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Long odds for major Illinois pension fix

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There are no such laws for the state or Chicago, however.

Instead of paying the ARC, the state has periodically skipped pension payments, borrowed billions to fund the system and backloaded debt payments so that small amounts are paid in the early years before ballooning down the road.

The trouble now, however, is that the state pension debt is so high that there isn't enough revenue to cover the ARC. Take the Illinois Teachers' Retirement System. In 2011, the ARC was $2.7 billion, but the state contributed just $2.2 billion, according to the fund's most recent financial report.

The city also has consistently failed to contribute enough to adequately cover pensions for its employees, leading to a large debt.

Take Chicago's police pension fund. For decades, the city paid a percentage of the department's payroll rather than an amount determined by an actuary to keep the fund solvent. Under that structure, the city contributed about $174 million to the police fund in 2011. The true costs of the benefits, however, were $403 million, more than double what the city paid, according to the pension plan's financial reports.

That imbalance has been the main thing driving the police plan from being 99 percent funded in 2000 to just 35 percent in 2011. The debt, meanwhile, tripled during the past decade to $6.2 billion.

A state law passed in 2010 requires the city to pay the ARC for its police and fire pension funds beginning in 2015. City officials estimate that it will add an extra $580 million to Chicago's pension costs.

Chicago Public Schools faces a similar problem. Confronted with a large budget deficit in 2010, school officials went to Springfield and brokered a deal that allowed CPS to lower its payment to the Chicago teachers pension fund over a three-year period.

That deal expires this year, yet the district is in no better shape to pay its pension bill. The district's budget shortfall is expected to be $1 billion, with $340 million of that total resulting from its pension payment nearly tripling from $196 million to more than $540 million. Meanwhile, the teachers pension plan is now less than 60 percent funded, and its debt stands at more than $6.8 billion — 16 times larger than it was a decade ago.

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