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Civic Committee: Ill. pension system 'unfixable'

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Illinois' public-employee pensions system is so far in debt that it is "unfixable," an influential business group said Wednesday.

The Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago told its members in a memo that even current retirees' benefits must be cut and other drastic action taken to prevent pension-program bankruptcy, the memo said.

"The pension crisis has grown so severe that it is now unfixable," former state attorney general Tyrone Fahner, the committee's president, wrote. "We do not make that statement lightly. It is an honest statement that no one — not our legislators, nor our governor, nor labor leaders — is willing to say publicly."

The memo said workers putting money into the retirement accounts will never see the payback they were promised.

"It's not melodrama, it's fraud," Fahner said in an interview with The Associated Press. "They're paying under false pretenses."

Fahner acknowledged that even with a pension debt estimated at $96 billion, the problem is mathematically solvable. But to continue trying to catch up, Illinois must pay $6.7 billion next year — about a fifth of the state's general revenue — and that amount will top 40 percent by the beginning of the next decade.

Reaction to the memo was swift. A spokesman said Gov. Pat Quinn is grateful for help to "sound the alarm." A House leader on the issue said current legislative proposals balance savings and viable, acceptable policy. The state's largest employee union criticized "millionaire CEOs" harping about state retirees who make an average $32,000 pension while politicians created the staggering debt by skipping state-obligated payments.

A spokesman for the Teachers Retirement System, the largest of the state's five accounts, said the committee's conclusion is simply incorrect.

The General Assembly meets in its fall veto session later this month — a key to the timing of the committee's memo — but legislators don't expect to take up the pension issue again until early next year.

"We hope the committee will help make the case to every member of the state Legislature and to state pension-holders that solving the pension problem is key to assuring that benefits will be there when the stakeholders retire," Pallasch said.

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