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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPlanned pension cuts have retired truckers up in arms; fund says they're unavoidable (up to 61%)
MEGAN FARMER/THE WORLD-HERALD
Mary Packett with her father, Fred Lowry, holding a photo of Lowry and his truck in 1969. Packett has been a vocal advocate against proposed pension cuts, lobbying lawmakers and officials in Washington.
http://www.omaha.com/money/planned-pension-cuts-have-retired-truckers-up-in-arms-fund/article_b57d5a22-0053-561a-ade4-8c0bf2dda38d.html
POSTED: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2015 12:00 AM
By Janice Podsada / World-Herald staff writer
Growing up with a father who drove a truck was often a trial for Mary Packett and her siblings. Fred Lowrys 16-hour days eight hours on, eight hours off had everyone tip-toeing through the house when he was trying to sleep. If we made noise, hed yell at us, said Packett, 52.
Packett is making noise again this time on behalf of her 76-year-old father and other retirees who face possible cuts to their pension benefits that could come as soon as July. About 5,000 of the retirees live in Nebraska and Iowa.
Packett, an Omaha real estate agent, is on a mission to keep the retirees benefits intact. This week, shes traveling to Washington on her own dime, she said to meet on Friday with federal officials to protest the proposed cuts. Its her second visit. In September, she testified at a federal hearing on the impact of the proposed cuts.
It was in September that the $18 billion Teamsters Central States Pension Fund, which covers 400,000 active and retired teamsters in 22 states, filed a petition with the U.S. Treasury Department declaring it would run out of money in 10 years if benefits werent reduced. There are about 1,200 of the retired Teamsters who live in the Omaha area.
FULL story at link.
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Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)This and any other pension cut amounts to nothing more than theft. It was a part of the individuals compensation package and failure to pay it as was planned and agreed upon is simply theft. Someone needs to be prosecuted and pay up.
ChisolmTrailDem
(9,463 posts)Yupster
(14,308 posts)which are just as bad off and people issue warning after warning, and people ignore them or fight against any change and then they reach this point.
Some of these pension funds are still assuming 8 % returns while half theirt portfolio is bonds paying 5 % and the other half is stocks always at risk for a crash. Many of these funds got blasted in 2008 and have still not recovered. The low interest rates have also squeezed the fund managers. Some of moved higher percentages into junk bonds and now junk bonds are right now crashing.
It's mostly just math, and people mostly ignore it.