Teachers’ Pensions: Who’s Really Paying?

by News on October 14, 2011

in featured, Government Employee Unions, Pensions, State and Local, Union Contracting Privileges

By Ted Dabrowski and Michael Wille/Illinois Policy Institute

Public employee unions balked at pension reform when it was introduced this spring because they claim government workers already have “paid their fair share” by kicking in “8 percent, 9 percent or more from each paycheck” to their retirement funds.

But when it comes to public school teachers in Illinois, paying their own way to retirement isn’t the norm.

An analysis by the Illinois Policy Institute of data from the Teachers’ Retirement System, the Illinois State Board of Education and hundreds of teacher contracts found that in nearly two-thirds of districts across the state, teachers don’t contribute the full “employee share” toward their pensions. In fact, most of these districts don’t require their teachers to contribute anything toward their own retirement. Instead, the contributions are paid for or “picked up” by school districts – and by extension, local taxpayers. During the 2009-10 school year alone, this little-known perk cost taxpayers more than $430 million. This subsidy is on top of what the state – and by extension, state taxpayers – pay into the teachers’ retirement funds through district-paid employer contributions and state funding. To give a recent example, in 2010, the state paid more than $2.2 billion toward TRS to cover the “employer share” of the benefits.

http://illinoispolicy.org/news/article.asp?ArticleSource=4457

Leave a Comment

Previous post: UPDATE 2-Air Canada goes on offensive vs cabin crew union

Next post: