Showing posts with label MNPEA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MNPEA. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Running for the PERA Board!


I submitted the paperwork to be on the Ballot of the PERA Board (Public Employees Retirement Association) earlier this month. 

I am running for the Retired, Disabled and Survivor representative seat.

If elected I would be the first (to my knowledge) retired corrections officer to serve on the PERA Board.

Experience:

Detention Deputy, Hennepin County Sheriff's Office Hennepin County Jail 1990 to 2016.

Union Steward Teamsters Local 320 mid 1990's - 2011.

Elected as a National Delegate to the 2011 International Brotherhood of Teamsters Convention.

Union Steward Minnesota Public Employees Association (MNPEA) 2011-2015.

Served as an advisor to the Minnesota Senate's Telecommunicators Pension Benefits Working Group  2021.

President Minnesota Correctional Officer Retirement Association MNCORA  

Over the years I have negotiated numerous Labor Contracts with Hennepin County.

I have represented members in grievances both contractual and disciplinary.

I attend the PERA meetings and stay on top of our issues.


If elected I will represent the Retirees, Disabled and Survivor beneficiaries of the PERA pension with all of the passion I have to the members in my previous stewardship's.

I will support strong investment returns to keep the plans well funded and achieve maximum COLA's.

Thank you to all of you who signed the nomination form. Here's the timeline of  event's leading to the election. The next step is to vote! 

Vote Wade Laszlo, PERA Board!

Election Timeline:







Friday, February 28, 2020

Big Pension News Coming

As my readers know I have been keeping a close watch on the PERA Correctional Pension.
The only Union protecting the PERA Correctional Pension with me has been MNPEA.

Others are now trying to take credit. Others who were willing to accept cuts to our pension.

Real long story short (for full story go back in this blog). On December 14, 2017 I was at the PERA Board Meeting. They were voting on Pension Funding proposals to the legislature. It was proposed to cut the COLA increases for the PERA Correctional Pension retirees.

During the discussion it was stated all of the "stakeholders" had been talked to and were on board for the cut. Those consulted and approving were Teamsters Local 320, AFSCME and LELS.

I raised my hand and asked if  MNPEA, one of the largest stakeholders had been notified. They had not! Rebecca Otto then moved the Correctional change be tabled until Director Doug Anderson had a chance to talk to the stakeholders (MNPEA the only group not consulted).

Tom Perkins of MNPEA and myself subsequently met with Doug Anderson who then recommended our COLA cap remain at 2.5% not the 1.5% agreed to by the other so called stakeholders.

The PERA Board had a special meeting on January 9, 2018 and voted to approve the 2.5%.

I am attaching the documentation from PERA's website. You will see no Teamsters present. AFSCME and Dave Matuslaem (then with the MPPOA) were all on board to cut our pension.

It angers me to hear these other groups now claiming they fought for our pension. They did not, only MNPEA. I was there!

WATCH THIS BLOG. VERY BIG NEWS IS COMING!






Monday, July 22, 2019

Sherburne County MN ICE- a well oiled machine

The Star Tribune has a story covering a protest against the Sherburne County (MN) Jail adding more ICE beds. They propose to expand from the existing 300 to 500 beds.

Sherburne County has had the contract for years. Hennepin County was offered the contract years ago when they were building their Public Safety Facility, but turned it down. So Hennepin County tax payers are saddled with the entire Jail budget.

So while Hennepin County spends over $100,000,000 a year on Public Safety, Sherburne County received almost $30,000,000 in five years from the Federal Government to offset their budget.

The Sherburne County jail is clean, and it's Detention Deputies are professional MNPEA Union members.

I've seen complaints in the news about private, for profit jails and now I'm watching complaints about the government doing it in a proper manner. Ice detainees receive food, clothing and medical care. They are legally held until an immigration judge makes a determination.

