Public Employee Unions Rule California
Expect more strikes, fewer government services, and more tax increases to pay for pension obligations.

One official remarked years ago that his county essentially was a pension provider that offered a few public services on the side. It was a snarky reminder that public-employee compensation—especially those exorbitant pensions paid at relatively young ages—consumed the bulk of municipal budgets. It's the tail wagging the dog.
The same dynamic is at work at the state level. State Sen. Steve Glazer (D–Orinda) last month made waves for a column he penned in The Los Angeles Times. Commenting on the recently passed $310-billion budget that ramps up funding for all the usual progressive priorities, he dared to say what everyone in Sacramento knows—even if saying so breaks social taboos.
"(W)e've already spent billions of dollars on the same problems—with very little to show for it," he wrote. "Our failures are evidence that good intentions and lots of money are not enough to fix what ails the Golden State. To make our progressive beliefs mean anything, the Legislature must ensure that the money we spend is actually improving the lives of the people we say we are committed to helping."
His "solutions" aren't significant enough to mention in detail, but Glazer made reference to "special interest demands" and legislators "caving in to the unions." That at least acknowledges the proverbial elephant in the room. Public employee unions exert excessive influence and capture the bulk of new spending for themselves. It's not only a Democratic problem. The state GOP is beholden to the biggest offenders (police and firefighters' unions).
This session, Assemblyman Heath Flora (R–Modesto) authored Assembly Bill 1254, which would grant automatic pay raises forever to state firefighters to bring their current average compensation ($200,000 to $253,000 a year) up to the rates of better-compensated municipal firefighters, which pay 15% to 40% more. This Editorial Board referred to the bill as "hands down the most irresponsible union-giveaway proposal this year."
If you wonder why there's never enough money and why lawmakers always look for new ways to raise taxes, then take a look at the Transparent California website, which details state and local compensation packages. For instance, I count more than 200 California Highway Patrol employees who in 2022 earned above $400,000 in total compensation, with the top earner receiving $777,000.
This year, California faced a $32-billion deficit, which lawmakers closed through kick-the-can accounting gimmicks and some cuts to the climate-change spending bonanza. Public employees were spared any pain and some bargaining units received pay bumps even though there's no guarantee we'll soon be back in black. Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic supermajorities managed to avoid tough choices.
In 2012, California faced similarly sized deficits. The budget drama, coupled with news reports of struggling pension systems and outrageous pension benefits, sparked a pension-reform movement. Voters in Democratic-dominant San Jose overwhelmingly approved a pension-reform ballot measure 2012, which later was thrown out by the courts. A union-friendly state agency (the Public Employment Relations Board) and courts also derailed a 2012 reform measure in San Diego.
Despite those setbacks, the measures highlighted public support for reining in out-of-control pension obligations that sap budgets and enrich politically powerful union members. As part of his budget, then-Gov. Jerry Brown spearheaded and signed a modest (but useful) pension-reform law known as the Public Employees' Pension Reform Act (PEPRA). It went into effect in 2013. Since then, the state has veered even further left and no one even bothers anymore.
In her recent Orange County Register column spotlighting one Los Angeles fire captain who earned $510,000 in overtime last year (for total compensation of $699,000), Teri Sforza detailed the shocking setbacks we've seen since the 2012. She focused on overtime: "In 2012, only 213 city workers earned overtime of at least $100,000. Last year, 3,680 did. … In 2012, 3,814 city workers earned at least $50,000 in overtime. Last year, 16,699 did."
The overtime system seems designed to boost pay. And, of course, public employee pay and pension payouts have continued on an upward trajectory in the past 11 years. But it's never enough. Lately, we're seeing an emboldened public employee union effort that has led Los Angeles city workers to recently go on strike. Last month, the same agency (PERB) that largely killed off the San Diego pension measure has gutted San Francisco's charter provisions forbidding public employees from going on strike.
Mission Local noted that such provisions were "enacted following chaotic 1970s-era public employee walkouts." Hey, the nation is enduring Jimmy Carter-style inflation, so why not throw bouts of labor unrest into the mix just for nostalgia's sake? And everyone is getting in on the action, as highly paid prison doctors and psychiatrists authorized a strike early this month.
