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02-08-2013, 02:03 AM
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Panel OKs revamp of state public employee pensions
By The Associated Press
Published: February 07, 2013

TALLAHASSEE — A proposal to end guaranteed pensions for new teachers, state and county workers and other public employees began moving through the Florida Legislature today.

A House panel voted to introduce a committee bill that would replace traditional defined benefit pensions with individual investment accounts similar to 401(k) plans for employees hired after Jan. 1, 2014. It would shift investment risk from employers to employees, a growing trend in the private sector. Benefits can vary widely depending upon the performance of investments each employee chooses. The bill also would end disability benefits for new employees.

The measure is a top priority for Gov. Rick Scott and Republican legislative leaders. It cleared the Government Operations Subcommittee on a party-line 9-3 vote.

Republicans and business groups that support the measure contended the switch would save taxpayers money. Democrats, union officials and other critics argued it would have the opposite result.

Opponents also objected to taking a vote before actuarial studies, which are expected to resolve that question, have been completed.

"This is, ram it down everyone's throat," said Rep. Irv Slosberg, D-Boca Raton. "We're not fools. This is just a cost shift, and my advice is find someone else's pocket to pick. Leave our workers alone."

Subcommittee Chairman Jason Brodeur, R-Sanford, assured his colleagues there will be plenty more opportunities to discuss and modify the measure when it is heard by other committees.

If passed, the proposal would be the second major change in the Florida Retirement System since Scott took office two years ago. A law passed in 2011 requires public employees to contribute 3 percent of their earnings to the system, in effect a pay cut.

Brodeur stressed that the bill would affect only new hires, not the retirement system's 623,011 current active members — those now working — or its 334,682 retirees.

Only about 25 percent of all covered employees are state workers. The rest are teachers and local government workers including law enforcement officers and firefighters.

"It doesn't hurt anybody who's currently in the system," Brodeur said. "It doesn't break any promises to those who haven't been hired yet and it doesn't ask for any taxpayer increases either."

Brodeur acknowledged that the Florida system now is one of the nation's best-funded and well-managed pension plans.

Financial experts say pension plans that are at least 80 percent funded are considered on solid ground because employees do not all retire at the same time. The Florida system was 87 percent funded as of last June and since then its investments have grown by $10 billion to $132 billion as a result of the ongoing stock market recovery.

In some years the fund has topped 100 percent. That's enabled the Legislature to divert about $12 billion in state contributions to other purposes over the past dozen years. Also, the 3 percent employee contribution is being used to reduce employer contributions instead of increasing the fund's assets. Public employers now contribute 3.55 percent for most workers.

"What's wrong? Why are we trying to fix it?" asked Gary Ramey, president of the Florida Professional Firefighters union. "We're spending an awful lot of time here and resources for a problem that really doesn't exist."

The bill's supporters, though, say they are worried that kind of success cannot continue, citing huge unfunded liabilities racked by municipalities, other states and private companies.

Brodeur characterized the proposal as a minimal change as opposed to more drastic measures he said would have to be taken if the Florida plan suffers the same fate.

"Closing a defined benefit plan, believe me, is not a minimal change in any way, shape or form," said Ray Edmondson, CEO of the nonpartisan Florida Public Pension Trustee Association. "It's the most expensive thing you can do."

Ramey said state and local governments would have to pay more into the present plan for each current employee as its shrinks due to the lack of new members.

02-08-2013, 02:27 AM
As long as it doesn't effect me, I could give a rats ass! :devil:

02-08-2013, 02:42 AM
As long as it doesn't effect me, I could give a rats ass! :devil:

You will years later when they try to say they cant pay you at 100% promised because the money coming in was cut off.

02-08-2013, 06:25 PM
As long as it doesn't effect me, I could give a rats ass! :devil:

You will years later when they try to say they cant pay you at 100% promised because the money coming in was cut off.


You know the poster with the dancing penis. Hope he is so trite and enjoys his dancing penis up a rats ass when as you say his Retirement Funds are cut off or reduced because FRS is underfunded. That all will come down after the 3% becomes 6% to FRS for 10 years and then you are told its broke. Got anymore dancing penis's up your sleeve. PS Here is a dancing mouth for your dancing penis!!! :lol:

02-09-2013, 12:47 AM
I only care if it effects me! I don't care about any of you low lifes! :devil: :devil: :devil: :devil: :devil: :devil: :devil:

02-09-2013, 04:39 AM
The investment plan at 29 yrs months is looking better and better.

02-09-2013, 10:37 AM
The sooner this is implemented the better. Now people can work however many years they want, take their money with them and retire. They also control their own investments. The state should get out of the pension and homeowners' insurance businesses.

02-09-2013, 04:02 PM
The sooner this is implemented the better. Now people can work however many years they want, take their money with them and retire. They also control their own investments. The state should get out of the pension and homeowners' insurance businesses.

:lol: - Now the state is paying less in the investment plan than defined benefit % due to some loophole after that 3% ruling and you are take a big hit on the investment plan money if you arent 62 regardless if you have reached 25 or 30 years unlike defined benefit. Rick Scott must love you guys.

02-09-2013, 08:07 PM
Agreed. Don't think for a second that dirty **** scott is doing anything that will make your life better. His only goal is to shit over all of us, make himself look as good as he can. We must all get energized to defeat this ******* next year or we are all screwed. Defeat the Geek in 2014!

02-10-2013, 01:55 AM
I think that Gov. Scott as well as the Republicans in the Legislature are right on the money. The days of a defined pension are over. We should be more like the private sector. They did away with a defined pension plan long time ago. It is a luxury that the taxpayers in the state of Florida can no longer afford.

02-10-2013, 03:52 AM
I think that Gov. Scott as well as the Republicans in the Legislature are right on the money. The days of a defined pension are over. We should be more like the private sector. They did away with a defined pension plan long time ago. It is a luxury that the taxpayers in the state of Florida can no longer afford.

:lol: Yep and now over half dont have nearly enough for retirement while Scott ran a company that fleeced hundreds of millions from medicare and he just takes the fifth a hundred times.