December 11, 2013: This
publication was written by members of Ballard Spahr's Public Finance
Department.
The Governor of Illinois last week signed into law
legislation involving significant overhauls to the state’s pension system. The
reform is intended to help stabilize both the pension system and the state's
financial health in light of unfunded state pension liabilities exceeding $100
billion, a recent charge of securities fraud by the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission for misleading pension disclosures, and the lowest credit
rating of all 50 states.
Under the new law, which takes effect June 1, 2014, Illinois
hopes to reach fully funded status in 30 years by cutting benefits and adding
supplemental state contributions to the required state annual payments. The
state’s pension plans are currently only 39.3 percent funded. State annual
contributions have risen steadily over the past four years, consuming 20
percent of the state’s budget in fiscal year 2014—up from only 12 percent of
the state’s budget in fiscal year 2010.
The reform program implements a new funding schedule that
would raise the contribution percentage to 26 percent by fiscal year 2045 and
cut approximately $160 billion from state payments owed to the pension system.
The changes in the funding schedule also are expected to eliminate
approximately $21 billion from the state’s unfunded liability. Changes to the
pension benefits include lowering annual increases in pensions to retired
individuals and basing the pension benefits on the number of years worked.
While the overhaul plan passed the Illinois General Assembly
with bipartisan approval, it nevertheless has critics from both parties. Some
argue that the plan’s deep cuts into retiree and union benefits went too far;
others argue the overhaul does not go far enough to truly repair the pension
system and Illinois’ finances. A coalition of unions opposed to the bill is
expected to file suit in state court challenging the law’s constitutionality,
and it is likely that the courts will have to decide whether the law stands.
The new law also failed to address the critical need to shore up distressed
local pension trusts, including Chicago’s, which was recently reported to be
only 35.2 percent funded.
Illinois follows in the footsteps of several other states
implementing pension reform, most recently Rhode Island. It remains to be seen
whether Illinois’ overhaul will be enough to set the state’s pension system
back on sound financial ground and improve the state’s credit rating and market
spreads.
If you have questions about the new Illinois pension reform
law or want more information, please contact William C. Rhodes at 215.864.8534
or rhodes@ballardspahr.com, Kimberly D. Magrini at 215.864.8365 or
magrinik@ballardspahr.com, or any other member of Ballard Spahr’s Public
Finance Department.
WILLIAM C. RHODES, TEL 215.864.8534, rhodes@ballardspahr.com
KIMBERLY D. MAGRINI, TEL 215.864.8365, magrinik@ballardspahr.com
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