Let's just admit to reality: Taxpayers actually work for our public employees rather than the reverse. As long as that's the case, public services will never improve and your tax burden will only increase.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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It's very unfortunate...but the voters refuse to hold the officials accountable. You'd think the degradation of life in SF and LA would make some people start to ask questions, but they seem more afraid of being viewed as being "mean" than actually fixing a problem.
To be fair there IS no solution to the problems of big cities or being held hostage by public worker unions, unless you think the dinosaurs could have saved themselves from extinction; or that the politicians will commit honorable political seppuku, ending their careers and returning to writing wills and negotiating divorces for a living. As long as politicians can't get elected in places like California without the support of public worker unions, there is absolutely no incentive for them to get out of bed with the unions ... full stop.
I'd be on board with "If you work for the government, you do not get to vote" personally.
Disenfranchise the entire military and all police officers. Also anyone working for a government contractor.
I think you should think this through more.
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The solution is to BAN unions of government employees. Unlike private sector unions, NEITHER side of the negotiation table has any incentive to listen to those that actually have to pay the bills. If customers don't want to pay for UPS driver's contracts, they can use FedEx, or vice versa. There is no equivalent option for government employees. Even if private companies offer an alternative to the "service", the taxpayer has to pay for the government provider.
Everyone should be allowed to join a public sector union. If they work for the state, they have a right to unionize. If they don't work for the state, once they join a public sector union, they will have a right to a paycheck, job performance optional, but the government must pay all union members. Sounds like the very definition of a self-licking ice cream cone (because too many people still reject the notion of a perpetual motion machine). So far - so far - the only working example of a perpetual motion machine is the printing press located in the basement of the Department of the Treasury, and there are a few people who suspect that while it appears to be running at an ever increasing speed, it cannot do so "forever". The sign above the door to the room where the perpetual motion money printing press is currently humming away reads: ""Après moi, le déluge".
As to the problem of less than 40% of children in public schools, carefully tutored and mentored by members of the public sector teachers unions, not meeting grade level standards for literacy or numeracy, the solution is painfully simple: Change the damn standards! All children, especially some children, are above average if the "average" can be engineered low enough. And for Pete's sake, don't acknowledge the pesky elephant in the corner that bitter clingers keep pointing to.
Government employees are the new nobility. The rest of us are just serfs.
The voters in CA refuse to even ask to establish a "safe word" in their relationship with the Dem party, the Unions who run that party and the State Government which bends to the will of those unions.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12420793/Trump-CANCELS-major-news-conference-New-Jersey-golf-club-present-evidence-exonerating-fourth-indictment-Georgia-election-fraud-charges-citing-lawyers.html
Trump CANCELS 'major news conference' at his New Jersey golf club to present evidence 'exonerating' him after fourth indictment on Georgia election fraud charges, citing his lawyers
Riiiiight...
Due to lawyers telling him to file the documents to the court first… it helps to read the entire story.
Amazing how quickly you dismissed photos yesterday of J6 prisoner abuses based on source yet you post Daily Mail long known for reporting issues without question or thought.
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Go easy on the weak little pussy. He’s got ‘wet brain’. And he was a dumbass prior to that.
Posting your comment to a COMPLETELY UNRELATED article turns more people off from your position than it attracts. The validity, or lack thereof, of you position is irrelevant to that fact.
Democracy stops working the moment the people realize they can vote themselves money from the public purse.
Actually, democracy stops "working" when the democrats run out of other peoples' money to spend.
Like Trump did when he signed himself a massive tax cut.
How did he sign himself a tax cut, Pluggo.
Only Democrats hate it when government allows people to keep more of the money they earn.
To a CA Democrat, the only people who ever earned anything are currently waiting in line at a needle exchange in the Tenderloin or Venice Beach. Everyone else is some degree of "parasite" who still owes reparations to someone in a victim class somewhere (specifics TBD, as if they matter anyway).
