Chicago mayor’s 2026 budget would dial back pension funding – The Bond Buyer

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson's proposed $16.6 billion 2026 budget would reduce the supplemental pension contributions that had lifted the city's credit stature.mThe budget, released Thursday, calls for new revenues, but avoids the property tax hikes that fell flat with City Council last year. The mayor's budget would cut the advance pension payment to $120.2 million from the originally planned $238 million.
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Hello, Indiana!
5 months ago

So he says, with an eye on the election. Then, if the votes go in his favor, Mayor Prozac will be beating his chest again with promises to “ get dat money!”.

Free at Last
5 months ago

I’m curious where the breaking point is. At some point, when their slave like voters are squeezed hard enough, they will turn on their democrat masters. At that point do these dem politicians turn on their constituents or do they in turn revolt against their union masters? It may never happen. It may happen next year. If the dem scum turn on their union masters, those pensions may not be as secure as the pensioners think. I’m glad to be watching dumb and dumber drive the bus off the fiscal cliff from afar.

Chercher
5 months ago

The goal here is to spend as much pension money as possible in the short time they have power. Hand it all out, and call it social justice. When the pension system is bled dry, you can throw up your hands and let the pensioners force the federal government to bail them out.

P T Bombast
5 months ago
Reply to  Chercher

Two possibilities: solvent state legislators will block bailouts or they’ll insist on their states’ fair share … opening the floodgates of deficit spending destroying everybody’s income and savings. Public pensions will be paid in worthless dollars and those retired public servants can join the rest of us in the bread lines.

ProzacPlease
5 months ago

Once again, nobody wants to make the pension payment.

Congratulations, public unions. You spent decades thinking you were building your power. In reality you spent years creating your own competitors for public funds. Morons.

Now go out and protest to keep all the illegals here. It’s what you do.

MsT
5 months ago

The Mayor is indifferent to pension solvency–he’d rather direct money to building housing on the south and west sides for his constituents and provide economic gains to illegal migrants, including rapists. The pension house of cards will fall sooner without the advance payments–so what? It’s not his pension.

Free at Last
5 months ago

It’s looking like Harvey may be an early test case for Chicago. It’ll be fun to watch from afar. Make sure you get those well earned pensions paid. The rest of you? You’re on your own. For what you are about to receive, be thankful that your masters have your best interests at heart.

Morefandave
5 months ago

That’s right, Pinhead. Short the pensioners-again. The pension debt is a significant part of the reason Chicago is in this pinch-along with all the money you’re blowing on the illegals.you seem to care more about than your own citizens.

Fullbladder
5 months ago

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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