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EE_
10th September 2014, 06:34 AM
Don't ever ask me to vote for more taxes to go to schools!

Why Illinois Is Bankrupt: 6,000 Teachers Get Pensions Of $100,000+
by NCPA • September 6, 2014

From 2013 to 2014, the number of teachers receiving six-figure pensions in Illinois increased by 24 percent. Today, 6,000 retired Illinois teachers are collecting at least 100,000 in annual pension money.

Yet, as Kelly Riddell reports for the Washington Times, if the Illinois Teachers Retirement Service (TRS) were forced to pay out the pensions it owes today, it would only be able to pay retirees 40 cents for every dollar. Indeed, the state’s pension fund is in trouble:

According to a report from the spending watchdog group Open the Books, over 100,000 Illinois teachers had already broken even on their pension payments after just 20 months of retirement.
Illinois taxpayers can pay up to $2 million per teacher per retirement.
The TRS pension fund is underfunded by $54 billion, according to the Illinois Policy Institute.
By 2029, the fund could be entirely broke.

TRS is the largest pension fund in the state. According to Riddell, Illinois legislators have continued to underfund TRS in order to free up funds for spending elsewhere. Yet, over half of Illinois teachers are retiring before the age of 60, and many teachers are making twice the amount they earned while they were actually employed. For example:

Sandra Renner served as the superintendent in the Butler School District in Illinois. During her last four years at her job, her salary rose by 31 percent to $288,240. As a result, her starting pension was $210,480. She will receive pensions higher than her salaries for all but five years of her time in the workforce.
Administrator Mohsin Dada saw his salary rise from $156,160 to $358,750 during his last year in his job. As a result, his pension was $254,700.

In the TRS plan, teachers are guaranteed a 3 percent annual cost-of-living adjustment, not connected to inflation or adjustable based on budget crises. Moreover, the adjustments are not capped as they are in Social Security. As a result, the state’s public employees will see an average $1,906 cost-of-living adjustment in 2014, nine times the amount a Social Security beneficiary will receive to account for cost-of-living increases. According to Laurence Msall, president of the Civic Federation, the cost-of-living provision is one of the central reasons the state’s pension costs are so expensive.

Another problem in Illinois is “pension spiking,” in which educators’ salaries rise immediately prior to their retirement.

For example, Open the Books discovered teachers in the Hinsdale school district were receiving a 24 percent salary increase during the last four years of their careers, boosting the value of their pensions.
Unions often make salary spikes a part of salary negotiations. School districts are only on the hook for these payments for just a few years, while taxpayers bear the real financial burden: the resulting higher pension bill.

The Illinois legislature passed pension reform last year, which included salary caps and a cost-of-living adjustment based on inflation, but labor unions challenged the reform in the courts. Riddell reports a judge issued a temporary injunction against the law in May. According to Ted Dabrowski of the Illinois Policy Institute, if the court rules pension reform unconstitutional, taxpayers are going to face large tax increases.

Source: Kelly Riddell, “Generous teacher pensions continue as Illinois’ financial crisis worsens,” Washington Times, September 1, 2014.

General of Darkness
10th September 2014, 07:38 AM
Mohsin Dada with Hillary Clinton http://mohsindada.com/wp-content/uploads/Clinton/Mohsin%20Dada%203.jpg
http://mohsindada.com/wp-content/uploads/Clinton/Mohsin%20Dada%201.jpg
http://mohsindada.com/wp-content/uploads/Clinton/Mohsin%20Dada%202.jpg

Neuro
10th September 2014, 07:51 AM
Mohsin Dada with Hillary Clinton

http://mohsindada.com/wp-content/uploads/Clinton/Mohsin%20Dada%203.jpg

Charming couple!

Libertytree
10th September 2014, 08:03 AM
Must have been one helluva party, Jerry Springer was there.

Neuro
10th September 2014, 08:08 AM
Must have been one helluva party, Jerry Springer was there.
I knew there was something familiar about that guy in the background... Good eyes you have. It was a freak show!

Libertytree
10th September 2014, 08:16 AM
I knew there was something familiar about that guy in the background... Good eyes you have. It was a freak show!

My thought exactly!

Hitch
10th September 2014, 09:26 AM
Administrator Mohsin Dada saw his salary rise from $156,160 to $358,750 during his last year in his job. As a result, his pension was $254,700..

He "saw" his salary rise. What a joke. This asshole worked tons of overtime to get his salary that high, because the pension is based upon a percentage of the last year's salary worked. He knew what he was doing. He "saw" like it was an unexpected luck, gee what a lucky guy!!