Everything you say is completely 100% true, but I don't feel sorry for you bro, not even one iota.
You could move tomorrow, the day after that, or the day after that and still do this job if you really wanted to, bit you won't for the very simple and rather obvious reason that you DON'T want to.
You're the west coast version of Park Slope Welchie Boy: your complaints are 90% bullshit, and for whatever weird personal reasons you have, the thought of living somewhere not dominated by the far left is more frightening to you than spending the rest of your life getting shit on with high crime, $5 a gallon gasoline, and a nearly 50% tax burden.
In his defense. not that I don't agree with some of your sentiments, if you have a family, just moving is a lot more difficult than many realize. If you're single, then yes, it is usually quite doable.
Seems like getting your kids out of those shit holes would be even more important than if you were single.
Seriously.
Not living in California only helps a little. Joe Biden and the Democrats in Congress gave cities $86 billion to bailout their pensions. In fact, almost the entire $1.9 trillion "infrastructure" bill was a bailout to blue states.
The catch with Southern CA is that the misery is 100% manufactured. This State has one of the greatest natural living environments on the planet, and was a great place to be until the majority of the local electorate got themselves sold on a bill of goods and bought into supporting an agenda of governance that consists almost entirely of ideas which produce the near opposite of their intended result when mixed with reality. I've seen no indication to prove that the actual objective of "progressivism" is to amplify inequality and create a permanent underclass of people conditioned to accept complete dependence on the government for nearly every necessity of life; all I know is that if that were their actual purpose, there's virtually nothing about their policy agenda which would need to be modified to ensure that such a society eventually takes shape.
If we keep reluctantly voting for democrats to return to normal, maybe things will change.
this is the essence of bidenomics
The pension problem would appear worse if not for the fact that these political entities consistently overestimate the returns they will get in the market, so as to lower the amount of contributions they need to make now. This too will exacerbate the problem.
https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
CA wasn't really screwed until moonbeam signed the Dills act; presto!
There is one truly evil pile of shit at the bottom of this and his name is Jerry Brown.
Fuck you with a running, rusty chain saw, Jerry; we did not know the extent of the damage you caused CA, all to buy some votes with taxpayer money. In a just world, you'd be rotting in jail.
Among my Democrat acquaintances, the dissatisfaction with Biden and the radical Dem leadership is growing. However, in a purple area like where I live, their refrain is "Well, we don't like it but we can't rock the boat and let the Republicans win." Now, if you live in a one-party state, you might be able to convince your Dem friends to push for some sort of "Reform Democrat" caucus and start to roll back the nonsense without them thinking it will empower those "evil" Republicans.
The government will kick the can down the block one last time, at which point the pension funds will go bankrupt, the retired public workers will scream horribly, the currently employed public workers will go on strike demanding that the pension funds be fixed, but there won't be any money to fix it with. Then the state will default, the Federal government will bail California out and the rest of the country will rebel or, more likely, sit back and take it one more time.
Well, Chicago, LA , NYC and other blue areas prove their residents are happy with the status quo and have no need for "reform" Democrats. They overwhelmingly prefer living in dysfunctional, quasi socialist, nanny states over safe, meritocratic, rule of law communities with personal freedom AND personal responsibility. They got what they chose.
In all of the one-party states along the west coast, the Dems who are dissatisfied mostly hate that the "progressive" agenda isn't getting enough play and that the recent one-day strike by the 3600 workers who made 100k in just overtime pay last year is "a good start".
They're also the ones who truly believe that homelessness is first an foremost an issue of housing costs, but that allowing "the builders' solution" of increasing housing supply to a level that even approaches the level of actual need is the last thing that should be done.
In this, California is behind the curve and a bunch of pikers. If you want to see what a state ruled by public employee unions looks like, look no further than the People's Socialist Democratic Republic of Illinois.
It's guaranteed in our state constitution. Check and Mate.
20 year old insights from Reason don't feel that exciting, even if they're true.
Well, we all saw how that last tax revolt in California worked out. Politicians are experts at waiting until the rebels get tired of revolting and then picking back up again where they left off.
