STOCKTON, Calif. — California officials must now assign blame to Stockton’s bankruptcy as mandated by its state law.
But who is to blame?
According to one analyst, it
was cumbersome pension promises and public union salaries that sent
Stockton under, not the housing crash.
“Union pensions wrecked Stockton,” said Mike Shedlock, investment advisor at Sitka Pacific Capital, in his article at Business Insider. “The only way to escape the death-grip of inane pension promises is bankruptcy.”
Shedlock said the U.S. should expect to see more cities file for bankruptcy.
The investment adviser also
offered some potential solutions other than bankruptcy, including halts
on defined benefit pension plans and collective bargaining for public
union workers.
Stockton
plans to default on $10.2 million in debt and cut $11.2 million in
employee pay and benefits. The cuts have led to high crime and
unemployment rates.
“The city is fiscally insolvent and must seek Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection,” Stockton said in a statement to Bloomberg.
“In addition to the bankruptcy petition, the city will file a motion
with the courts to share information from the confidential mediation.”
Source: desert news
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