Politicians Expect You To Pay A Little Bit More
The Ventura County Star Mentions VREG
We’re proud the Ventura County Star mentioned us in an article on pensions. The Star article lists VREG as a watchdog group.
Click here to go to the article.
We believe pensions and unfunded liabilities are ticking time bombs for the city. The Star joins us in pointing this out to Ventura citizens.
In Ventura’s budget starting July 1, the city will pay CalPERS almost $11 million. That’s the amount Ventura owes in unfunded liability. CalPERS projects that to at least double five years later, to over $22 million. That doesn’t include normal, ongoing costs.
That increase almost equals the revenue the half-cent sales tax will generate. The City Council supported the tax to pay for needs other than pensions. Taxpayers believed it was for infrastructure, public safety, homeless services, water quality and other priorities.
Taxpayer and watchdog groups accuse city leaders of misleading the voters. They knew Ventura needed the revenue to offset growing retirement costs.
The Star writes, “Venturans for Responsible and Efficient Government has made similar claims.”
How Bad The Situation Is Depends On Who You Talk To
City Finance Director, Gilbert Garcia, disagrees. He says the city will separate new sales tax revenue from the General Fund. It will be overseen by a soon-to-be-created citizen oversight board.
The state will pay money from Measure O to Ventura beginning in April. The oversight committee is not formed yet. That means no citizens won’t know if the money is separate until months after the fact. The city has had since November 9, 2016 to organize the citizens’ oversight committee. Yet, four months later citizens don’t have any safeguards in place.
The article notes. “How dire the situation is—or isn’t—depends on who you talk to.”
The article notes. “How dire the situation is—or isn’t—depends on who you talk to.” How true.
If you ask a public employee they think the whole thing is way overblown and there is no problem. The public employee does not care that they impose a real burden on their neighbors. They have theirs. They worked for those benefits. The taxpayers owe them.
The Council members give the public employees what they want. They give little regard to the economic consequences on the rest of the citizens. It’s the hard working men and women who they will always expect to “pay a little bit more.”
IF THIS UPSETS YOU, WRITE YOUR COUNCILMEMBER
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