New 2017 pension data released: CalPERS payouts approach $21 billion, up 43% over past 5 years
Today, TransparentCalifornia.com — California’s largest public pay database — released pension payout data for the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) for the fiscal year ending July 31, 2017. The data show total pension payouts of $20.63 billion — a 43 percent increase from the amount reported in 2012.
In just the past fiscal year alone, CalPERS began paying out pensions to 25,472 new retirees, at a total cost of more than $1 billion annually. The top 5 largest pensions among those who began drawing a CalPERS pension in the past fiscal year went to:
- Former Gardena City Manager Mitchell Lansdell: $258,992.
- Former San Jose State University President Mohammad Qayoumi: $225,283.
- Former Clovis City Manager Robert Woolley: $221,604.
- Former Placer County Sheriff Edward Bonner: $216,388.
- Former Santa Clara County Undersheriff John Hirokawa: $215,810.
When broken down by last employer, the dataset reveals 40 agencies or state departments with at least 100 CalPERS recipients drawing pensions of $100,000 or more. The top 10 agencies or state departments with the greatest number of $100,000 or more pension recipients are shown below:
Last Employer |
# of $100K+ CalPERS Pensions |
---|---|
1217 |
|
920 |
|
613 |
|
549 |
|
521 |
|
499 |
|
374 |
|
285 |
|
283 |
|
279 |
To view the entire CalPERS dataset in a searchable and downloadable format, please click here.
CalSTRS data not forthcoming
Update: The CalSTRS data was provided shortly after this piece was published.
2017 data for the California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS) has yet to be provided to Transparent California in a useable format, despite the data already having been compiled and in CalSTRS possession for at least the past 25 days.
CalSTRS has twice mailed badly damaged, unusable CDs which purportedly contain the requested information. The system has refused to deliver the information via alternative means.
“CalSTRS is plainly required to make this information available in an electronic format under the law,” according to Transparent California Executive Director Robert Fellner. “Sending copies of broken, unusable CDs is not in compliance with the mandates of California’s Public Records Law. Even more bizarre is CalSTRS refusal to deliver the requested information in any one of the less-costly alternative methods suggested by Transparent California. We hope CalSTRS finds a way to comply with their obligations under the state’s public records law and provide the requested information in a useable format, just as more than 2,500 other California governments have been able to do.”
Los Angeles County
New 2017 calendar year data for the Los Angeles County Employees’ Retirement Association (LACERA) is now available on TransparentCalifornia.com.
In just the past two years, LACERA began paying out pensions of $100,000 or more to 839 new retirees — or more than 15 percent of the total new pension recipients over that same time period.
The three largest payments among those recent members went to:
- Former Los Angeles County Assistant Sheriff Richard Barrantes: $309,142.
- Former Chief Physician Meenal Patel: $276,005.
- Former Sheriff’s Department Chief David Fender: $271,957.
The overall top pension remains former Harbor-UCLA Medical Center Chief Physician Charles Mehringer, who earned $411,443 last year.
The data also reveal a significant difference in the average full-career pension by member type, as shown in the chart below:
Average 2017 full-career LACERA pension, by member type
Non-safety |
Sheriff |
Fire |
---|---|---|
$68,318 |
$107,893 |
$122,845 |
To view the entire LACERA dataset, please click here.
San Diego City
The just-released 2017 pension payout data for the San Diego City Employees’ Retirement System (SDCERS) reveals an average pension of $85,670 for full-career retirees.
The three largest payments went to:
- Former Deputy City Attorney Diane Silva-Martinez: $893,731.
- Former Fire Captain Bradley Cronk: $871,599.
- Former Assistant Police Chief Sarah Creighton: $854,225.
To view the entire SDCERS dataset, please click here.
Transparent California will be continually updating the site with the new, 2017 data from the remaining pension funds in the coming weeks. Be sure to follow our blog and Twitter accounts, or sign up for our mailing list, in order to receive the latest updates.
For more information, please contact Robert Fellner at 559-462-0122 or Robert@TransparentCalifornia.com.
Transparent California is California’s largest and most comprehensive database of public sector compensation and is a project of the Nevada Policy Research Institute, a nonpartisan, free-market think tank. The website is used by millions of Californians each year, including elected officials and lawmakers, government employees and their unions, government agencies themselves, university researchers, the media, and concerned citizens alike. Learn more at TransparentCalifornia.com.