What a prick.

madfranks
10th September 2014, 09:59 AM
He "saw" his salary rise. What a joke. This asshole padded his timesheets with tons of overtime to get his salary that high, because the pension is based upon a percentage of the last year's salary worked. He knew what he was doing. He "saw" like it was an unexpected luck, gee what a lucky guy!!

What a prick.

Fixed it for you - what you think he actually worked all that overtime? Billing your lunch hours and taking a 10 page report home over the weekend to bill 16 hours is to is not working.

EE_
10th September 2014, 01:17 PM
I think teachers should no longer be called teachers. They are indoctrinators. Most, if not all, have sold out for the pay check. They are forced to fill the children's heads with the government curriculum crap...and they do so joyfully.

Dogman
10th September 2014, 01:28 PM
Schools another name for creches and germ factory's.

Dachsie
10th September 2014, 01:54 PM
During her last four years at her job, her salary rose by 31 percent to $288,240.

"Her salary rose" sounds like mythical thing just happened. This is dishonest writing. We need to look at just exactly HOW that huge raise came about.


Administrator Mohsin Dada saw his salary rise from $156,160 to $358,750 during his last year in his job.

"saw his salary rise" sounds like Dada is some passive observer who saw the 43.5 % increase salary just appear. Again, this kind of writing is dishonest.

The part about unions being able to negotiate pay raises was true so union states might explain some of these big pay raises in the last years to pump up retirement checks.

But whenever there are meteoric raises in non-union states, you must look to politics and dishonest maneuverings to pay people off for playing by the crooked rules all those years.

There are many other ways people in high up government positions, and being a professor at a university IS a high up government position, can make things rosy for themselves after coming retirement, and boosting ones retirement check is just one of them.

The state teacher retirement systems themselves need to be looked at individually under a strong magnifying glass. They basically are not much different than Wall Street brokers. There is a lot of under-the-table quid pro quos happening that again is a really a rape of all the taxpayers, as well as many individual low-level retirees.

Some of the healthier state teacher retirement funds are being salivated about and coveted by the high level bankster owned federal politicians and those funds may be confiscated in some manner in the not too distant future, sort of like the Cypress bank account balances were stolen from the ordinary folk there. Our crooked bankers and politicians would love to get their hands on some real billions of dollars that are not just phony bookeeping entries with no real backing.

EE_
10th September 2014, 03:40 PM
Another in line for a big pension?

NH Teacher Accused Of Playing Kissing Game With Students
By Michael Rosenfield, WBZ-TV September 9, 2014 6:18 PM

Michael Rosenfield is the New Hampshire Bureau Chief for CBS Boston’s...


PORTSMOUTH, NH (CBS) – A federal report into a lengthy investigation of sexual harassment by a teacher at Portsmouth High School has been released.

The investigation began after a parent, who wants to remain anonymous, complained that teacher Joe Arnstein was showing R-rated movies in Spanish class.

“There was significant nudity and sexual content to the point that it would be considered soft-core pornography,” said the parent. “And it had no place in a classroom with 14-year-old children.”

According to the report by the United States Department of Education Office For Civil Rights, Arnstein told officials he was hoping to encourage student engagement in class.

He was also accused of playing a vocabulary game in which students who answered correctly could receive a coin or kiss him on the cheek.

“I can’t even imagine how any adult could even think this was a proper game,” said the parent, who is considering filing a lawsuit against the district.

His attorney, Jay Nadeau, tells WBZ-TV he has filed a notice with the school district indicating legal action is being considered.

The report faults the teacher for “sexual conduct” and the school for failing to thoroughly investigate the behavior.

“If that was taking place it’s obviously inappropriate,” said parent Marcy Baer.

A support page for the teacher is on change.org. He continues to teach at the high school.

“I’ve heard outstanding words about this man,” said parent Renee Davis.

An attorney for the school district says he has a “pristine personnel record”.

School officials would not discuss what type of punishment Arnstein faced, but the federal report says he was disciplined and had to undergo sexual harassment training.

In a statement today, the school district says it has “…revised its policy and grievance procedures…over the next few weeks, all high school personnel and all high school students will receive training on what constitutes harassment.”
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2014/09/09/nh-teacher-accused-of-playing-kissing-game-with-students/

mick silver
11th September 2014, 08:22 AM
what sad about this over time it's going on all over this country , last time I heard ky was trying to find away to pay for over 30 billion in retirement funds they don't have