This is a re-post but adds some sanity to the union vs management debate at trimet
The financial problem has been a long time in the making. Ask any
employee of TriMet’s Training Department, and you can discover that this
is a hole dug by TriMet management a long time ago. Three decades ago,
full retirement was at age 62, with a 20 year vesting for Union
employees. The pension was tiny. But there was the promise of improving
seniority over time, and health care in retirement. Employees could
retire early at age 55, but with a much-reduced pension — out of
compassion for drivers who developed health problems and could no longer
drive. It was hard to survive retirement at 55 with no social security
until 62, and a tiny pension. TriMet is not part of PERS.
The big change came when management demanded part time drivers be
included in the contract. This was implemented in such a way that all
new drivers must start out part time. Combine the low starting wage with
short hours, and it turns out that young people with a family can’t
afford to work as bus drivers. New hires tended to be empty nesters in
their 40′s, 50′s, and even 60′s looking for a pension and health care.
Over time, the full retirement age was dropped to 58, with a 10-year
vesting period, and during Tom Walsh’s rule as GM, the pension was
raised to a fairer level, but still far below PERS. The contract also
required that the pensions, but not the retiree health care, be fully
funded, something to be phased in over a 40 year period. Subsequent
policy has been to bring the pension fund to full funding over a 20 year
period. The pension fund would have been well on the way to full
funding, if not for the massive drop in the stock market, which is now
in recovery.
The problem, now coming home to roost, is that TriMet has promised to
pay full health care for life for a 55 year old retiree with 10 years
of service, and there are a lot of folks retiring at 10 years.
TriMet’s offer to the Union, recently thrown out by the ERB, took a
machete to this problem. If their proposal had been upheld, many senior
employees would have retired, in order to take advantage of the old
contract. This was a stupid idea. Once a TriMet employee reaches 55,
every year they keep working saves TriMet one year of retiree health and
pension payouts, at the cost of a very modest increase in eventual
pension. If TriMet could keep most employees working until 65, they
would save a huge amount, because the health care cost for retirees 65
and over is paid in large part by Medicare.
Where TriMet should be engaging the Union is in trying to work out an
agreement that gradually vests the full cost of retiree health care
over significantly more than 10 years, and that adjusts the agreement
about part time drivers so that older full time drivers can choose part
time work without losing seniority, thereby allowing new hires a greater
opportunity to work a full 40 or more hours per week. This would bring
in employees at a younger age, allowing the cost of pensions and health
care to be amortized over something like 30 years, rather than 10 years.
While still allowing early retirement at 55, there should be an
incentive to work up to age 65.
If your Mercer interviewee
is so sharp about employee benefits, why doesn’t she understand the
above concepts? Did management fail to clue her in? Did she just not ask
questions? I am sorry to be submitting this so late after the
interview, but these are important issues that management and the TriMet
Board seems not to understand
1 comment:
I am looking for more crisis management examples that might be something like the Tylenol crisis or potentially business crisis's that are well known. It is for a class and just looking for something interesting. Thanks
|Hi,
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Thank you very much in advance,
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