Health & Fitness
Reforming Pensions Saves Teaching Positions
Comments on public policy; state issues and reform that can save teaching positions.
Last week, the MA State Senate (26-10) adopted meaningful reforms to the public pension system, approving modest changes supported by Gov. Patrick and Treasurer Grossman. Unfortunately, some of our MetroWest legislators voted against the bill, thereby proving the old adage that "Business as usual" is alive and well for some defenders of the status quo. Among the common sense changes in Sen. Katherine Clark's legislation is to raise the retirement age for most state workers from 55 to 60, and re-calculate pension payouts, based on a 5 year average of base pay rather than an individual's last 3 years of salary working for the Commonwealth. The bill also increases early retirement penalties, similar to those in the private sector who cash in an IRA early, or seniors who choose to accept Social Security at age 62 instead of receiving their benefit at 65.
These modest reforms only apply to future state retirees making a "nay" vote mystifying and fiscally irresponsible.
Find out what's happening in Actonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The pension reform bill provides a reasonable yet critical step in reining in unsustainable pension costs for the state and municipalities in Massachusetts, while still providing a level of guaranteed retirement benefits that are largely a thing of the past for most of the Commonwealth's citizens still lucky enough to have a job in the private sector during the Great Recession.
Considering our state pension system is in crisis - with upwards of 20 billion dollars worth of unfunded liabilities saddled on the back's of our kids, I support the bipartisan proposal and urge the House to follow the Senate's lead.
Find out what's happening in Actonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Defenders of the status quo fail to understand that unless the Legislature tackles meaningful pension reform, the opportunity costs and ability to invest in local aid and state spending on public education is severely compromised. Faced with that proposition, I choose reform over political pandering.
Dean Cavaretta
Follow me on Twitter @DeanCav