Council boosts their fringe benefit package
Around
April each year, I ask City Treasurer and Finance Director Dave
Christian for an update on the salaries and fringe benefits paid to
City Council members.
I'm
especially interested in changes in benefits collected by council
members because the fringe package totals more than twice the $500
monthly salary and mirrors benefits paid to full-time employees.
Since my
report last year, three council members – John Anderson, Tom
Lindsey and Mark Schwing – who didn't accept a previous increase in
the “cafeteria plan” portion of the fringe package began taking
the full amount.
“Last
year [the] three were at $833, even though the approved amount was
$945. However, during this past year, all three requested to be
increased to the $945,” Christian noted. The “cafeteria plan”
portion recently jumped 7.9 percent to $1,020 monthly retroactive to
Jan. 21 and will increase another 7.3 percent to $1,095 next Jan. 1.
Although
some council members refer to the $1,020 monthly payment as a medical
or health benefit, the proper term is “cafeteria plan,” as
described in the text of a unanimously adopted resolution that set
compensation for this and next year.
According
to the resolution, the benefit is “utilized first to pay health
insurance premiums; any residual amount may be applied to
the...member's deferred compensation.” Currently, all five apply
the full amount to deferred compensation, Christian noted.
Deferred
compensation is placed in 457 (b) plans that resemble 401 (k) plans
used by many private sector workers, but with some
advantages related to disbursement.
In
addition, stated Christian, “All council members except [Gene]
Hernandez have a monthly PERS contribution of $123.21 made by the
city on their behalf,” and starting July 1, “each of those
council members will contribute 2.5 percent of their stipend to PERS,
thus lowering the city's contribution by $12.50 each per month....”
PERS,
the Public Employees Retirement System, under a “2 percent at 55”
formula, will pay a monthly retirement allowance of $80 to a
two-term councilperson and $120 to a three-term councilperson, with
annual cost-of-living increases, after age 55 for life.
Hernandez,
already retired under PERS, doesn't receive the city's dental and
vision benefit, which is provided the others “on an as-needed
basis,” stated Christian. The city pays $9.20 monthly per person
for self-insured dental and vision plans.
Interestingly,
an Employee Assistance Program, described by Christian as “an
overall physical and emotional well-being program, offering
counseling and personal services in a wide variety of areas” is
available to council members at a city cost of $3.02 monthly per
person.
Hernandez,
who pledged in the 2012 election to forgo salary and benefits, says
he's donating his salary and intends to donate his deferred
compensation to charity. He isn't taking the $36 monthly phone
allowance but will accept the $100 monthly auto allowance.
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