Over 2,000 retirees and Teamsters from 20 states rallied in front of the U.S. Capitol April 14, calling on the Treasury Department to stop their pensions from being slashed by 50 to 70 percent.
Special Master Kenneth Feinberg is slated to make a recommendation to the Treasury by May 7 on whether to accept the cuts proposed by the Central States Pension Fund, which would hurt 410,000 Teamsters and retirees from Florida to Minnesota.
Retirees have formed āCommittees to Protect Pensionsā in at least 20 cities. These committees organized the rally, with help from the Teamsters, Teamsters for a Democratic Union, and the Pension Rights Center.
Davey Grubbs, a volunteer organizer of the North Carolina Committee to Protect Pensions, drove for almost 32 years, beginning at age 21āmostly in carhaul, a physically taxing job that involves loading cars onto huge trucks.
After two back surgeries, a doctor told him he couldnāt go back to work. But Grubbs, determined to get his full pension, kept working ātill I couldnāt feel my feet anymore.ā After a third back surgery, heās permanently disabled.
āBasically I gave my health for the pension,ā he said, āand now theyāre trying to take it away.ā His pension would be reduced from $3,400 a month to $1,261, and the age he could draw it without penalty would rise from 62 to 65.
BACK TO WORK AT 75
The North Carolina committee sent four busloads of activists, including Brad Colesworthy, who retired after driving a truck for 32 years.
Colesworthy will see his pension cut almost in half, from $2,500 to $1,303 a month, if the cuts go through. Heās concerned about his wifeās medical bills and their mortgage.
So at age 75, heās back to work full-time, driving a school bus. Itās not how he pictured his golden years, but āIām blessed I can drive,ā he said. āIāve had open-heart surgery, but Iām still in pretty good shape.ā
Central States projects that it only has $18 billion available to pay the $34 billion it owes to current and future retirees, after the Fund lost $8.8 billion in the 2008 stock market crash. At the time, Goldman Sachs and Northern Trust were running the Fundās investments, thanks to a 1982 consent decree designed to rid the Fund of corruption.
In hindsight, since Goldman played such a large role in bringing on the financial crisis, it looks like the fox was guarding the henhouse.
The activists are backing the Keep Our Pension Promises Act (KOPPA), introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Rep. Marcy Kaptur of Ohio, which would solve the underfunding problem by providing backstop money for the Central States retirees whose companies ran away or went bankrupt. The money would come from closing certain corporate tax loopholes.
GRASSROOTS MOVEMENT
In North Carolina, retiree activists began their organizing by holding small meetings in restaurants. After the Fund sent letters out last year to notify individuals just how much their pensions would be cut, āthatās when we really started cranking up,ā Colesworthy said. āWe had meetings all over the state.ā
They organized bus trips to Washington, D.C., to lobby their senators and reps, rallied in front of a congressmanās local office, and held letter-writing drives, generating 3,000 letters at a time.
āOur feeling is, if they can get away with something like this, whatās next? Is it Social Security?ā Colesworthy said. “This basically opens the door to any pension fund that has been underfunded or mismanaged to submit the same application.ā
Congress brought on the problem when it passed the Multiemployer Pension Reform Act in December 2014, after heavy lobbying from the Fund, with no public hearings and no debate. Neither the House nor the Senate voted on the bill; it was attached to the omnibus budget bill, literally in the middle of the night.
Nonetheless, over 20 senators and representatives lined up at the rally to declare their support for the retirees. So did Teamsters President James P. Hoffa, though heād done little to stop Congress from legalizing the pension theft.
NEXT, A VOTE?
If Treasury rejects the Fundās proposal, the retirees will get some breathing room. The matter would be back in the hands of Congress, where itās unlikely anything good or bad could pass till after Novemberās elections.
On the other hand, if Treasury approves the cuts, next the Fund has 30 days to put the plan to a vote by members. In that case, āwe will do everything we can to vote it down,ā Grubbs said. āUnfortunately, they stacked the cards against us.ā
The law allows a vote by emailāwhich many retirees donāt useāand if you donāt vote, it counts as a yes. āSo much for democracy,ā Grubbs said.
If members vote no, the law permits the Treasury Department to overturn the voteāand denies the retirees the right to sue. āWe very strongly feel that Congress doesnāt have the right to take our judicial branch away from us,ā Grubbs said. āWeāll see them in court.ā
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