cuts to city services. Now, all of a sudden, there is a $10 million budget surplus and millions to improve roads near a proposed sports stadium and to subsidize the Downtown Association. This pattern of inaccurate financial projections, meant to scare voters, helped convince the State's Joint Legislative Audit Committee to audit the City of San Jose's finances. Tell the city to negotiate legal pension reform, Vote NO on Measure B!  Helen Chapman Former Chair, San Jose Parks Commission
Governor's Proposal:
Grand Jury Report: Measure B would also allow employees who wish to pay less for retirement benefits to choose a lower cost optional plan that saves them and the City money. Upon voter approval of Measure B, the city will immediately seek a judicial review to minimize the cost of legal disputes. See the legal opinion of outside counsel: http://www.sanjoseca.gov/mayor/goals/budget/PDF/MeyersNavePublicLegalOpinion.pdf A Stanford report found that San Jose public safety retirees' average annual pension benefit ($90,612) is the highest of any independent pension system in California. http://siepr.stanford.edu/system/files/shared/pubs/papers/pdf/Nation_More_Pension.pdf The City Auditor found that disability retirements among San Jose's sworn employees are considerably higher than other jurisdictions and 67% of fire retirees were receiving disability retirement payments. Some employees granted disability retirements were working full time in their regular job right up to when they separated from the City. The Auditor recommended the City charter be amended to reform the system. http://www.sanjoseca.gov/auditor/AuditReports/1102/1102.pdf The City engaged in hundreds of hours of negotiations with 11 employee unions, including 20 sessions with state mediators, but was unable to reach agreement on language for Measure B.
Vote yes on Measure B.
Marcia Fritz
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Full Text of Measure B |