PRC In the News
04/20/16|Quad City Times

Editorial: Up or down, Congress owes Central States pensioners a vote

Give them a vote. Congress owes that much to the 400,000 retirees set to have their Central States Pension Fund benefits slashed next month.

PRC In the News
04/20/16|Cincinnati Enquirer

Teamsters protest broken pension promises at U.S. Capitol

Prepared to rally against what could be the biggest cut to the largest multi-employer pension fund in U.S. history, retired Teamsters exited bus after bus that pulled up to Capitol Hill’s Western Lawn on a warm Thursday morning. They came from as far as Florida, Texas and Wisconsin. Many paid out of pocket for the […]

PRC In the News
04/20/16|Quad City Times

Q-C Teamsters join D.C. rally against pension cuts

More than a dozen Quad-Citians joined thousands of fellow retired Teamsters on Thursday at a rally in Washington, D.C., opposing proposed cuts to their pensions. The Treasury Department has until to decide May 7 whether to approve a plan by the Central States Pension Fund that would cut pension payments, in some cases by 50 […]

PRC In the News
04/20/16|McClatchyDC

Teamsters rally in Washington to protest possible pension cuts

Holloway-Blankenship was one of hundreds of Teamsters who rallied in front the U.S. Capitol Thursday to protest what they fear could be a decrease in their benefits if the Treasury Department approves a cut by the Teamsters’ Central State Pension Fund, under the 2014 Multiemployer Pension Reform Act.

PRC In the News
04/20/16|Forbes

Got Questions About Your Pension? Try These Helplines.

There’s also free legal assistance on pension, profit sharing or retirement savings plans from the U.S. Administration on Aging’s Pension Counseling and Information Program that serves 30 states. The Pension Rights Center has a list of those service center contact numbers here, and also has lawyers and actuaries on call at PensionHelp America.

PRC In the News
04/20/16|Akron Beacon Journal

Akron-area Teamsters headed to Washington to protest pension cuts

Thousands of retired Teamsters — including two busloads from the Akron area — will pressure federal lawmakers Thursday at a rally in Washington, D.C., to ward off deep pension cuts expected to start this summer.

PRC In the News
04/20/16|Quad City Times

Rally to focus on plight of pensioners

Denise Wheatley spent 32 years working as a clerk at Standard Forwarding, a trucking company in East Moline. Now retired, she’s counting on the $2,850 monthly pension she earned on the job. In a few months, though, that could be cut in half.

PRC In the News
04/20/16|Washington Post

One of the nation’s largest pension funds could soon cut benefits for retirees

More than a quarter of a million truckers, retirees and their families could soon see their pension benefits severely cut — even though their pension fund is still years away from running out of money.

PRC In the News
04/06/16|MarketWatch

Losses under Goldman, Northern Trust accelerated Teamsters cuts

One of America’s most battle-hardened pension funds was flying high last decade with large bets on stocks, lower-rated bonds and real estate. But even during the best of times, the Central States Pension Fund needed to draw down at least $1.2 billion a year in capital to pay for overhead and Teamsters union drivers’ benefits.

PRC In the News
04/05/16|New York Times

San Francisco Poised to Approve Fully Paid Parental Leave

“There’s been a lot of proposals out there, but California became the state leading the effort,” she said. “It’s a recognition that most people are retiring without adequate income.”

PRC In the News
04/01/16|Orlando Sentinel

Disney case shows pitfalls of overlooking pension plan descriptions

How much effort should a company make to inform employees how their personal decisions could affect their benefits? This week, a widow learned she lost an appeal to the Walt Disney Co. over that issue.

PRC In the News
04/01/16|The Badger Herald

Pension cuts to keep federal fund afloat could drown retirees in debt

A recovery plan that would reduce pension paychecks to keep the Central States Pension Fund afloat could ultimately drown Wisconsin retirees and the state’s economy in financial problems.