Ore. faces higher public pension tab

Print
Email
|

by Associated Press

kgw.com

Posted on September 28, 2012 at 11:33 AM

Updated Friday, Sep 28 at 1:44 PM

TIGARD, Ore. (AP) -- Investment returns have fallen short, so the managers of Oregon's public pension system are turning to schools, cities and counties to make up the difference.

Government agencies are expected to find out Friday afternoon exactly how much more they'll have to pay toward employee pensions beginning next summer. The $2 billion that public employers are contributing during this two-year budget period is expected to rise by 45 percent, $900 million, in the next.

The local budget decisions that will follow are likely to put new pressure on government services and public workforces that have already shrunken by the Great Recession and its aftermath.

Print
Email
|