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A responsible retirement solution for taxpayers, public workers

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Here are the key differences between the Institute’s proposal and other plans being circulated in Springfield:

• It rules out extending the 2011 income-tax increase.

• It protects pension benefits already earned by employees but ties all future earned retirement benefits to a 401(k)-style of defined contribution plan.

• It pays off the unfunded pension liability on a level-dollar basis.

• It reduces the fiscal 2014 unfunded pension liability by $46 billion.

• It reduces fiscal 2014 state contributions to $4.7 billion, a nearly 30 percent drop from $6.7 billion under current law.

But, also, it is quite generous to the employees themselves.

For example, a teacher who starts his or her career at age 25 at a salary of $35,000 and receives a 3 percent raise each year can retire at age 67 with $1 million in the bank, based on an average annual investment return of 4 percent. With that amount, a teacher could buy an annuity worth $54,000 annually.

So how does the plan accomplish these things?

It raises the retirement age to 67 for new and younger employees and it halts all future automatic retiree cost-of-living adjustments for retirees until the system is fully funded.

State Rep. Tom Morrison, R-Palatine, has introduced legislation to implement the plan.

“This bill reforms pensions in a constitutional way,” he said last week. “It protects the pension benefits workers have earned to date. The pension formula will simply apply to their current service and their current salary. They will receive a basic pension as if they had left government employment today. But in order to fully protect those benefits, we have to change how future benefits are earned. And while we’re making those changes, let’s do it in a way that empowers workers with real control, rather than keeping the power in the hands of this legislative body.”

Sadly, through decades of mismanagement by governors of both political parties and by multiple generations of state legislators, we find ourselves in the midst of crisis. Unless, tough decisions are made, core government services such as public safety, education and providing care for the most vulnerable in society will face unacceptable cuts.

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