They do fund part of their own retirement. Heck if you work for a large company they most likely pay something towards your retirement (matching 401k or something else). Also many government workers make less then private sector employees in equivalent positions (most not all) and the pension is what they get for accepting less pay. Think of it as deferred pay.
Lastly what does that article have to do with Louisiana. The majority of Louisiana's shortfall is due to tax cuts.
Not enough information to determine if LSU has internal issues it is refusing to deal with.
They seem to be fairly effective with what they spend per student. I don't think that should ever be lost in the discussion. It seems the core function is being performed fairly well. What else is going on...???
We got into a similar position in the early 70s and actually had to call a constitutional convention and pass a new constitution to remove all of the dedications. Took us all of 40 years to get ourselves back over that barrel. I think we're on constitution number 11 since the state joined the Union.
I responded to a cliche left wing statement that wasn't specific to Louisiana's current budget crisis:
Pensions destroying state budgets? It's not a talking point, it's a real problem that has to be resolved.
Illinois Faces Big Revenue Hit in 2015 - WSJ
And it'll be resolved on the backs of the tax payers, whether it's through increased taxation or loss of services tax payers rely on.
There would be no need to define early if public employees funded their own pensions.
It simply makes no sense to me that I should have to dig in my pocket for an extra 2% each year and pay for someone else's pension while I'm sitting here trying to fund my own retirement. That's far from extreme. A huge majority of private employees feel the same way.
You're trying to compare your opinions on your states in particular issues and making broad generalizations regarding policy of a state in which you don't seemingly understand yet. In the short Google search, I found that these pensions were agreed upon years ago. They were also contributed to by the teachers themselves. Their retirement also must get to a certain tenure to vest, and then are distributed on a sliding scale depending on how long they worked?
How is this much different then the matching your company is probably doing to your 401k?
Per my research, the deficit is a state deficit, not a pension fund deficit. They have $300M in their fund and $12B in future pension debts. When you consider that it's a fund that continually contributed to over time. The second link references that this is really Jindal robbing Peter to pay Paul. Essentially taking funds that were agreed upon and earned through a mutual agreement between the teachers and the state. Now, they want to renig on that agreement in order to pay for the irresponsibility of the state government. The teachers held up their end of the bargain, the state is who seemingly seems to be the culprit in this scenario.
On another note, if you are a teacher, why would you ever want to work in Louisiana? Terrible rankings, pay and the state will rob your pension fund in order to make up deficents in the general fund?
Teacher’s Retirement System of Louisiana (TRSL) | LSU System
Battle over Louisiana pension funds shaping up | LSU | The Advocate — Baton Rouge, Louisiana
This is exactly what is going on here.
I'm sure there's an interesting "Common Law v. Civil Law" angle here.
You're trying to compare your opinions on your states in particular issues and making broad generalizations regarding policy of a state in which you don't seemingly understand yet. In the short Google search, I found that these pensions were agreed upon years ago. They were also contributed to by the teachers themselves. Their retirement also must get to a certain tenure to vest, and then are distributed on a sliding scale depending on how long they worked?
How is this much different then the matching your company is probably doing to your 401k?
I didn't compare the two states in any of my posts. I linked an article regarding Illinois in response to a general question.
The difference is in the disbursements. 401k disbursements are dictated by how much money the retiree has invested and how long they believe they may live. While pension disbursements, at least in Illinois, are dictated by the amount retirees earn immediately prior to retiring (last two years I believe). Conveniently, many of the recipients receive a nice pay raise prior to retirement, commonly referred to as a pension spike, so they can lock in a lifetime benefit that far exceeds their overall average salary. I can't scam...I mean spike my 401k disbursements, I'm sorry to say.
401k disbursements don't enjoy cost of living adjustments.
If my 401k is prematurely depleted, whether it's a result of mismanagement or circumstances out of my control, I can't go to the taxpayers and ask for a re-fill.
