These benefit levels, while unaffordable, are not the fault of government employees themselves. State lawmakers set the rules. However, the benefits these employees receive contrast starkly with the reality local taxpayers face.
Typical homeowners in Kane County pay higher property taxes than the state average and more than double the national average, when measured as a share of home value. The average single-family home in Kane County had a property tax bill of $6,517 in 2017, according to ATTOM Data solutions, a property data company. The average home value for the county was estimated at nearly $235,800, bringing the average effective property tax rate up to 2.76 percent. The national average, meanwhile, was 1.17 percent.
Worse yet for taxpayers, IMRF is not the only unsustainable pension fund they’re on the hook for. Many local police and fire pension liabilities throughout Kane and across the state have been growing far faster than taxpayers can manage. For example, in the Cook County village of Streamwood – one of the towns FRWRD serves – taxpayer contributions to its fire and police pension funds increased 135 percent and 197 percent, respectively, from 2006 to 2016. Despite these massive increases in taxpayer contributions, the Streamwood fire pension fund has an even lower funding ratio today than it had in 2006.
If lawmakers want to retain and attract residents, and see them thrive, they must rein in property taxes by controlling the growth of pension liabilities. In the short term, lawmakers should implement 401(k)-style retirement plans for new workers. This would be a fair and promising proposal for taxpayers and government workers alike. In the long term, lawmakers must amend the Illinois Constitution in order to adjust future, unearned retirement benefits for government workers.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment