Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (July 4, 2014)
Panelists differ over cure for ill union pension plans WASHINGTON, D.C. — Panelists deeply immersed in the financial prob- lems of multi-employer pension plans remain split over how to fix them. “Multi-employer plans are a ticking time bomb,” warned House Education and the Workforce Committee Chair- man John Kline (R-Minn) at a May 1 forum sponsored by Bloomberg Gov- ernment. Kline said multi-employer pension plans are on an unsustainable path, with $818 billion in liabilities and only $397 billion in assets. More than 10.5 million people participate in such pension plans, including 3.5 million retirees. “Do the math,” Kline said. “There is an urgent need to enact bold reforms.” Most of the panelists at the forum nixed finding any federal aid for the mi- nority of failing pension plans. The chairmen of the relevant GOP-run U.S. House committees have flatly said such aid won’t pass. They agreed a fix is needed, but warned that their colleagues will need a lot of education on the issue. Kline said many of his colleagues are OSEA needs help to bring free books to children in east Multnomah Co. The Oregon School Employees As- sociation (OSEA) is working with the nonprofit organization First Book to get access to free books for children in east Multnomah County. First Book is a Washington, D.C.- based social enterprise that furnishes brand-new, high-quality, popular chil- drens’ books to schools or programs where they might otherwise have diffi- culty acquiring them. Founded in 1992, First Book has distributed more than 100 million books targeted for young- sters from birth to 18 years of age. The American Federation of Teach- ers (AFT) — of which OSEA is an af- filiate — has partnered with First Book to hold more than 10 “book truck” events in communities across the coun- try. One was held in Turner, Oregon, last January that benefited students at Cascade, Jefferson and North Santiam school districts. Vicki Nelson, president of OSEA’s Centennial School District Chapter 113, is spearheading the campaign that hope- fully will bring 40,000 to 45,000 books to east Multnomah County, which is home to Centennial, Reynolds, David Douglas, Parkrose and Gresham-Bar- low school districts. But other groups such as My Father’s House, SnowCap, Human Solutions, the Boys and Girls Club of America, and others, stand to benefit as well. To make it all happen, Nelson first must register 2,000 people with First- Book by July 31. Once that is done, the book order will be placed, and then scheduled for delivery sometime in late August. To register, you must be in- volved in some way with either a Title 1 or Title 1-eligible school program; with a program where at least 70 percent of the children are from low-income fam- ilies; with a program primarily serving children in military families; or with a program primarily serving children with disabilities. “Once you are registered, there is no obligation to do anything else,” Nelson said. However, she will need at least 150 volunteers to come to the drop point at Centennial High School to help sort the books by title and age group. She envi- sions a sea of union members all wear- ing their union-colored T-shirts sorting and processing the books. Then, more union members and community part- ners would take boxes of books to hand out to children, who get to keep them forever. “We understand that investing in early childhood education is really the most important investment any com- munity can make. We want to give every child in east county the opportu- nity to succeed,” Nelson said. “This is a positive project that will put the children on a path to a better fu- ture,” noted Richard Ramirez, organiz- ing director for OSEA. To register, go online to www.first- book.org/aft. When signing up, be sure to use the AFT link. For more infor- mation, call Ramirez at 1-800-252- 6732. Workers hurt on the job have a right to pursue a ‘third party case’ in court against a responsible party other than their employer, for damages not available in workers’ compensation. unaware of the magnitude of the prob- lem. The National Coordinating Commit- tee for Multi-Employer Plans (NC- CMP), a joint group of union leaders and executives, proposed a solution last year. “Solutions, Not Bailouts” would rewrite pension law to allow plans with surpluses to sock money away to save for future hard times; allow flexible timelines for plans to return to solvency; allow cuts in earned benefits — includ- ing those retirees in pay status already earning benefits, and establish ways for plans to seek new clients, merge, or both. Kline said the choice NCCMP offers is “between an axe in the hands of a first-year med student, or a scalpel in the hand of a trusted surgeon.” If a multi-employer pension plan does collapse, participants have a safety net in the form of the government’s Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. But its director, Joshua Gotbaum, said “PBGC is a safety net that’s only a foot above the ground. Plans whose participants come to PBGC are seeing their benefits cut very substantially.” For a participant with 30 years of service retiring at age 65, the maximum benefit amount that the PBGC will pay is $12,870 per year. Any benefits that participants have earned over this amount are forfeited. The maximum an- nual benefit for workers with 20 years of service is $8,580. Gotbaum said the vast majority of multi-employer pension plans will be around “next year, next decade, and next generation.” He said there is a mi- nority of plans covering between 1 mil- lion to 2 million people that will be- come insolvent over time — some sooner than later. “What they need is the ability to ad- just their benefits to survive and stay above PBGC levels,” he said. International Association of Ma- chinists General President Tom Buffen- barger was the lone dissenter at the fo- rum. His union’s plans escaped the 2008 financial crash for the most part by investing conservatively. But he said the crash itself caused the problems. And since taxpayers had to bail out the big banks that caused the crash, the gov- ernment should help taxpayers save their own pensions, Buffenbarger de- clared. “We’re girding for the fight over cut- ting benefits of existing retirees,” he stated. “These are the people who Broadway Floral for the BEST flowers call 503-288-5537 1638 NE Broadway, Portland Gradine Storms, Principal Broker Member of CWA Local 7901 7886 SE 13th, Portland, OR•Cell/Text 503-784-8326 gstorms@equitygroup.com Linkedin/GradyStorms JULY 4, 2014 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS worked hard, they earned a pension — which are deferred wages. They played by the rules. And now they’re supposed to take the pain for doing all the right things in life? And the reason that drove this was the bad acting by our financial community and by our government.” Buffenbarger said the federal gov- ernment “was very quick to act to bail out banks and the bad actors there; bail out corporations and the bad actors there; bail out accounting firms, bail out airlines, bail out auto companies, bail out everybody ... but the American tax- payer. I find nothing wrong with asking our government to throw a few dollars into a system that will put some secu- rity back into our retirement system.” David Certner of AARP said one of the fundamental tenents of ERISA is that once a worker has earned a (pen- sion) benefit, it can’t be taken away (called the anti-cutback rule). “There is a very bright line there for us that says, ‘no you can’t do that.’ Those are earned benefits, you can’t cut those benefits. You have to look at other alternatives,” he said. The Pension Protection Act reforms are set to expire at the end of 2014. Rep. Kline says a new reform act needs to get through Congress this year. (Editor’s Note: Press Associates Inc. contributed to this report.) ...Staples boycott (From Page 1) because roughly one-third of Staples’ revenue comes from the sale of school supplies, said Jim Falvey, president of Portland-based National Association of Letter Carriers Branch 82. When management of the store on Northeast 122nd off Glisan Street in Portland refused to accept the protest- ers’ petition, the protesters began chant- ing “the U.S. Mail is not for sale” and “privatization has got to go,” while blocking the store entrance. After the person in charge agreed to convey their message to upper management, the pro- testers filed out, chanting “we’ll be back.” “Staples is setting up fake post of- fices inside their stores that jeopardize our nation’s public post offices, the sanctity of the mail and thousands of good jobs at living wages,” said Jamie Partridge, a retired letter carrier now with Communities and Postal Workers United, the organization that sponsored of the action. “The public should not be fooled by claims of better service. Staples work- ers are not sworn to safeguard the mail. The risk of theft from the mail de- posited in a Staples post office is very real,” Partridge said. Protesters vow to increase pressure on the office supply chain nationwide until it drops the postal contract. PAGE 3