Conor Friedersdorf explains:
In California, a state worker can retire at age 50, do absolutely nothing all day, and collect 90 percent of their salary for the rest of their lives!
5,000 of these pensions amount to six figures incomes. Nor can the
state afford the system it has. As the Matt Welch piece mentions, "the
state's annual pension fund contribution vaulted from $321 million in
2000-01 to $7.3 billion last year." That is a rather alarming rate of
growth, and an astonishing figure, don't you think? Given that the
state is bankrupt and issuing IOUs to its creditors, it doesn't seem
unreasonable to complain that public employee unions have extracted
benefits that are both obviously unaffordable and far in excess of what
is enjoyed by the taxpayers who finance them.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/daily-dish/archive/2009/07/one-reason-california-is-bankrupt/198968/
