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Group crunches pension numbers

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The group also wants to eliminate pensions for new hires and replace them with a 401(k)-style account.

Despite repeated calls for action on pensions, the 97th General Assembly adjourned without addressing the problem. This led to Fitch Ratings downgrading the state’s financial outlook from stable to negative earlier this month.

Using a Freedom of Information Act request, Tobin compiled a list of the top 100 pension earners at Northern Illinois University and local school districts, respectively. He also compiled a list of the top 20 pension earners at the city of DeKalb and the top 25 in the DeKalb County government. The lists can be found online at www.TaxpayersUnitedOfAmerica.org.

The lists include a retiree’s employer, their annual pension, how much they contributed to it and their age at retirement. Tobin and his staff created the list making the assumption of a cost-of-living adjustment of 3 percent compounded annually, and that a retiree lives to be 85 years old.

By Tobin’s count, some of the teachers and other government retirees will have collected millions of dollars. Kevin Hickey, who retired as deputy sheriff of DeKalb County in 2010, tops the county list, collecting a lifetime pension payout of more than $5 million by the time he’s 85.

“I don’t think any of these people are deserving of what they are receiving,” said Tobin, who later described the payouts as immoral. “These people are receiving million-dollar pension payouts. It’s ridiculous. It’s absurd.”

Dave Urbanek, the public information officer for the state’s Teachers’ Retirement System, said teachers outside of Chicago must contribute 9.4 percent of their salary to their pension, although some school districts pay a portion of that requirement under union contracts.

Increasing the contribution requirement would mean less take-home pay, he added.

“You have to weigh the current needs of the teacher versus their retirement needs,” Urbanek said.

Urbanek said the average teacher pension is $48,000, and that if it were extended over time, it would be $960,000. But it’s not that simple.

“The money is not put in somebody’s mattress. It’s spent ... all over,” Urbanek said. “To say people are getting rich on pensions is simply not correct.”


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