By Eric Rosario
(Tumon, Guam) Sen. Paul Manglona (I-Rota) wrote the Commonwealth governor a stern rebuke of the political blame game that was Gov. Ralph Torres's open letter to retirement beneficiaries. Mr. Manglona defended teachers and the Board of Education, reminded Mr. Torres of the audits of the Commonwealth that prove the financial mismanagement had nothing to do with teachers, and offered specific suggestions to fix the problem.
Here is the text of Mr. Manglona's letter dated today to Mr. Torres:
Dear Governor Torres:
Your recent decision informing our retirees, surviving spouses, and minor children that 25% of their retirement pension will no longer be funded by the government is very alarming to say the least. This 25% pension reduction will impose a financial hardship on our “man amkos” who rely solely on their retirement checks to make a living and pay for their medical needs. We must look at other avenues to meet our constitutional mandate to PSS while making our “man amkos” whole with their full pension.
The Commonwealth has been struggling financially for a couple of years now from fiscal mismanagement. Your December 31, 2018 letter to the presiding officers of the Legislature affirms this. In your letter, you stated that the fiscal challenges actually began around 2017 and due to the decline in revenue collection and excess expenditures, the Commonwealth had a deficit of $25,910,717 for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2018 before Typhoon Yutu made landfall in the Commonwealth. This is not all, just a year before in FY 2017, we had an $8 million deficit; and in FY 2019, our deficit grew to a whopping total of $98 million.
As such, we cannot put the blame on and point fingers at the members of the Public School System (“PSS”) Board of Education for the 25% reduction in retirement pension payments. Legislative Journal records will show that the 25% earmarking requirement for PSS had always been significantly underfunded during the budget process. In fact, several unconstitutional earmarking legislations, such as Public Law 20-34, were intentionally passed to make sure that PSS did not get its required 25% funding. We have always known of PSS’ 25% earmark, so we cannot now pretend that we were blindsided by the Commonwealth Supreme Court’s decision.
On June 12, 2019, I sent you a letter regarding government overspending and deficit accumulations. In my letter, I emphasized the need for us all, in working on the Fiscal Year Budget Plan, to work with reliable factual information such as the true cost of government operations. There is no doubt that our practice of omitting or knowingly under-budgeting known, unavoidable costs from the budget—including government utilities, medical referral services, Medicaid matching requirements, CHCC indigent care costs, and PSS’ 25 % earmarking constitutional requirement—has been the main reason for our government’s overspending.
The independent auditor’s report by Deloitte on August 13, 2019 shows that the Executive Branch alone exceeded its budgeted allotment by $11 million in FY 2018, the Medical Referral and Medicaid local expenses exceeded allotments by almost $20 million, and government utilities by $1.8 million. We cannot attribute our fiscal mismanagement on the retirees, surviving spouses, minor children, or PSS. We have no one to blame but ourselves, the leaders, for the maladministration of public funds.
Governor, there are several options the Secretary of Finance David Atalig can examine before moving forward with your decision to cut the retirees’ pension. Keeping in mind that the fiscal year is about half way over so we need approximately $11 million for the 25% of class members’ full benefits, I respectfully ask that the Secretary consider the following:
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Negotiate with Imperial Pacific International (“IPI”) for an advance payment of their Exclusive Casino Annual License Fee of $15 million that is due in October 2020;
Negotiate with IPI for the long overdue Community Benefit Fund mandatory contribution in the amount of $37 million for the years 2018 and 2019;
Use the Marianas Public Land Trust’s $15 million loan reimbursement by FEMA;
Reprogram unused fund balances from all the various appropriation measures funded by more than $150 million in Casino Gross Revenue taxes;
Reprogram unused fund balances from Public Law 20-59 funded by $13 million from revenues generated from the licensing of amusement machines;
Use a portion of the $35 million federal assistance coming from the recently passed CARES Act, which the Governor has sole discretion on its disbursement;
Use portions of FEMA reimbursement for Typhoon Yutu and Mangkhut expenses in the amount of more than $175 million;
Use fund balances of Section 702 Covenant CIP funding, approximately $11 million per year for medical supplies and equipment to free up government operation monies to be used for retirees; and
Work with Region 9 EPA to speed up funding availability of $56 million in Federal money for Sanitary Landfill projects, saving CNMI millions in government operation expenses.
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Governor, again, as I had always emphasized in all my previous letters to you, it is essential that we work with reliable factual information from the Department of Finance before making any drastic decisions. I believe the Legislature should have been brought into the discussions regarding this severe measure to reduce our retirees’ pension by 25%. In any event, I hope you will reevaluate your decision by seriously and reasonably considering all the options above at a minimum before implementing the 25% reduction, which would ultimately require that the Department of Finance provide us all with accurate and up to date financial figures. With government transparency and accountability, our people will be behind us and be more willing to accept the tough austerity measures that we impose upon them because they trust that we are seriously confronting the magnitude of our fiscal dilemma.
Further, if after exhausting all efforts at finding additional resources for the retirees’ pension and the Secretary of Finance still comes up short of the approximately $11 million needed, I strongly recommend that there be a 3- or 4-tier pension rate reduction. For instance, the lowest tier may consist of retirees receiving less than $20,000 per annum getting minimal to no cuts at all to their full benefits.
Governor, I am confident that if we all put all our heads together we can come to a reasonable and satisfactory solution. In addition, as we try to readjust our government’s fiscal plan, our nation’s leaders are doing everything they can to provide financial assistance and stimulus to keep our economy afloat. In fact, Congressman Gregorio “Kilili” Sablan has indicated that the U.S. Congress is now working on CARES 2 Act. Likewise, we too should all come together and work to find ways to help our people during these uncertain times.
Si yu'us ma'ase' Senator Paul! My father's per annum retirement is only $16,000 and some change. He had a triple bypass surgery a year ago and he needs to see his family doctor not to mention his cardiologist every now and then. He has a few underlying conditions that I cannot disclose so how could he pay for his medical needs when and if the 25% cut comes into place??? I cannot believe our governor has no empathy for those individuals who are really SICK and cannot make ends meet. I am too saddened and very heartbroken because of his decision. Is this all this administration could do? To cut the pension of the hardworking retirees??? Please continue to work…