Chicago alderman’s $120K pension shows why city fund is broken – Illinois Policy

Burnett’s case underscores the costly and unsustainable nature of Chicago’s municipal pensions. The whole system suffers for the sake of a few at the top.
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Rob M
7 months ago

They rely on large number of participants who will continue to vote for them. Kass calls it bribing the people with their own money. The problem is because of gross mismanagement, the money is drying up. The average taxpayer paying the bills make less than the average political hack, or even average state worker. The sad thing is the poor, whom Dems profess to care so much about, are the ones who get squeezed the most. It’s sickening.

Hello, Indiana!
7 months ago

CHI has far more aldermen with smaller precincts than most major cities. One for the south, west and north sides each and one for downtown would suffice. Even two per each of four districts would be a tremendous improvement.

Leaving Soon, just not soon enough
7 months ago

To end the problem just put a cap on all pensions no matter how much they earn. Working in the public sector right now makes many if not all employees millionaires.

the doctor
7 months ago

Don’t cap the pension, end all government pensions.

9mm
7 months ago

That, or at least just start taxing them at the state level above x amount.

PPF
7 months ago
Reply to  9mm

So, you are good with also taxing IRA, 401k and private pension payments? You won’t get away with just taxing public pensions. Also, taxing “only above x amount” may violate the flat tax requirement of the Illinois constitution. Does this mean you would support a progressive income tax amendment to the Illinois constitution?

9mm
7 months ago
Reply to  PPF

We are talking about public pensions and not privately owned IRA’s or 401k’s that are funded with one’s pay. Big distinction. Illinois taxes unearned income today, and I see no reason they couldn’t try the same with means testing public pensions. I’d welcome the test of your theory that doing so would violate the constitution.

PPF
7 months ago
Reply to  9mm

You won’t be able to target just public pensions and you won’t “means test” them. It’s a diminishment that specifically targets pensions and not retirement income as a whole. The courts would see right through that. Falls right in line with other ideas such as charging a “service fee” to cash a public pension check for those that moved out of state. We can’t tax those people that left so we will just rename the reduction as a “service fee”. Good luck with that theory.

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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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