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One things about cops, though, I don't think I have encountered one who was not suffering from some degree of PTSD.
Pensions are a form of compensation. Nothing more or less. If you want to look at how teachers, or cops, firemen, or judges, or public defenders, or clerks in govt offices are paid on an annual basis, then by all means go ahead and include the annual cost of the pension in your analysis of their pay.
If you think being a cop or a fireman for 30 to 35 years is such a sweet deal, you should have done it yourself, instead of being envious of those that did.
Truth. Have a family friend who was shot in the shoulder in the line of duty and is now on permanent disability. Not only that, but his knees are totally fucked up from taking down/tackling/cuffing resistive perps. Constantly on painkillers, basically he's addicted to codeine and miserable. But hey, that pension!
When I add in the value of their pensions, and I do, public employees are compensated vastly greater than private company employees.
then you know that cutting public sector compensation ultimatley hurts the private sector workers
marcus saysthen you know that cutting public sector compensation ultimatley hurts the private sector workers
Only if all those LA Teachers are retiring in LA. Otherwise, they cash their checks, go to the doctor, go grocery shopping, and buy homes in... Arizona.
But LA businesses and workers, not Arizona companies and employees, pay for it.
Everyone who gets CA pension retires outside of it, pays no taxes. call it winning?
How exactly do teachers and police officers make the $500k/year which would equate to $5m nest egg?
It incentivizes people to suckle a public service job which does little benefit
$5 million annuitized at 5% is 250K a year for 30 years. How many retired teachers do you think get even a 4th of that ?
Pulled your numbers out of where ?
$5 million annuitized at 5% is 250K a year for 30 years. How many retired teachers do you think get even a 4th of that ?
One things about cops, though, I don't think I have encountered one who was not suffering from some degree of PTSD.
Is 5% the current annuity rate?
marcus saysI was middle aged when I started teaching
during the fallout from the dot.com collapse, I read an article in the SF Chronicle about teachers who started in middle age, and how their social security got messed up.
I did not know this, but California teachers are opted out of social security. It means, they don't pay into it, nor do their employers. They do the pension instead. The teachers who started late, would receive a low social security based on contributions before going into teaching. But, because they started late, nor would they accrue a large pension benefit.
How do you spell clueless ?
F_O_R_T_W_A_Y_N_E
5% is a reasonable assumption
Can you kindly refute his ideas
No reason to assume when there are online tools.
www.youtube.com/embed/NjkNNDuAb9A
Maybe you don't understand, the online tools, if decent, require an assumption. If not, an assumption is being made for you. It's basically the reverse of the tools for calulating a mortgage payment. YOu have to choose an interest rate. If the tool doesn't ask you for an interest rate, it's becasue they assume you're too uniformed to come up with your own assumption.
Wasn't trying to make you cry marcus.
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