"Our failures are evidence that good intentions
I'm a hard-liner on this. I'm really tired of the "good intentions" moniker applied to far-left politics. If we can't apply that moniker to conservative, libertarian or right-leaning politics in general (looking at you, Reason as you've repeatedly used the 'good intentions' moniker when criticizing the left) then we should stop applying it to the left while tens of thousands live in squalid conditions and crime run rampant and its victims are openly mocked by the architects of these city-scapes.
"One of the great mistakes is to judge policies and programs by their intentions rather than their results.” - Milton Friedman
One of the greatest mistakes is to think that politicians care about results or are acting out of ignorance when they implement ineffective or failing policies.
Well, they ARE acting out of ignorance when they act. ALL of us are acting out of ignorance all the time. That's why government action should be discouraged as much as possible by default. Central planners never have - and never CAN have - as much information as the millions of people making independent decisions throughout the system constantly; so central planners can never do as good a job at planning as the unplanned system can do. That fact does not rule out malicious intent by the politicians, or self-interest in part of the results of their actions; but it does tend to rule out good intentions as a basic principle.
You are missing the point.
Saying that "Central planners never have – and never CAN have – as much information as the millions of people making independent decisions" implies incorrectly that politicians engage in central planning.
They are not. Politicians aren't trying to plan the economy. Politicians aren't concerned with "doing as good a job planning as the unplanned systems do".
Politicians are trying to institute policies that get them reelected, nothing more. The priorities there are paying off political allies and special interest groups, while punishing opponents. For example, destroying the livelihood of millions of middle class families and small businesses in California is neither a mistake nor malicious, it is rational self-interest by California politicians
What politicians are engaging simply has nothing to do with central planning, because it has totally different objectives and results in totally different policies.
And when the policies don't work the excuse is that not enough money was spent.
Better Public Unions ruling California than glibertarians
Better no one RULING California than either Public Unions or glibertarians. It's the RULING that is causing the problems, not who happens to be in power at the moment.
Fuck off and die, asshole; make the world a better place.
"Public Employee Unions Rule California"
Of course they do. That's what socialism is all about. No need to *EARN* anything the goal is to scream for armed-theft. Whichever [WE] mob can STEAL the most wins!
And that is exactly why every communist and socialist system ends in disaster. Armed-theft doesn't make sh*t.
Well, it may be what socialism is intended to be about. In the real world, socialism is about trade and crafts people mindlessly following the union leadership who got their leadership positions as a result of ruthlessly clawing their way into power while sending potential competitors to die in the gulags.
I consider mindlessly laboring ones trade and crafts for the ‘gun’ toting leader to be slavery or armed-theft. The very difference between justly earning and criminally taking lies in that 'gun-force' intimidation.
There are no unions under socialism.
HIlarious California is one of the world centers of capitalism. 2 of the top 4, 3 of the top 11, 4 of the top 20, and 6 of the top 26 corporations in the world are based in California. California has more billionaires than any other state (New York is second) and more than any foreign COUNTRY other than China (and it isn't clear that the Chinese billionaires have effective control of all of their assets).
You may return to reality at any time.
So just like Detroit before it's falter.
Please keep it in CA.
How many billionaires are planning on leaving or, at least, changing their official state of residence to another state?
California is full of "fascist-style capitalism".
California does not have free market capitalism, which is what we usually mean when we talk about "capitalism".
Of course, socialists like to equivocate about that.
The problem for California is that the billionaires like Oprah tend to make sure they don't live in California on a full time basis and are residents of states like Florida or Tennessee or Wyoming. States that don't have income taxes. Then they can support policies they don't pay for.
Can we declare non profits or ngos that receive federal and state grant funding salaries government? How do NGO jobs count on new “jobs” statistics? Jared McDreamy LOVES NGOs. (Doing a wonderful job of “SOLVING” homelessness, drug addiction and crime).
