More than 1 million workers and retirees could lose their pension benefits
within 20 years.
Many of them were construction workers or truck drivers who belonged to
a union and paid into pension funds set up to cover workers from multiple
employers.
But about 100 of these pension plans are expected to run out of money in
the next two decades, according to a report from the Center for Retirement
Research at Boston College.
Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle agree that something must be done.
A bipartisan committee headed by Republican Senator Orrin Hatch and Democratic
Senator Sherrod Brown was created earlier this year with a mandate to come up
with a legislative fix by November.
“A number of the country’s biggest multiemployer pension plans are
approaching insolvency, which poses a threat of small businesses going
bankrupt, retirees seeing their benefits cut, and taxpayers getting stuck
footing the bill,” Hatch said in a statement.
One big problem is that there are many more retirees than active workers
participating in the plans. About 83% of participants in plans facing
insolvency are already retired or have left their companies for other jobs.
What makes things even more dire is that a government agency that
normally steps in when a pension plan fails is also in trouble. The Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation expects its insurance program for multiemployer
pension plans to run out of money within 10 years.
The bipartisan commission isn’t the first effort by Congress to address
the problem. Most recently, legislation passed in 2014 increased funding for
the PBGC insurance program.
It also allowed cash-strapped plans to cut both future and current
retiree benefits. But so far the government has approved just four of the 15
plans that submitted proposals to cut benefits. When one of the largest
multiemployer funds proposed cuts in 2015, the government rejected the plan because the
reductions weren’t sufficient enough to head off insolvency.
If nothing is done, the fund — which has nearly 400,000 participants
— will be unable to pay any benefits by 2025.
The committee will hold its second of at least five hearings on
Wednesday.
“This overview hearing will help shine a light on what’s at stake as the
committee works to solve the pension crisis for the 1.5 million workers and
retirees and countless businesses around the country who are counting on us,”
Brown said.
Click here for the original article from WTVR.