The article says, " of the 1,500 people detained overall on behalf of ICE for most of last year, three-quarters had previous criminal convictions, including 29 for criminal sexual conduct, 19 for kidnapping, 82 for assault, three for murder and 11 for manslaughter. Roughly half were from Mexico; the rest hailed from 85 different countries."

So half are not from Mexico, blowing a hole in the media narrative.

I support citizen's right to protest. But they should realize when our laws are enforced those arrested will be held somewhere. I prefer a government run center over a private for profit one. I also applaud the Sherburne County board for being fiscally responsible. They are making our Nation and State safer, and saving their taxpayers money. That's what I call good government.

Friday, June 07, 2019

Sherburne County may add more ICE Beds

Detention Deputies/Corrections Officers are on the front lines of Homeland Security!

According to MPR:

Sherburne County is proposing to expand its jail to provide space for up to 500 immigration detainees, an increase from the 300 beds it currently provides for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Sherburne County has the second-largest county jail in Minnesota, capable of housing 732 inmates. For decades, the county has contracted with the U.S. government to house immigration detainees and other federal inmates. Its jail once held the 20th conspirator behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Zacarias Moussaoui.




Friday, November 16, 2018

Hutch campaign manager attends MNPEA meeting

Sheriff Hutch's campaign manager attended the last MNPEA union meeting. Here is a synopsis from some members who were there.

WADE!!! In a nutshell, this is what D. B. told me. Hutch's campaign guy is Austin Sable out of Radio. According to him, Hutch wants to return to a more traditional Sheriffs Office with a predominately Civilian staff while focusing on Jail, Radio and Records/Courts. Stanek over-extended Radio's service perimeter while not providing the staff and resources needed to handle it. There are 15 stations manned while a 16TH goes unmanned. Although Waterways is still a mandate, he sees no real issues there. and I would agree. Seems that most, if not everybody out there is content. He wants to see that budgeted moneys go to where they are appropriated to go. The last two idiots were notorious at asking for money to fund 'this' and end up spending it to fund 'that.' We both have seen plenty of BS. He also wants to address both retention and incentives for both new hires and existing staff. I am hoping he takes a more reasonable and sensible approach to hiring. This 'mass hiring' approach that Stanek had a love affair with is neither practical or economically sound. There is a balance between paying your existing staff OT (far cheaper) and hiring new staff (more costly). A approach that would benefit everybody. Finally, he is open to Labor Groups. He both appreciates and recognizes Labor Groups. I realize this is all lip service so far, but it sounds promising. If I were speaking directly to him, I would put it this way.."Dude, you are in a very good position. Stanek had taken just about everything away from us. If you could restore even some of it, you could be viewed very favorably. Do you want a good movie or a bad movie??? It is totally up to you!" 

I forget to mention, he is all about Mental Health and not servicing ICE. I am not sure what he is after with the Mental Health thing. I do hope we don't continue to warehouse inmates for these M/H institutions. Once committed, send them!!! We should not be sitting on them. As far as ICE is concerned, not sure what he means by that either. He could mean we are not going to warehouse inmates for ICE while they drag their feet on what they are going to do. I would agree with that. 


I REACHED OUT TO SHERIFF HUTCH TO WRITE AN UNEDITED MESSAGE IN THIS BLOG TO DETENTION DEPUTIES.

Tuesday, October 09, 2018

Beware LELS, Law Enforcement Labor Services!

Hey Minnesota CO's, all representation is not the same.

LELS has a pitch to Corrections Officers on their website.

That's funny because LELS (Sean Gormley and David Metusalem) , Teamsters Local 320 (Brian Aldes) and AFSCME all signed off on allowing PERA CO's to take a Pension cut just a few months ago. Thank God MNPEA and I caught it.

They are also pitching their Legal Plan. I'm not sure how it's working now, but back when Hennepin County Detention was with them it didn't apply to Detention Deputies, only sworn officers. I'm also sure it doesn't apply to off duty like MNPEA's plan does. Hell, they didn't even support the PERA Correctional Officers Pension when we were working on it. Dan Wells sat behind me at a meeting and laughed!