Anyway, the Reason/Cato Soho forum assured listening taxpayers that Californians vote for socialism because of conservative Republicans mean attitudes in California. The only way to abolish or seriously curb a welfare socialist state is to add public unions and around five hundred million people to it- Reason Cato Soho
"Can we declare non profits or ngos that receive federal and state grant funding salaries government? "
No. Besides, for profit contractors get much more money. Defense contractors alone get over $400 billlion a year in the US. The US used to build a lot of its ships in government owned and operated shipyards, and a lot of its rifles in government owned and operated armories. But Robert McNamara decided that contractors were cheaper.
"Californians vote for socialism"
See my other comment about how hilarious it is to call California socialist.
See reality about how hilarious it is to call California the capitalist state of the nation. The CCP also has billionaires as you so point out. All of which funded by crony socialism.
But one thing you've got right; CA is about just like the CCP at this point in time and will soon out-do the CCP.
"...See my other comment about how hilarious it is to call California socialist..."
All of your comments are hilarious, but not for the reason you'd hope; such imbecility is amusing.
>>It's not only a Democratic problem. The state GOP is beholden to the biggest offenders (police and firefighters' unions).
lol bowf sidezing California is ridiculous. on an aside I was out there earlier this week for a Gigantes game and some golf with my pops. It would cost >$80 to fill up my Mustang. No fucking way, despite how beautiful it is where he lives
Voting for democrats results in democrat policies.
whodathunkit?
California won't be able to pay its public sector pensions. In fact, the death spiral is accelerating with people leaving the state over poor conditions and high taxes.
The only question at this point is how much federal tax payers will be on the hook for the promises California made to its public sector employees.
The very reason Democrats want their ideology federally implemented. “National” socialism. Conquer and Consume until there’s nothing left.
One of the wisest things I’ve ever seen done was letting Detroit eat itself into shambles. As it should be with CA. The biggest concern is whether those emigrants will learn anything or will they just keep conquering and consuming other States.
I don't see how it could be a "concern" if the conclusion is foregone. No, they won't have learned anything. Whether they will conquer or not depends on whether their numbers are diluted during the emigration or they concentrate in the next region in sufficient numbers.
The federal government been bailing out blue states since Bidenomics- otherwise called Covid. It’s still not enough. Eventually, San Diego, LA, San Francisco and San Jose (depending on the city pension obligations) will go into bankruptcy and muni bond holders will take a hit. If Democrats keep winning federal elections, they’ll keep the bailouts flowing in the form of grants and mandatory Section 8 housing vouchers which get transferred back to apartment investors building the high density “affordable” crap. Same investors run all the government pensions, it’s all federal taxpayers money in the end. Ponzi scheme
All of it.
Getting in bed with public sector unions is inevitable when you have a legal framework like California's. That's not a reflection of GOP ideology or ideological failures. The only other option the GOP has is to leave California altogether.
This problem cannot be fixed through voting or political parties. It will be fixed either through bankruptcy, SCOTUS intervention, secession, or collapse of the US as a whole.
Leaving California altogether may not be avoidable. The GOP has been increasingly unable to maintain funding of several state party apparatuses lately, described as "hollowing out."
And once the GOP stops being politically relevant by sticking to some imaginary core ideology, it will simply be replaced by another political party.
The US political system is set up to have two parties that cluster around the median voter. What you see the GOP and the Democrats do, across the US and in every state, reflects simply the median voter in that state.
The problem isn't GOP party ideology, the problem is the median American voter.
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Reason making excuses for Gov. Newsom already? Do they know he is going to run against Biden or something? The Governor runs California, he uses the Unions for power and rewards them for that support. You can't separate the two, that is not how Democratic politics works.
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Public employees should all get the same compensation as jurors - hard stop.
Don't call the police when your house gets burglarized. There won't be any to respond. In fact, nobody will pick up the phone when you call 911 for anything. And enjoy having gangs of teenagers who don't have schools to go to running unsupervised around your neighborhood, unemployable and uninterested in whether your property is yours or theirs.
They’re already not there to respond. All they do is file a report.
And there are plenty of gangs of teenagers already, even though they have free public schools they should be going to.
