Site icon SD Rostra

Report Reveals Excessive Pension Payouts in City of San Diego

Expert Who Revealed City of Bell Pension Scandal Releases Analysis and Joins DeMaio to Call for Immediate Reform

Councilmember Carl DeMaio joined the same pension expert who revealed the excessive pension payouts in the City of Bell to release a report documenting excessive pension payouts to retired city employees in the City of San Diego. DeMaio also released a comprehensive list of pension reforms to end abusive payouts at taxpayers’ expense.

 “I was shocked by what I discovered in the City of Bell and am shocked by what I discovered in the City of San Diego.  San Diego is just like Bell – only bigger in terms of the total collective cost to taxpayers from these outrageous pension allowances,” said Marcia Fritz, a pension expert with the California Foundation for Fiscal Responsibility.

 “These outrageous pension payouts in city government must end,” commented DeMaio.  “Before taxpayers are asked to put more of their hard-earned money into this city government, we must enact fundamental reforms to the city’s unaffordable pension system.”

Among the findings of the report:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 After setting pension reform as his top priority in office, Councilmember Carl DeMaio on his first day in office refused to enroll in the city’s pension system.  This has saved taxpayers approximately $30,000 per year. 

 The City Council is slated on Tuesday to consider a measure to only modestly increase their contribution for politicians’ pensions.  While the action may satisfy one condition in Proposition D, the action will fall short of requiring politicians to pay an equal share for pension costs.

 DeMaio used the report to highlight the need for comprehensive pension reforms before any new revenues are consumed by the pension system.  DeMaio urged the Mayor and City Council to lead by example through reforming their own pension benefits immediately.

 “The city politicians should act immediately by paying a full equal share for the cost of their pension benefits – and future politicians should simply receive a strict 401(k)-style defined contribution system,” proposed DeMaio.  “Politicians should not be receiving a massive taxpayer subsidy for these lavish benefits – and they certainly should not be voting on their own pensions.”

 The full report can be accessed at www.CleanUpCityHall.com

 A copy of Councilmember DeMaio’s list of proposed pension reforms is attached.

Exit mobile version