All across America, Wall Street is grabbing money meant for public workers
September 26, 2013 7:00 AM ET
In
the final months of 2011, almost two years before the city of Detroit
would shock America by declaring bankruptcy in the face of what it
claimed were insurmountable pension costs, the state of Rhode Island
took bold action to avert what it called its own looming pension crisis.
Led by its newly elected treasurer, Gina Raimondo – an ostentatiously
ambitious 42-year-old Rhodes scholar and former venture capitalist – the
state declared war on public pensions, ramming through an ingenious new
law slashing benefits of state employees with a speed and ferocity
seldom before seen by any local government.
Called the Rhode Island Retirement Security Act of 2011, her plan would
later be hailed as the most comprehensive pension reform ever
implemented. The rap was so convincing at first that the overwhelmed
local burghers of her little petri-dish state didn't even know how to
react. "She's Yale, Harvard, Oxford – she worked on Wall Street," says
Paul Doughty, the current president of the Providence firefighters
union. "Nobody wanted to be the first to raise his hand and admit he
didn't know what the fuck she was talking about."
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