We are in a time when CO's are leaving the likes of Teamsters Local 320 and AFSCME, just be careful you go to a Union that will represent Corrections. Not just take your dues for Police only.





Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Janus wins over AFSCME

Janus wins Over AFSCME

The United States Supreme Court has ruled charging Fair Share Dues to unionized public employees is ILLEGAL! A violation of the 1st Amendment.

This will be the end of AFCSME and Teamsters Local 320 if they don't begin representing their members like the MNPEA does! I predict their membership will plummet like happened in Wisconsin after it became a Right to Work State.

I am, and have always been pro-Union, however, when a Union stops representing members and spends all of the member resources supporting politicians rather than members, those members have a right to leave.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

No. 16–1466 MARK JANUS, PETITIONER v. AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY, AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, COUNCIL 31, ET AL. ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT [June 27, 2018]

JUSTICE ALITO delivered the opinion of the Court. Under Illinois law, public employees are forced to subsidize a union, even if they choose not to join and strongly object to the positions the union takes in collective bargaining and related activities. We conclude that this arrangement violates the free speech rights of nonmembers by compelling them to subsidize private speech on matters of substantial public concern

Monday, May 21, 2018

Pension Bill Passes

The new PERA Pension Bill has passed. HF3053 and SF2620

Public Employee Pensions have been a hot topic and the original proposals were to cut our annual Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) down to a maximum of 1.5% with a minimum of 1%.

The PERA Corrections Pension under the new bill will be between 1% and a maximum 2.5% (COLA) based on the Federal cost of living index.

We have been at 2.5% and based on the economy should remain there for the foreseeable future.

See previous postings for all the grit.

Special thanks to Doug Anderson of PERA and the PERA Board for listening to Tom Perkins of MNPEA and myself and recommending to the legislature we cap out at our current 2.5% COLA. Also to my Representative Abigail Whelan for meeting with me and bringing our concerns to the Bill's authors to allow us to remain at the higher COLA.

To all CO's and retiree's out there remember, Teamsters Local 320, AFSCME Council 5 and LELS
had all agreed to cut our PERA Correctional COLA to 1.5%! They called it shared sacrifice.

Thank you legislature and PERA for hearing OUR voices.

Saturday, April 14, 2018

PERA Correctional Pension Update

Good news on our Pension front. 

According to  PERA: Strong year for PERA investments.

The investment performance for PERA's three largest retirement plans--the General Employees, Police & Fire, and Correctional Plans--for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, was excellent. The Combined Fund posted a 15.1 percent rate of return for the 12-month period.

and from the PERA Newsletter 

CORRECTIONAL PLAN

The Correctional Plan legislative proposal includes a post-retirement increase to provide 100 percent of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), with a 1 percent floor, and a 2.5 percent cap until the Plan’s funding ratio drops below 80 percent for one year or 85 percent for two consecutive years. The funding ratio would be measured on the market value basis every year. If the funding ratio does not meet the required level, the post-retirement increase would be 100 percent of CPI, with a 1 percent floor, and a 1.5 percent cap. Once the lower cap applies, no further triggers would exist.
The proposal preserves the opportunity for a post-retirement increase as high as 2.5 percent provided that the funded ratio exceeds the existing trigger.

Monday, March 05, 2018

New Pension Bill

A new Bill has been introduced in the Minnesota  House and Senate affecting our PERA Correctional Pension (HF3053 and SF2620).

Originally the recomendation was to lump our PERA Correctional Plan in with all of the rest and give us only an annual cost of living adjustment (COLA) floor of 1% with a ceiling of 1.5% based on inflation. AFSCME called it "shared sacrifice." Teamsters and even LELS signed off on it. Willing to weaken the PERA Correctional Plan!

After Tom Perkins of MNPEA and myself met with PERA Executive Director Doug Anderson and the PERA Board, they recommended to the legislature that our PERA Correctional Plan have a floor of 1% with a ceiling of 2.5% based on inflation.