Oh no. I won't have the police report to give to my insurance company.
Oh no. I won't have anyone to show up and shoot my dog.
Oh no. I won't have anyone to pull me over and charge me a going a little bit to fast tax.
What are you calling the police for? To go ROB your rich neighbor for you or to stop your kind of scum from robbing what you rightfully earned. Believe it or not there is a difference.
I assume this is sarcasm.
In case it is not: this is the current state of police and education in much of America.
The solution is to privatize security and education. That also solves the public sector pension problem.
There no longer is a thing that used to be called sarcasm.
Your wildest attempt at sarcasm is merely prophecy.
Public employees unions should not be allowed to make political contributions. If someone could find a constitutional way to make this happen, you could solve half the problem. Alternatively, the public unions should negotiate with their employers - the taxpayers. Let the people who actually have skin in the game handle the negotiations. I'd love to see a group of parents across the table from the teacher's union.
Actually it was Citizens United that ALLOWED public employee unions to engage in unrestricted political activity including direct contributions from union treasuries. Until the rogue Supreme Court came down with that horrible decision, they could only communicate with their own members. They had to establish separate political action committees that were arms length away. Repeal Citizens United!
Citizens United was about a political non-profit making a film critical of Hillary Clinton. It had nothing to do with "public employee unions". And it was decided correctly.
The problem here is that public sector unions are intrinsically corrupt and should be outlawed, like they are in many modern democracies.
Expect more shitlib californians to move to Texas and recreate the same disaster.
shhhhhhhhhhh
Didn't Zach Weismeuller write an article about escaping California and being really happy with the low taxes, low regulation, low cost of living, low crime, low homelessness, low needles and poop on the street, but was disappointed that the normies at the brew-pup didn't share his erudite, progressive, forward thinking opinions on politics?
Sort of like that Feminist writer who complained that all the men she was attracted to: treated her with respect, stayed in shape, held doors open for her, carried heavy packages for her, etc., had the wrong political opinions...
California is far from the worst in terms of funding its public pensions. The most underfunded pensions are in Connecticut, Mississippi, New Jersey, Illinois, Kentucky and South Carolina, with Kentucky and Illinois at the bottom. The District of Columbia and Washington State are actually overfunded, and Iowa, Tennessee, New York, Nebraska, Wisconsin and South Dakota are close to being fully funded. You will note a mix of red and blue states in both lists; and also that Governors who had years to fix the underfunding problem are running for President.
As you can see from this most recent report, California is actually about average compared to other states:
https://equable.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/State-of-Pensions-2022_Year-End-Update_Jan-2023.pdf
This is typical bashing of blue state governments that is unjustified. Bash New Jersey, Connecticut, and Illinois -- they deserve it. But you are a hypocrite if you don't also bash Kentucky, South Carolina, and Mississippi at the same time. And California has a lot more resources to eventually pay those pensions than those three deep red states have.
Here in New York we are well funded not in spire of the public employee unions but because of them. They have the power to destroy the political career of any politician who dares to suggest stealing money that should be earmarked for pensions, which has been done all over the US to pay for tax cuts and popular spending programs. Nobody in either party dares cross them. California would be better off if the unions had such power. Ditto Kentucky, Mississippi, and South Carolina.
Unfortunatly public employee unions don't do a particularly good job at representing their employees in other respects. Public employee salaries are WAY below comparable positions in the private sector. Those listed states that have underfunded pensions deliberately underpay employees but dangle the possibilty of a pension decades in the future to keep them from making the economically sensible decision to move to the private sector. Except that you can't blame the unions for all this because Mississippi, Kentucky, and South Carolina are right to work states with no public employee unions.
Hint: public sector salaries (and pensions) are much, much higher in California, Illinois, New York, etc. than in Kentucky, Mississippi and South Carolina. You're looking at funding percentages and not the total overhang in dollars...
Funny though, Illinois is ruled by the public employee unions (hell, they even chose/backed the governor), and ranks at the bottom for pension funding. Dead last, at the fucking bottom. So bad, they've got the worst rating in the US by the financial groups. So, if public employee unions are so good, then how come the state most run by them, Illinois, is doing so poorly?
