You have to hand it to the obstructers of beneficial change in
Louisiana, they don’t go down without throwing everything they can into the
fight. But with arguments the quality of which is like bringing a knife to a
gun fight, it’s no accident that they lose.
Such was the case with objections to HB 61
by state Rep. Kevin
Pearson, which would have state employees hired after this year have their
retirement benefits, contributed from their salaries and an employing agency
proportion, put into a cash balance plan. This would allow the state to invest
money for these plans and essentially have any losses covered by the state.
Current employees could opt in. For the employee such a plan may allow for
greater periodic payments after retirement and is portable; for the
taxpayer-funded employer, it means less future strain on retirement benefit
payments that have already lead to a nearly $19 billion gap in unfunded accrued
liabilities that will cost the citizenry about $1 billion extra this year alone
to cover.
Legislative opponents supporting special interests invested in the current
system tried to disparage the reform, without success. In part, this was due to
the conceptual weaknesses of their argumentation.