While I would prefer no change to our annual COLA of 2.5%, if change is going to come, at least we will maintain a COLA of 2.5% in times of inflation.

The new bills reflect that. Thank you Doug Anderson, PERA Board and legislatures.
Special thanks to Rep. Abigail Whelan for meeting with me early on and contacting the Bill's authors.

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Liars, Representation and Pensions

On 2/16/18, Teamsters Local 320 Secretary Treasurer Brian Aldes had an editorial published in the Star Tribune.

I can't believe he had the audacity to discuss public employee pensions, "...pensions are promises employers make to their employees in the form of deferred compensation. Public employees pay into their pensions through contributions to the plan.."

Teamsters Local 320 actually had agreed to allow a cut in the Cost of Living for their CO's pension from 2.5% to 1.5% a year. They along with AFSCME, and LELS were unwilling to stand up for their CO's!  MNPEA was the only union to do so.

Brian's and the Teamsters main concern seems to be collecting dues rather than member representation. Had that been their goal the Hennepin County Detention Deputies and Dispatchers (911) wouldn't have decertified them in 2011, followed not much later by Minneapolis 911 who all went to MNPEA.

The crux of his editorial is the fear that Janus vs. AFSCME, Council 31 will be upheld by the Supreme Court. Why? Because then people won't have to pay dues if the Union isn't doing what they are being paid to do!

I am very pro-union, but if a union has forgotten they exist for the members, they serve no purpose.

Sunday, January 14, 2018

PERA Board of Trustees approves legislative proposal for Correctional Plan

After meetings with myself and MNPEA Vice President Tom Perkins I am proud to share:

PERA Board of Trustees approves legislative proposal for Correctional Plan

The PERA Board of Trustees unanimously approved a legislative proposal for the Correctional Plan during their Jan. 9 special meeting. In December the Board approved legislative proposals for the General and Police & Fire Plans. The Board wanted PERA staff to receive additional input from stakeholder groups before voting on a legislative proposal for the Correctional Plan.

The modified Correctional Plan legislative proposal includes a post-retirement increase to provide 100 percent of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), with a 1 percent floor, and a 2.5 percent cap until the Plan’s funding ratio drops below 80 percent for one year or 85 percent for two consecutive years. The funding ratio would be measured on the market value basis every year. If the funding ratio does not meet the required level, the post-retirement increase would be 100 percent of CPI, with a 1 percent floor, and a 1.5 percent cap. Once the lower cap applies, no further triggers would exist.

The proposal preserves the opportunity for a post-retirement increase as high as 2.5 percent provided that the funded ratio exceeds the existing trigger which calls for that the funding ratio does not drop below the 80 percent for one year or 85 percent for two consecutive years.

Thank you PERA Executive Director Doug Anderson and PERA Board! Thank you Minnesota Public Employees Association (MNPEA) for standing with us!

No thanks to Teamsters Local 320, AFSCME Council 5 or LELS who were willing to let their Corrections Officer's cap out at 1.5%!

Monday, December 25, 2017

NEW PERA RECOMENDATION

After meeting with PERA Executive Director Doug Anderson he has emailed me a second PERA proposal.

This still has to go to the PERA Board but I believe Mr. Anderson heard what was said and has come up with a very reasonable responsible second proposal.

Here it is:

Proposal 1: Change to 100% of CPI, 1% floor, 1.5% cap. 

Proposal 2
*Change current COLA to 100% of CPI, 1% floor, 2.5% cap (currently a fixed 2.5%).

* Maintain the current “trigger off”, which is that the 2.5% cap turns off when funding is < 80% once or < 85% for two consecutive years. 

*If/when the “trigger off” occurs, the benefit goes to 100% CPI, 1% floor, 1.5% cap. 

*Eliminate any future “trigger on”. If the plan triggers off, it could never trigger back on. The benefit would remain 100% CPI, 1% floor, 1.5% cap.

