Riordan drops L.A. pension reform

Nov. 27, 2012

By John Seiler

It looks like only bankruptcy will bring pension reform to Los Angeles. Former Mayor Richard Riordan just dropped his efforts to put San Jose-San Diego-style pension reform before the city’s voters:

“The sudden retreat followed an attack by organized labor on a plan that Riordan said is vital to avoiding municipal bankruptcy. City leaders are coping with a financial crisis and will ask voters next spring for a sales tax increase to avert more cuts. Riordan argued that City Hall should reduce employee pension benefits instead.

“The failure of Riordan’s ballot drive could push the pension issue further into the background of the 2013 mayoral race. Three City Hall insiders in the contest have criticized the plan, while a Republican outsider has embraced it.”

The sales tax likely will pass. Combined with increases in federal and state taxes, the higher city taxes will kill businesses and jobs, in the end reducing revenue. The lower revenue will make it harder to make current pension payments. Then the city will follow Vallejo, San Bernardino, Stockton and Mammoth Lakes in declaring bankruptcy.

By then, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa will have a cabinet job in the next Obama administration, and his successor will get the blame for the debacle.

Just this month, my colleague Brian Calle wrote on our Web site an article, “Los Angeles teetering on the brink of bankruptcy.” He interviewed Riordan.

The teetering now is even closer to the brink.


Tags assigned to this article:
bankruptcyJohn SeilerLos AngelesRichard Riordan

Related Articles

Pension reformer Chuck Reed will fight on

San Jose is in the center of the world’s economic pulse, Silicon Valley. By all rights, its city treasury ought

Brown’s Tax Canoe Headed For Water Fall

MARCH 23, 2012 By WAYNE LUSVARDI California Gov. Jerry Brown likens himself to a canoeist who paddles a little to

Griping Teachers & Bad Grammar

Katy Grimes: Sitting in the Capitol lunchroom Wednesday after the big Senate education hearing, I overheard some interesting comments from