But they don't care about funding because they are guaranteed under the state constitution so even if the funds are bankrupt they will still be paid.
"As you can see from this most recent report"
Do you honestly think anyone here believes your leftard propaganda??
If we believed your 'studies' back in the 70s - global cooling, or I mean global warming, or I mean the weather changes killed the planet back in 1997. Nazi-Germany was the best nation ever and Venezuela is a utopian dream.
Your kind mills pure BS all the time.
In Connecticut it was Governor Ella Grasso, governor from 1975-80, who started the pension slide. Her first gambit was to change the years to retirement from, I believe, 15 to 20 years which lowered pension contributions to balance the budget. I lived in the state and don't remember if the decision was based on evidence or just her feelings. I suspect it was an easy way to help balance the budget before making necessary cuts.
The worst decision of JFK's presidency was allowing unions into the federal government.
That report says that California's pension liabilities are $274 billion. In fact, they seem to be closer to $1.5 trillion, and that doesn't even include healthcare and other liabilities.
But the solution is simple: pensions should be limited to a proportional payout from what the state pension plans actually have. So, if a state's pension plan is only 50% funded, pensions should be reduced to 50% of their nominal amount.
"California is far from the worst in terms of funding its public pensions..."
How much does cherry-picking pay where you live, lefty shit?
California and Texas have similar funding ratios for its public pensions. In fact, California is 1.1% better!
https://equable.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/State-of-Pensions-2022_Year-End-Update_Jan-2023.pdf
Maybe the goal of the USA wasn't to see how much 'public' government employees could make off the backs of their robbed-blind private sector employees. Did that ever even cross your mind?
Something about ending slavery in the US or something.
The numbers are b.s.
You, Mr. Greenhut, are a threat to Democracy! If government workers and pensioners, and government recipients outnumber and out vote private sector taxpayers, who's to say it's wrong if they clean their prey to the bone? Like wolves and sheep voting on dinner.
^THIS^. The very reason the only humanitarian asset a government has is to ensure Liberty and Justice for all. It should only act defensively (not aggressively/progressively). There's a 180-degree difference between a government that is the armed-robber and one that comes in the defense of someone getting armed-robbed.
Yes, well, if anybody in California actually gave a damn, an initiative would have been passed at some point in the last 30 years banning employee unions, or at least copying the Ohio model (banning public employee unions except for police and fire).
The biggest problem is the pensions, and the rules for earning them, and the ages for eligibility. Just put everyone on a 401k plan instead, with a 3% match like the plebes get.
Specifically reform pensions by initiative, the unions will use the same power with/over politicians they used to get the pensions to get something else just as expensive (more salary, more paid vacation, higher overtime rates, higher staffing levels, etc.).
Eliminate the unions by initiative, you cut out the cancer.
Or maybe "The biggest problem is" government retirement. As is the problem with healthcare, education, mortgage loans and everything else the government touches.
It's why I have to laugh every time people talk about our dedicated public servants, or ask us to shed a tear for our poor underappreciated police, firefighters and teachers. The first two are paid like royalty and retire early, often to work another high paying job and earn a second pension, and the third are paid well relative to their skills (at least in California), and get half the year off (averaging 180 work days). Yet housing development projects in some cities reserve below-market units for public servants.
There is an easy and obvious solution: only net taxpayers should get to vote on how the government's funds are spent. You can't let the recipients decide how much they are going to get. So instead of one vote per person, make it one voter per 10 thousand dollars in net taxes paid (actual income less direct government payments, not unquantifiable benefits like "access to roads" or "law enforcement" which rarely happens.)
Unfortunately, that ship sailed a long time ago.
"only net taxpayers should get to vote"
This assumes the USA is a pure democracy problem. It doesn't take into account the US Constitution never allowed 80%+ what this Nazi-Empire is illegally doing. In a sense; electing fraudsters and Hitler wanna-Be's to enforce that law is the problem but there shouldn't be any net taxpayers funding UN-Constitutional socialism.