In other words if CPI (inflation) is at least 2.5% or more we are guaranteed the 2.5% COLA. Depending on inflation we are guaranteed at least 1% but can go higher than the earlier proposed 1.5%.

I wish it were left alone, but the writing is on the wall for the legislature to eliminate triggers. The O'Driscoll/Rosen Bill wants to cap us at 1.5%,. The PERA proposal 2 would allow us to go up to our current 2.5% recognizing the health of our plan.

If we drop below the trigger we will join ranks with the other plans. I am a fiscal conservative and believe that is fair. If our plan is doing well we reap the benefit, if it gets weak we tighten the COLA belt. At the end of the day we want a healthy pension.

I again express my gratitude to PERA Executive Director Doug Anderson for taking time to listen to MNPEA Vice President Tom Perkins and myself.

This is not a MNPEA response, the MNPEA Board will meet and respond on their own.

As an interesting aside. We also learned at that meeting that LELS also met with PERA and was on-board with cutting the COLA to 1.5% of their CO's!

Remember, the legislature makes the laws that govern our pensions. PERA executes those laws. There is no guarantee the legislature will follow their recommendation. But if it comes to a fight at the Capital it's another arrow in the quiver.

To be clear, I prefer no change to our current Pension, as it is doing well. IF, they are are going to eliminate the triggers, I prefer the second proposal of the 2.5% COLA to the 1.5% cap.


Tuesday, December 19, 2017

PERA meeting and recommendation

Today MNPEA Vice President Tom Perkins and I met with PERA Executive Director Doug Anderson and Shayna (?).

They very graciously gave us an hour and a half. We all have the same goal of keeping our pension healthy. They have tremendous pressure to move the plans to 100% funding, a goal I agree with.

There is a proposal to lower the actuarial tables from 8% to 7.5%. If passed, this changes the amount considered fully funded. Under current law it's 8% and our payouts are based on that.

If the actuarial is lowered to 7.5% the proposal is to eliminate the triggers (read previous posts) and go to an across the board COLA formula. An annual COLA of 1% (as a floor) with a max COLA of 1.5% based on inflation (CPI).

In effect this cuts the PERA Correctional COLA a full 1% and the other, not as well funded plans only .5% and  *maintains 1% with no cut to the Police and Fire COLA even though they require $9,000,000 a year just to keep current funding.

This all leads to an assumed funding for the PERA General Plan and Police and Fire to be at 110% in 2047.

Ok, but the PERA Correctional Plan would be funded at 120% in 2047. With "shared sacrifice" we sacrifice more. It reminds me of the book Animal Farm. "All animals are created equal. But some are more equal than others."

PERA does not make law, but are frequently asked for recommendations. These recommendations mirror the O'Driscoll and Rosen Bill.

They gave us this meeting because as stakeholders, MNPEA and retirees of MNPEA, had no input into what they will propose. Now we have, again thank you Doug Anderson.

The hope is when they meet in January they will recommend, like last year, no change to the PERA Correctional Plan.

*Post corrected 12/22/17 I originally posted P&F would get a .5% COLA.


Thursday, December 07, 2017

Meeting with my State Rep about our Pension

Just finished a very productive meeting with my State Representative Abigail Whelan. She met me at our local Dunn Brothers Coffee and we had a very productive conversation about the recent bills (HF 565, SF 545) that sought to lower our COLA. She was in agreement with our position and will be talking to Rep.O'Driscoll (one of the authors) about it.

As you know Governor Dayton vetoed them, but they were part of the Omnibus Bill and very likely will be re-introduced.

I cannot stress enough, please contact your State Representatives and Senators. Rep. Whelan also recommends this.

Stress that our PERA Correctional Pension is well funded.

There is no need for 'shared sacrifice' with less well run pensions.

There is already a trigger in our pension that if it drops below 80% funding our COLA automatically cuts to 1%. (We are funded at 95.7%).

