Where's the Outrage?
During a period of blaring "austerity" when a key goal of those with means is to cut pensions that have been fairly earned by public employees, it is astonishing to read that some lobbyists in 40% of US states get paid pensions from the public trough.According to an August 25 Associated Press (AP) article:
Hundreds of
lobbyists in at least 20 states ... get public pensions because they
represent associations of counties, cities and school boards, an
Associated Press review found. Legislatures granted them access decades
ago on the premise that they serve governments and the public. In many
cases, such access also includes state health care benefits....
"It's clear that
there's a big problem with hypocrisy when these lobbyists have been
pushing austerity and benefit cuts for other government workers while
they themselves enjoy solid state pensions," said Michael Kink of the
progressive group Strong Economy for All Coalition. "`Do as I say, not
as I do' seems to be their approach on retirement cuts."
"Workers who have faced cuts in pay and pensioners have a right to be angry - as do voters," Kink said.
Who knows? Some of these private lobbyists who receive taxpayer funded pensions (and in some case healthcare benefits) may even work to advance legislation sponsored by the infamous ALEC.
The AP story begins with a rather astonishing role model for a wealthy lobbyist who gets a pension courtesy of those whose pensions he may be trying to reduce or eliminate:
As a lobbyist in New
York's statehouse, Stephen Acquario is doing pretty well. He pulls down
$204,000 a year, more than the governor makes, gets a Ford Explorer as
his company car and is afforded another special perk:
Even though he's not a government employee, he is entitled to a full state pension.
Many of these non-governmental employees represent
lobbying associations at the forefront of trying to reduce public
pensions while ensuring that they keep their own, even though their
salaries are not paid by any governmental body.
If all this sounds preposterously hypocritical, it is. It's another scam that is greed wrapped in a lofty excuse:
Acquario,
executive director and general counsel of the New York State
Association of Counties, argues that his group gives local government a
voice in the statehouse, and the perk of a state pension makes it easier
to hire people with government expertise.
The revolving door of
incestuous government insiders turning around and becoming lobbyists --
in this case working for a guy who makes more than senators and most
governors -- just won't supply good enough personnel unless the
taxpayers pay for private employee pensions, Acquario argues. Say what?
At least there are some state legislators looking at this egregious pickpocketing of the public purse:
"It's
a question of, `Why are we providing government pensions to these
private organizations?'" said Illinois Democratic Rep. Elaine Nekritz.
Thanks for that dose of reality.
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