911paramedic
Diamond Member
- Jan 7, 2002
- 9,448
- 1
- 76
This. Pensions are promises made many times in lieu of competative pay in the private workforce.
Tax cutters always try to fuck pensioners.
And pension padding is there to fuck the tax payers.
This. Pensions are promises made many times in lieu of competative pay in the private workforce.
Tax cutters always try to fuck pensioners.
This. Pensions are promises made many times in lieu of competative pay in the private workforce.
Tax cutters always try to fuck pensioners.
So now we get to choose whether we pay what we owe?
Several times in this thread people have claimed CA can file bankruptcy. THAT IS NOT TRUE. Bankruptcy is a statutory procedure, not a right. You must fit within the statutory scheme for it to be applicable. Who may be a debtor under the various chapters of the Bankruptcy Code is set forth in 11 USC 109, and the closest relevant section is for Chapter 9, municipalities in 11 USC 109(c):
* * *
(c) An entity may be a debtor under chapter 9 of this title if and only if such entity
(1) is a municipality;
(2) is specifically authorized, in its capacity as a municipality or by name, to be a debtor under such chapter by State law, or by a governmental officer or organization empowered by State law to authorize such entity to be a debtor under such chapter;
* * *
"Municipality" is specifically defined at 11 USC 101(40):
* * *
40) The term "municipality" means political subdivision or public agency or instrumentality of a State.
* * *
"State" is seperately defined at 11 USC 101(52):
* * *
52) The term "State" includes the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, except for the purpose of defining who may be a debtor under chapter 9 of this title.
* * *
It is crystal clear that the bankruptcy mechanism is not available to States. If anyone disagrees I challenge them to post a citation to any court opinion to the contrary, or even some legit legal scholar.
People grossly oversimplify and mischaracterize the law and assume the state can set aside existing pension obligations. In most cases that is not true and would be a violation of existing specific federal laws. Future pension obligations for current and future workers can be modified under the right circumstances, but that is not my understanding of what the OP is complaining about.
<--- doesn't live in CA and has no horse in this race
They are still obligations that were part of the compensation paid to those people. Its one thing to say we should get rid of pensions from now on. Its completely another to say we shouldn't pay the pensions that are already an obligation. California already subsidizes university tuition way more than most states that's a good place to start cutting.
It would never get to that. They can cut all kinds of services that aren't required by law to pay the ones that are.I don't think it is very relevant if a state can "legally" declare bankruptcy. If they are out of money and can not raise enough to cover expenses they are technically bankrupt and people the state owes are going to get shafted. They can sue and they can and will win but exactly what would you like the state that has no money to pay with?
Post a link to your employers worker memorial site. I'd like to see how many of you have lost your life on the job.Hilarious. Public workers don't work as much as private workers. They also have greater job security. You work for the government and you knowingly give up competitive pay.
No. How much you have to pay with makes the choice for you.
It would never get to that. They can cut all kinds of services that aren't required by law to pay the ones that are.
A contract is a contract.
Do you regularly hire people to perform services for you, then refuse to follow through on your end of the contract and pay them
because you'd rather use the money for something else?
I don't know about you, but if my employer refused to pay me for work I did 2 weeks before, I'd be pissed. You don't think I should be able to sue for my rightfully earned paycheck?
Figures you'd be in favor of theft from working people. As long as you rich people get yours of course.
You can't cut enough.
They assumed insane growth rates to make those payments. Not only are they not getting those growth rates they probably lost some money during the last few years. The problem will get larger not smaller.
Sure they might be able to kick the can for a few more years but like I said, the math always wins.
I like how one local pundit put it:
California already has become an international laughingstock for failing to close a budget deficit that's scarcely 1 percent of its economic output, driving its credit rating into the basement and alienating voters.
A failure who promised to do what his predecessor (Gray Davis) failed to do (i.e. balance the budget) after ousting him in a recall election. Can anyone imagine Meg Whitman attempting this?Nice, you guys gave him a week to fix California? Let's hope he does a better job than the last Republican failure.
I don't think we'll see Jerry gallivanting around the globe shaking hands ala Arnold.You can't close the deficit when the radical Republicans have a veto on the budget they abuse and a 'zero new taxes' fanaticism, and prop 13 in place.
But now the rules have changed and the Democrats can pass a budget. Beginning with this budget from Brown that cuts every department but K-12, I think we'll see change.
A failure who promised to do what his predecessor (Gray Davis) failed to do (i.e. balance the budget) after ousting him in a recall election. Can anyone imagine Meg Whitman attempting this?
Oh, go right ahead.Don't get me started. I was living in SoCal when that shit went down. Ah, the cry babies did'nt like the results of the election so they play to the base that will turn out to basically have a "Do over" only this time with the motivated base. That experience left a bad taste in my mouth of the whole California political system.
Don't get me started. I was living in SoCal when that shit went down. Ah, the cry babies did'nt like the results of the election so they play to the base that will turn out to basically have a "Do over" only this time with the motivated base. That experience left a bad taste in my mouth of the whole California political system.
That was a taste of the radical right in Orange County. The broader state deserves more credit for a Democratic legislature, choosing Brown and Boxer, etc.
It's not all good news, though - same state that gave the nation Nixon and Reagan, passed Prop 13, etc.
Is comparing its deficit and future obligations with its economic output - whatever they meant by that - a correct comparison?
Somehow when I read that, I get the feeling that words are being twisted.....
Chuck
This.
It's not like there were any good choices. We had to vote for the lessor of the evils.
I do not believe that the federal government is legally on the hook. I do believe that would be the result if any state cannot pay its bills. I don't think that at the moment, either state is near that point, primarily because the legislature and governor declaring insolvency would certainly be finished in politics were they to do so. It's not the easy solution it might appear. If the economy continues to suck, we might see that in a few years, after raising taxes and driving out the high income earners and the businesses still making a profit.So the Fed Gov is on the hook for all the states obligations if the state declares itself insolvent? Why then doesn't CA and IL just declare themselves insolvent (from my understanding, certainly that's where IL is at) and dump in on the Fed's lap?
To me insolvency and bankruptcy sounds in the end like the same thing: You don't have money to pay your bills in the short or long term.
Chuck
Stop thinking, please!
In his case, that's not an issue -- he never started.
