San Diego city’s pension board has decided not to reduce the value of benefits awarded to employees by the previous pension board, even though those benefits were overvalued. The shortfall $150 million will have to be born by the taxpayer. KPBS reporter Alison St John has more.
City employees can buy into bigger pensions by purchasing years of service, instead of actually working those years.
An actuary has calculated the employees should have paid more for those years to cover the cost of the benefits.
But pension system spokeswoman Rebecca Wilson says the mistake was made by the previous pension board.
Wilson : This was the old board who had set the pricing, so the new board had taken it upon themselves to look at any possible remediation and came up unanimously in favor of this particle course of action.
“This particular course of action” is to do nothing, leaving the taxpayer to carry the bag. The city council has not weighed in. The mayor’s office put out a release saying Sanders considers this unacceptable, and will recommend hiring outside council to advise the city on its options.
Alison St John, KPBS News.