Posted on 09/19/2025 6:19:30 AM PDT by delta7
“Bloomberg @business
Chicago is stepping in to lend cash to its underfunded pensions so they have enough money to avoid asset sales to cover retirement checks as they wait for property taxes to come in after a computer issue delayed collections.”
Chicago’s money trees are shedding their autumn layers with a new multi-million dollar government payout package for underfunded public pensions. City officials approved a short-term bailout of the Firemen’s Annuity & Benefit Fund to the tune of $28 million to avoid forced asset sales. That is merely the tip of the iceberg, as Chicago’s pension debt has risen 15% over the past five years to an utterly unsustainable $36 billion.
Property taxes currently fund 80% of the city’s pension fund, but are not enough to sufficiently meet payouts. The average pension fund ideally has a funding level of around 70%, and funding beneath 40% is considered nearly insolvent. In Chicago, the top four public pension funds (fire, police, municipal, and laborers), along with the teachers’ pension fund, have a backing ratio between 24% to 43%, with the combined debt now exceeding $53 billion—all of Chicago’s public pension funds have gone bust. Reform measures have been bypassed for years to the point of no return.
Chicago’s pension system carries a debt larger than that of 44 states. Seven Chicago-area pension funds are among the top 10 worst-funded plans in the country. The city already allocates up to 20% of its annual budget toward pensions. Taxpayers are expected to meet all shortfalls, but again, the current level of taxation is not enough to cover the gap.
Lawmakers claim there was a mere system error. Property tax bills were expected to be sent out in June, but will not reach taxpayers until October. The $28 million is intended to act as a temporary band-aid, but the city is almost guaranteed to ask for additional loans and bailouts because the frozen funds are NOT the problem. These funds are a Ponzi scheme, robbing Peter to pay Paul, but the jig is up.
Chicago
Lawmakers recently passed a bill to provide additional pay to Chicago’s retired firefighters and police officers. Politicians are permitted to pass bills to secure votes without actually having a plan in place. The city’s pension bill will rise to $2.76 billion by 2026. There is no money for other public services. Chicago has lost its ability to remain competitive as capital is fleeing increased levies.
Chicago’s overall property tax levy more than doubled in a decade, expanding from $860 million in 2014 to $1.77 billion in 2024. Pension costs directly have risen sixfold over that ten-year span from $478 million in 2014 to $2.75 billion in 2024. The city has redirected every penny collected from property taxes since 2014 into these failing funds, but the pension obligation has surpassed 160% of the annual property tax revenue.
The blame falls on the people rather than the failed politicians. Mayor Brandon Johnson proposed increasing property taxes by $300 million for the current fiscal year, which would mark the largest spike in property taxes in the city’s history. The measure was shot down by the City Council who instead plans to generate $165.5 million with additional taxes and fees in other domains.
In 2021, Mayor Lori Lightfoot demanded a $93.9 million increase in property taxes. Johnson actually campaigned against that measure, and Lightfoot was pressured to drop the tax hike to $42.7 million in 2023. Johnson was elected over Lightfoot for pretending to care about constituents and promising to lower tax burdens.
Their approach has failed. 41% of property taxes were injected into these broken pension funds in 2014 and increased to 80% in 2024. Property taxes more than doubled in that timeframe, but it is nowhere near enough to solve this crisis. Politicians will continue to rob the people with excessive levies to maintain the Ponzi scheme for as long as possible. It is only a matter of time before the city is unable to pay retirees.
The Illinois Constitution does not permit cities to file for Chapter 9 bankruptcy. The state has historically blocked any cuts to payouts regardless of liquidity. The city may one day be forced to beg for a federal bailout, which would force all Americans to pay for decades of reckless mismanagement by financially illiterate politicians.
Indeed
Mafia hit hardest
Too many people would rather have “govt” security vs. freedom
This is exactly why Prop 13 in California is under constant attack by the bastards in the statehouse - it prevents them from raising property taxes to fund their lefty policies (such as health care for illegals).
“The 1978 proposition decreased property taxes by assessing values at their 1976 value, limiting the rate of taxation to 1% of the assessed value, and restricting annual increases of assessed value to an inflation factor, not to exceed 2% per year.”
The Democrats need more revenue for state pensions, illegals and to line their own pockets.
That said I would vote for ending property taxes for everyone.
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States rights. Florida is voting on that in next year’s ballot. Their “ fix”? Instate a 12 percent sales tax on everything, except for food….damned if they do, damned if they don’t.
If the EU can be used as an example, be aware it started out as a one percent tax and now exceeds 18 percent in some member nations. The U.S. is in a debt spiral, tax, spend, tax, spend, and will no longer work.
“Chicago’s Pension Funds are Nearly Insolvent – Incoming $28m Bailout”
And? What else would they expect? The joint has been run by no-class, low life, ignorant, greedy, unfit for any normal occupation, soulless, heartless, valueless, communist leaning depmocrat, criminal gangster wannabees for decades. The only thing lower on the human scale than these filthy bastards are the scum that vote for them.
“The average pension fund ideally has a funding level of around 70%”.
No, ideal is 100% or more. It is a long-term obligation and should be managed/invested ... conservatively.
If a private pension plan is under 80% funded, certain restrictions apply to it. If it is under 60% funded, more onerous restrictions apply. One of these is that no additional benefits are earned until it’s over 60%.
I work on a number of small private plans. Over the last 4 years, the lowest funding level is over 80%.
Public pensions funded by taxpayers for bloated, under worked, beauracrats should be illegal.
Fund it yourselves.
“Trump To City - ‘Drop Dead’”
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