Pension Crisis Drains Philadelphia Schools of Cash
It doesn't get better from here
HARRISBURG — As the Philadelphia School District scrambles to come up with enough cash to open for students in September, a new report suggests the city's school funding crisis is on par with municipal issues in Detroit, Chicago and elsewhere.
At the heart of it all: pensions.
Payments to retired teachers and public employees are a growing threat to government budgets everywhere, and it is no different in Philadelphia. A new report from the Thomas Fordham Institute, a conservative education nonprofit, estimates the district's total retirement costs will balloon from $73 million in 2011 to $349 million by 2020.
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