PERA did not recommend any adjustments to our pension, only the Authors of the Bill (HF 565, SF 545) did.

I will be meeting soon with my State Senator Jim Abler.

I cannot thank Rep. Whelan enough for meeting me to hear our issue.

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Surge in Hennepin County Felony Cases

"felony charges in Hennepin County are up in all types of crimes, including a 63 percent jump in murder charges, and 15 percent increase in drug charges" -Star Tribune

FULL STORY 

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Some Details

As with most of you, I am a fiscal conservative. I have watched pension plans crash and burn. Like the Teamsters Central States pension.

To Minnesota's Credit, the PERA Board and legislature have historically done a great job of keeping our pensions solvent.

The last eight years were not particularly good for many pensions. The MSRS Correctional Plan, PERA Police and Fire, TRA (Teachers Union) and Judges pensions are not doing so well
and wisely some adjustments are being made to insure they remain solvent into the future.

Among proposals by Sen. Rosen in SF545 is to reduce the Cost Of Living Adjustment (COLA) of some of the plans, but not equally. Among them is to cut MSRA Correctional from a 2% annual COLA to 1.5% and to cut our PERA Correctional COLA from 2.5% to 1.5% so they are uniform.

Wait a minute. MSRA Correctional is way under funded and only gets a .5% reduction in it's COLA. The PERA Correctional Plan which is funded at 95.7% is asked to take a 1% cut in COLA!

The Legislative Commission's own actuarials on the PERA Correctional Plan state, "The funded status of the plan will increase gradually towards a 100% funded ratio."

It's disturbing to see Republicans like Sen. Rosen and her counterpart in the House, Rep. O'Driscoll, wanting to make things uniform. That sounds more like socialism than conservatism. Sadly, the vote was 100% in the Senate for this.

I can understand the cut to the MSRA Correctional Plan, but not the PERA Corrections Plan. They are two separate pensions, separate funding and one plan is anemic, the other healthy. Why give the healthy plan the bigger cut? This is unfair to County Corrections Officers.

Here's a large part of the problem. The largest Unions representing County Corrections Officers are MNPEA and LELS. We had no input!

The two groups that had input were Teamsters Local 320 (who lost almost all of their CO's) and AFSCME.  They were more interested is shoring up the pensions of their General Groups and Police, which make up a majority of their members.

AFSCME actually threw their approximately 100 CO's at the Hennepin County Workhouse under the bus. On their AFSME Council 5 website they call for shared sacrifice! Cutting our COLA does not help MSRS! If I were a Hennepin County Workhouse CO I'd scream bloody murder at AFSCME.

I leave you with a picture from AFSCME Council 5, calling for shared sacrifice! They plan on working against County CO's again in 2018. We have much work ahead.


Friday, November 10, 2017

Pension Watch Pt 3, what we are up against.

Watch the video, in it Sen. Rosen, Chairman of the Legislative Commission on Pensions and Retirement speaks of her bill.

Of note is the stated goal at the 3 minute, 30 second mark of "stabilizing the pensions at 90%."

Watch the video and then look at my comment son You Tube.

Tuesday, November 07, 2017

Pension Watch Part 2

So after much digging around here’s what I found out.

The PERA Board made no recommendations to change our pension.
It is 100% politically driven by the legislature.

The Bill (HF565) was introduced into the House by Rep. Tim O’Driscoll (R-Dist 13) and in the Senate (SF545) by Sen. Julie A. Rosen (R-Dist 23).

It died last time because Gov. Dayton vetoed it. But my understanding is it’s coming back.

Our PERA Correctional Plan already pays out the lowest benefit of any corrections or law enforcement pension in the state.

The Police and Fire pension pays out at a rate of 3% of their high 5 with a 1% annual COLA. They are only funded at 87.7%. (and they have a seat on the PERA board).

The State Corrections pension pays 2.4% a of their high 5 with a 2% COLA. (and they have a seat on their MSRS pension board).

