City workers pay into retirement fund
Back in
the halcyon days of this city's budget process – when
ever-increasing property and sales tax revenues allowed officials to
build up a reserve fund in excess of $30 million – the city's
workers were granted a generous perk that significantly boosted their
take-home pay.
The city
began picking up each employee's portion of the amount required to
fund retirement benefits under the Public Employees Retirement
System, which totaled a 7 percent pay hike, with deductions for
withholding and payroll taxes taken since 2007.
Now,
with a much tighter municipal budget, the city's 93 employees again
will contribute a percentage of their paychecks to fund their
retirement benefits: 2.5 percent starting July 1 this year and an
additional 2.5 percent July 1 next year, for an eventual total of 5
percent.
The city
will continue to contribute the amount shy of the 7 percent
requirement, as well as the city portion, which lately has approached
14 percent, although the latter number varies, depending on
calculations from retirement system actuaries.
However,
the employees – which include six management, 21 mid-management and
66 “miscellaneous” workers – won't suffer a pay cut as a result
of the increased deductions. The new pact includes a 3 percent
“cost-of-living” adjustment retroactive to January and another 3
percent hike next January.
Also,
furlough days, which cut salaries 5 percent, ended September 2012,
and vacation buy-backs will be reinstated. The suspended
pay-for-performance program will be “reconsidered” during the
upcoming budgeting process for the 2013-14 fiscal year.
Negotiations
could be reopened before the contract expires Sept. 30, 2014,
regarding a furlough program, and interestingly, the Jan. 9 local
holiday for Richard Nixon's birthday was switched for the Martin
Luther King, Jr., national holiday.
Both
full and part-time employees working 30 hours will contribute $75 per
month retroactive to January, with an additional $75 per month
starting in 2014 for the health benefits package.
The city
contributes $1,020 monthly for a “cafeteria plan” that is used to
pay health insurance premiums, with any residual amount paid either
as cash or applied to deferred compensation.
The
retirement plan currently in use is a “2 percent at 55” formula,
which allows employees full retirement benefits at age 55 based on
two percent of the highest year of compensation multiplied by the
number of years worked.
Employees
hired after Jan. 1 this year will fall under a new state-mandated
formula of 2 percent at age 62, with the highest compensation year
figured on a three-year average, although new workers already in PERS
can apply the older formula.
Cost to
the city for the salary hike less the new employee PERS contributions
will total $704,180 through September 2014. The one-time estimated
costs for vacation buy-backs could be up to $150,000, taken from an
employee leave reserve fund that now totals $1.4 million.
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