Taxpayers shouldn't have to bear the burden of funding pensions b/c politicians twenty years ago gave sweetheart deals to public unions in exchange for votes.
I would favor a system that used tax dollars to pay teachers a higher salary plus a 401k match and eliminate pensions altogether.
Please read the second article I posted. It literally addresses every point you are trying to make. The tax payers aren't burdened by this system.
No one is going into your 401k and taking your company match or personal contributions. That is what they are trying to do here.
C'mon man... At least put a little effort into understanding the actual argument.
Please read the article I posted. Taxpayers are being burdened by the pension system in Illinois. As I said before, I didn't compare the two states.
I'm sure there's flab in just about every public university system. The underlying issue here, though, is that the state has both a balanced budget provision in its constitution and a massive number of statutory dedications (i.e. minimum, mandatory funding levels for specific programs) in its laws. In essence, the state must present a balanced budget each year and is only allowed to cut higher education and certain components of health care (primarily, non-hospital and non-nursing-home providers) to offset a revenue shortfall. The state also has a nuclear option where it can institute level across-the-board cuts to every public program, but that provision has never been used before and would be devastating to the state infrastructure. You wind up with a system where quite a few publicly-funded programs have significant overspending but you can't shift their funds over to fill the gap because state law or the state constitution prohibit their funding from falling below a certain level (plus an inflation adjustment). Instead, health care and higher ed take a dive every time we miss our revenue mark.
We got into a similar position in the early 70s and actually had to call a constitutional convention and pass a new constitution to remove all of the dedications. Took us all of 40 years to get ourselves back over that barrel. I think we're on constitution number 11 since the state joined the Union.
Past tax cuts aren't the only culprit behind the state's budget position. The decline in oil revenue driven by low gas prices is a huge hit. That pulled several hundred million dollars out of state coffers this year compared to last. There are also some significant funding quirks related to federal reimbursement rates that are driving a big portion of the gap.
A) Pensions : If an agreement is in place during the time an employee works, specifying retirement benefits; pay him. It was part of the reason that employee did that job.
Anyone who sees arbitrarily cutting others pensions, deserves to have the value of their home go down the crapper. 500k mortgage on a 300K house, like that.
Both are examples of theft perpetrated on the American public in the last ten years. And every analysis shows that it is so the rich can get richer.
You guys do realize a prof's main job is research, not teaching right? The amount they teach is pretty immaterial to the work they do,
They have gotten gimmicks implemented on how pensions are calculated. For example, in San Diego a fireman's pension was based off the highest level they worked. It could have been for a year or a day. So what happened? Well at some point during their last year...everyone above the person just so happened to take the day off on the same day. So a guy could be promoted for the day. THAT IS THEFT. I could go on for days of similar examples all over the US.
The compensation amount for employees hired on or after January 1, 2011, is calculated by the years of service and the average salary for the 60 highest successive months of earnings (see the sample calculation).
How much research does an English professor do? Or a philosophy professor?
What you're describing here (I have no reason to believe it isn't true) is really terrible. I agree...it's theft.
That said, I have never seen anything similar in education. Teacher pensions are typically calculated based on a "high five" average. Being promoted for even a full year would only serve to bump the average. It wouldn't be the number upon which the pension is calculated. That's how it works in Louisiana.
Teacher’s Retirement System of Louisiana (TRSL) | LSU System
Public employees are hired under this plan. It's part of their contract.
How much research does an English professor do? Or a philosophy professor?
I don't know about those two, but an archaeological professor's travel and "research" budget must be huge.
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Even Dr. Jones tells his students that most archeological research is in the library.![]()
It should also be noted that from the school's POV, research has genuine financial value because it generates grants from public and private sources.
Tuition only covers a fraction of what schools spend per student so the non-teaching aspects of a university are a big part of its livelihood - and it generates a pool of graduate students who conduct teaching duties for their own academic benefit and extremely low financial compensation.
Even Dr. Jones tells his students that most archeological research is in the library.![]()
If you count special time spent with the female library staff......