Our PERA Correctional Plan pays out at 1.9% of our high 5 with a 2.5%  annual COLA because we are funded at 95.7%.

This Bill is patently unfair to PERA CO’s and Detention Deputies. We have the healthiest pension and the lowest payout! If they want to limit our COLA then make it fair and at least give us the 2.4% payout the State Corrections Officers get!

Rep. Tim O'Driscoll
The good news is that nothing can really be done on this until this summer. Our COLA is safe for 2018 and probably 2019 by the time they get anything done.

If we can get the authors of the Bill to withdraw the Bill or at least the part affecting us, we’ll be fine.

If not our pension will not keep up with the cost of living.

Contact Rep. Tim O'Driscoll  rep.tim.odriscoll@house.mn and ask him to withdraw our portion from his Bill.
Home: Sartell P.O. Box 225, 56377



Sen. Julie A. Rosen
Contact Sen. Julie A. Rosen sen.julie.rosen@senate.mn

Home: Vernon Center P.O. Box 428 56090
Ask her to withdraw out potion from her Bill.

When you contact them stress the unfairness.
Our pension is fully funded with the lowest payout.
Ask why they are punishing us! 

People who spend their lives in a dangerous career for public safety shouldn't get shortchanged at the end!



Feel free to contact me at my new email: pera.watchdog@gmail.com

Saturday, November 04, 2017

PERA Correctional Pension Watch

As a retiree I am paying close attention to our Correctional Pension. There are some proposed changes afoot that concern me. They should also concern future retirees.

Of particular concern is this Correctional Plan item from the PERA website:


Anderson said that PERA staff will continue to meet with Correctional Plan stakeholders to gather input into possible plan changes. The Board did not propose changes during the 2017 legislative session; however, the Legislature did propose a change from the current 2.5 percent trigger to a fixed 1.5 percent COLA


In the same letter the legislature is proposing a change from a 1% COLA for Police and Fire to 1.5%.

Currently the *Correctional Plan is funded at 95.7% and the Police & Fire Plan at 87.7%. The trigger for a 2.5% COLA is 90%.

*Source PERA Comprehensive Annual Financial Report.Pg 12.

The exceptional health of the Correctional Plan triggers the higher 2.5% COLA for Correctional retirees.

The Police and Fire Plan has had issues and has been unable to hit the 90% -2.5% COLA trigger.

Our Correctional Plan pays out at a rate of 1.9% of our contributions. Police and Fire pays out 3%!

Our plan has more money and triggers the 2.5% COLA. Theirs currently does not.

I don't care what they give P&F, but the proposed downplaying of our benefit seems to be a give away from the money WE paid into ours for another plan.

There is a PERA meeting on December 14th supposedly seeking input I want to attend. I just emailed PERA to get the info.

Why is this important? Former Teamsters Business Agent David Metusalem has Retired from the Ramsey County Sheriff's Office to be Executive Director of Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association, aka MPPOA (Congratulations). This required him to relinquish his seat on the Police and Fire Plan Board, triggering an election. We've never had a seat at the table!

The PERA website says they are meeting with "Correctional Plan Stakeholders." Who?

Why does this matter? P&F have members watching their retirement. Corrections does not!

Back in 2009 when we at Hennepin County were Teamsters, we made a proposal to get a Detention Deputy on the PERA Board. It passed, but never happened.

Who is looking out for us? Back in 1997 when we were first meeting at the Teamsters building with Mike Golen and Tom Perkins (our plans' architect) , Dan Wells from LELS sat behind me laughing at the idea. MPPOA and LELS won't care. Teamsters failed to act!

We have to get a Detention Deputy/CO and or Retiree on the Board. MNPEA members your board is already on this. The Correctional Plan architect is on MNPEA's board.

MPPOA and LELS, are you going to protect your 800 CO's?

Watch this blog for updates. Be prepared to contact your State Reps.