Generous government employee benefits deserve review

in

This week, part-time state government employees begin taking on a bigger responsibility for their health insurance costs, a move that I've said before makes sense for the folks paying the bill – the taxpayers.

But the problem with the ongoing dispute over whether part-time state employees should pay higher premiums than their full-time peers is this: it's just a fraction of the discussion state lawmakers should be having. 

Idaho has an incredibly generous health insurance and retirement benefits package for its employees. That generosity comes at a cost, and it is a cost that's nearly impossible to ignore while lawmakers debate how to pry $150 million or more out of the state's budget in order to make it balance.

Taxpayers still pay 92 percent of the health insurance premiums for full-time state workers. Taxpayers are still subsidizing the public employee retirement system at a rate of about 10.4 percent for employees who work in state government and the public school system.

Taxpayers could potentially save millions of dollars if the retirement contribution rate paid by employers were lowered and if state employees were responsible for a slightly higher percentage of their health care.

First the health care issue: The state government is spending about $165 million a year on employee health benefits. When medical costs including deductibles, dependents and co-payments are plowed into the mix, state taxpayers subsidize about 77 percent of the total cost of medical care for the state's workforce and their families. Folks in the private sector should be so lucky.

According to an analysis from the state Department of Administration, the state government could have saved as much as $14 million in 2010 had the state increased the employee share of health care costs by just 2 percent. Making state employees — instead of taxpayers — responsible for 30 percent of employee health care costs has the potential to save taxpayers $40 million a year. This says nothing about the savings that might occur at other local taxing districts with comparable health insurance plans.

Now the retirement benefits: State government and public school employees contribute to a public pension fund, as do their employers. The employees pay in about 6.2 percent of their salaries while the employers, meaning government agencies that live off of taxpayers, pay in 10.4 percent. The contributions are designed to keep the fund solvent to make payments to retirees.

If the Legislature were to change the mix of contribution rates by just 2 percent — lowering the amount paid in by the government and increasing the amount paid in by employees — it would save taxpayers (at the state and school district level) $20 million a year, according to an analysis by the state public employee retirement system.

That's not under consideration right now. But the fact is, even if the state retirement contribution were lowered by 2 percent, it would still be more generous than the 6 percent retirement contribution of many private sector employers.

The question for policymakers is whether taxpayers should be forced to continue to subsidize such a generous employee benefits package at the expense of taxpayers. It's a discussion lawmakers didn't have in 2003 when state budget was similarly wracked. It would be unfortunate to not have this discussion now.

Wayne Hoffman is the executive director of the Idaho Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit, non-partisan think tank. E-mail him at wayne@idahofreedom.net.

Comments

State Employee Benefits

I work at Micron, where we have never received even the 6% employer contribution to our retirement of "many private employers". It was set at 2%, that is until it was canceled last year. Even this 2% will not come back for at least another year. 10.4% is way out of line, and needs to be cut way back.

State employee health insurance

As a former Idaho state employee who was very grateful for the generous health insurance benefits I received (Isn't that why many of us sought jobs with the state?), I would not disagree with any of Wayne's arguments.

In 2005, 2006, and 2007, we were warned or told to expect an increase in our premiums, though these increases never materialized. Since I was in one of the lower pay brackets (a clerical position with a para-professional title - LOL), I certainly didn't look foward to having my take-home pay reduced by even a dime (My first raise amounted to 9 cents/hour). Nevertheless, I understood why the state needed to make this change. I was also aware the $59/month I was paying for myself and a spouse was, "dirt cheap" as they say, compared to similar coverage in the private sector, to say nothing of what self-insured individuals pay - the people who were paying that 92% on my behalf! As our President might say, it's about fairness, but try telling that to the IPA and ACE lobbies.

I may be wrong, but I don't think IPA and ACE speak for a majority of state employees. A good many state employees, particularly those in the clerical fields which include flattering titles like management assistant and section leader, started their careers in the private sector. They made a conscious decision to trade a few dollars in hourly pay for lucrative benefits and job security, and many of them have now been with the state for 20-30 years. Speaking only for the agency where I worked, nearly all the employees were dedicated to their jobs and to improving the services they performed for the public. It wouldn't be natural for them to want to pay higher insurance premiums, but trust me, they are not going to resign in mass if they must, because they are cognizant of the fact the grass is not greener anywhere else in Idaho.

It's unfortunate the legislature caved to the demands of IPA the last time this issue came before them as if state employees are a militant bunch. They aren't. They are good citizens just like you and me. If the legislature bites on the bullet, so will they.

What isn't clear to me is what impact the reforms working their way through Congress might have on state employee benefits. Will we know in time for our legislators to act wisely with what ever cards are dealt to Idaho?

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.