Detroit emergency manager opts to delay pension freeze
Mon, Jan 6 2014
Jan 6 (Reuters) - Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr on Monday delayed a
move to freeze the pension fund for some of the city's workers just hours after
the order became public, saying a delay would allow for mediation with the
city's retirement funds to play out.
Orr had issued the order on Dec. 30, with an effective date the following
day, but it did not come to light until Monday when pension officials criticized
the move. The document was not posted on a web page where Orr's other executive
orders have been since taking over Michigan's biggest city in March.
Despite the delay, Orr said he reserves the right to retroactively freeze the
General Retirement Fund, which covers non-public safety workers, retroactive to
Jan. 1 if mediation fails to produce an agreement on a $3.5 billion unfunded
pension liability the city "cannot afford to pay."
"The city remains in a financial emergency, and to the extent that mediation
can assist in finding a way to improve services for all of its 700,000
residents, then it is worth continuing," Orr said in a statement.
He added that "an additional delay without the prospect of a mediated
solution threatens to further erode essential services and public safety."
Earlier on Monday, a spokeswoman for Detroit's General Retirement System
blasted Orr for ordering the pension freeze in the wake of mediation ordered by
a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge, who is overseeing the city's historic municipal
bankruptcy filing.
"This is an outrageous and over-zealous action from the (emergency manager's)
office," Tina Bassett, the spokeswoman, said in a statement. "Again the
(emergency manager's) office demonstrates a lack of integrity and willingness to
make a good faith effort when negotiating with our pension system."
The pension freeze called for closing the pension fund to any new or rehired
employees and stopping benefit accruals for current workers. It also stopped
worker contributions to the pension and annuity savings funds and ended
cost-of-living adjustments for pension payments made to retirees.
As of Jan. 1, the order created a 401(k)-type defined contribution plan for
affected workers.
Detroit's pension systems, made up of the general retirement and police and
fire funds, are a major factor in the more than $18 billion in debt and other
obligations that led to the city's historic municipal bankruptcy filing on July
18. Detroit has approximately 22,000 retirees who currently receive pensions,
but only about 9,000 active employees supporting the funds, according to Orr's
office.
The pension funds have filed an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit, hoping to overturn Judge Steven Rhodes' Dec. 3 ruling that the
city was eligible for Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy.
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