Public pension funds should be defined contribution, not defined benefit, and based on salary before overtime.
The California taxpayers get the honor of paying bloated pensions to the state workers while most of those taxpayers do not even have a pension. Government does not earn profits so unions should have no place in government. This will probably not end well for the country when Democrat federal government will one day bail out the pensions.
The icing on the fecal cake is just how many of those pensioners are retiring out of state.
There are two classes of peoplein California: those voters who CARE about the future, and those who care only about their own vile selves.
There are only two options for the first-mentioned group: get REALLY vocal, noisey, active, and publicly MAD about what's happenong; leave the state.
For the other class, it would appear there is only one option, but that is an illusion. The apparent one option is to contine on the present course. BUT sooner or later (and later is coming ever sooner) the ship will hit the span and the whole schemozzel will collapse. Anyone who leaves prior to this event may be safe. Everyone else will go feed the fishies down there where the Titanic lurks and rots.
Given that US politics changes dramatically every few years, there is really no point for most people voting for the long term, even if they care about the long term.
Specifically, if I vote for for some policy that implies short term sacrifices on my part for long term improvements, that's a wasted vote, since under our current system, some politician is just going to swoop in 2-4 years and redirect funds to some useless pet project.
There is no way to fix this; this is how politics operates. All you can do is limit the damage by limiting the size of government as the Founders did. Unfortunately, their form of limited government has been undermined and destroyed over a century of progressivism.
It would be nice if Reason could find another columnist who writes about another state, and maybe alternate from time to time. Always printing this one guy's column just feeds into the typical Reason commenter's mindset of California-bashing at every turn. There are 49 other states with bad zoning laws, government abuse, waste and fraud. Time to highlight those as much as Reason loves to bash California (and no, I don't live there).
Well, all the focus from all the media are on the big four: New York, California, Texas, and Florida.
The problem with California is that so many of the problems are so egregious that it would look silly to point elsewhere. Do you think that saying Chicago pays $57k/year for firefighters is too much when San Francisco is paying between twice and ten times that depending on various sources?
What makes California such a ripe target is the waves of smug that waft eastwards. It's the smug lefties who talk down to the "flyover country" while denying the epic levels of crime, homelessness and income inequality in their own backyard that drives the attention.
Just one more reason, as if any more were needed, to outlaw all labor unions including political parties.
Article: "Let's just admit to reality: Taxpayers actually work for our public employees rather than the reverse. As long as that's the case, public services will never improve and your tax burden will only increase."
I wonder if Karl Marx discussed this in one of his books. Is this one of his "inevitable laws of history"?
Performative bitching from a guy who never did anything that might have actually caused thing to be otherwise.
Actually, the problem IS solvable. It will just take a generation. But it will also take cooperation from two sides of the issue that are equally ignorant. One side wants to buy the unions off and the other side wants to whine about how horrible government is.
The path to solve the issue is to increase the employer and employee contribution to retirement to the point where it covers the cost. This will impact public safety the most because retirement at age 50 or 55 is insane. If you want to do that, contribute 1/3 of your salary. Public safety is the major culprit, but the system also gets screwed by overtime and health disabilities. Much of the overtime is organized to peak salaries and much of it comes from over staffing disaster events, especially with management that is not fighting the wildfire at all but rather dining on free food and "keeping an eye" on the fire. Then there is the mystery back, foot or heart problem that arises about a year before planned retirement. Firemen pay attention.
The point is that cleaning up the process could help a lot.
"is to increase the employer and employee contribution to retirement"
Correctly stated, "to increase the SLAVERY" ... It never seems to amaze me how the left has brainwashed so many to think "armed-robbery" (by gov-gun forces) is just 'charity' or some kind of 'contribution'.
Hand over that wallet!!!!! Thanks for your contribution. /s
The public employee labor unions are the MAJOR funder of most local CA politicians (the ones that get elected). Then the unions in essence "negotiate" with themselves for more pay and benefits.
That's not gonna change. CA IS doomed.
Learn do live with it. Or leave (the smart choice).
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