How San Jose Took on the Unions and Saved Millions Through Pension Reform
Q&A with Former City Councilman Pete Constant.
"If a government can't provide the core basic services, it's failed in it's mission," says Pete Constant, a former member of the San Jose City Council who advocated for sweeping pension reform. "Our city had been in many years of budget deficits and there were many more coming in the future. And I just thought the financial decisions had been terribly made."
Constant became involved in city politics after an injury ended his 14-year career with the San Jose Police Department. Once in office, he found that San Jose's pension liabilities were rapidly devouring the city budget. "In a 10 year period from the year 2001 to the year 2011, the city of San Jose's pension costs rose from [approximately] $72 million a year to $245 million dollars a year," Constant explained. "We really had just one area to look at."
The financial situation in San Jose became so dire that officials had to slash city employee salaries and shut down brand new public facilities—including a police subdivision and four libraries—because they did not have the money to staff and operate the buildings. But these cuts weren't enough to get San Jose's massive debt problem under control, so members of the city council began looking at pension reform measures to contain rising costs.
The result of these efforts was Measure B, which reduced retirement benefits for new city employees and required current employees to either contribute more of their paychecks toward their retirement benefits or agree to receive reduced benefits in the future.
The 2012 ballot measure passed with 69 percent of the vote, but was immediately met with legal challenges from labor groups who claimed the law violated previous rulings that prohibit the reduction of active government workers' benefits. In 2013, a Santa Clara Superior Court judge struck down some provisions of the reform measure. Yet enough of the law was left intact to realize significant savings for the city, Constant says.
"In just implementing the new tier for new employees the city is already saving over $20 million per year," he says. "We've been able to open every one of those closed libraries. We've been able to start repairing our streets. We've been able to do a number of things that we weren't able to do just two short years ago."
San Jose's experience with pension reform offers other financially stressed cities a model for change. But before other municipalities tackle reshaping retirement benefits, Constant advises them to educate themselves about the problem to better communicate with constituents. "We had to do a lot of education," Constant says. "But once we were able to bring it down to an understandable level and talk to people, the people really began to get it."
About 10 minutes.
Produced by Alexis Garcia. Camera by Alex Manning and Paul Detrick. Music by Podington Bear.
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Pension contributions going from $72m a year to $240m a year is called "the workin' man getting ahead".
And an arm and a leg too.
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BTW, those "complications" in the pension system are the point. Complicated methods of calculating costs (or fees) obscure the connections between where money is going and how it's being used.
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And this survey is being reported in the media.
"let subsidized manufacturers around the globe sell here in America while good American jobs get shipped overseas."
Don't you just hate that X gov't is paying part of the cost for your shirts? Don't you wish you could spend 5X the amount so some kid in LA gets a 'living wage'?
I can remember getting calls back in VA during the McAuliffe/Cooch gubernatorial campaign. The game for me was less "identify which campaign is conducting this push-poll" and more "how can I ask really uncomfortable questions of the pollster about the guy they are clearly working for."
And this survey is being reported in the media.
It just came through on the fax machine, what're they supposed to do with it?
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Good interview. I'd vote for this guy.
On topic, if this Constant guy actually was putting what I'm sure was a sizeable pension/disability at risk in the name of sane reform, then good on him for that. Now all those shot dogs and violated rights that GOT him his pension are a whole other matter...
What I took away from the interview is that the public sector unions will never be on board for effective pension changes. Even if you tell them that they are at risk, too, if the system blows up because it wasn't reformed.
So you have to consider them adversaries from the start and go directly to the voters, those people in the community who, if they truly knew what a government 'defined benefit' pension is, would go ballistic.
This is why I always enjoy seeing Union busting at work. They always seem to evolve into bullying parasitic thugs.
If you have agreed to a price for something, and, later the other party comes back and says: "I just don't have the money." Whose fault is that?
That's the problem with most of the "solutions" to pension underfunding - it is the ones who have no role in the money not being properly allocated that are expected to take the hit.
Before you condemn "public employees" for their pensions, ask yourself, honestly, have you ever, or would you, tell your employer that a raise, or benefit increase, offered to you, is just too much for them to afford - that it would be greedy of you to accept?
And, as an aside; the negotiations between public employee unions and the government entities aren't a matter of "we will give you all you want in exchange for campaign contributions" - that is a huge straw man.
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Gee, think how much money they would have saved if they had done what really SHOULD be done; Outlawed public employee unions and given the unions officials a 15 minute head start.
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We had a state-wide vote on the provisions of Measure-B, and it failed.
San Jose's - and CA's - only hope of staying afloat is the Bankruptcy Court (yes, I know a state can't enter BK, but the pension system can only be saved if the various municipal entities can shake off the tyranny of CalPers and CalSTRs), and hope they get a judge more in tune with the Detroit decision.
I would dearly love to see some judge injunct a finance czar for California just as Kamala Harris assumes the throne in Sacramento.
You know moonbeam cruised to a victory without so much as a campaign on the strength of the 'balanced budget', right? And it's no more 'balanced' than if you owed several mil, but managed to make the minimum monthly payment on your credit card balance.
So there's really not much pressure for what you mention outside of the guy who ran the full-page ads last summer and autumn. Try as I might, I couldn't get anyone at reason interested is the series.
California, the new Greece, though they have some high earning entities that may decide to skip town if they go full retard.
It will be interesting if outfits like Goog, tell them to fuck off.I hope so as a small owner of Goog, but Goog is now into the crony thing.
Goog has graduated into the crony bunch, fuck them.
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