As pensions dried up, four firms paid top execs $49.5M - USATODAY.com As pensions dried up, four firms paid top execs $49.5M
By Matt Kelley, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON ? Top executives at four companies that jettisoned their employee pension plans received $49.5 million in retirement and severance benefits in the years before the companies filed for bankruptcy, while retirees saw their benefits cut by as much as two thirds, congressional investigators conclude in a report to be released today.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that pensions at the companies, United Airlines, US Airways, Polaroid and Reliance Insurance, were underfunded by more than $11 billion when the companies turned them over to a government-backed insurance fund. The report says executives at those four companies and six others that abandoned their pension plans took in a total of $350 million in pay and perks in the years leading up to the bankruptcies.
"If the pension is getting deeper into trouble and the executives are getting richer, there's something wrong with that picture," said House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-Calif.
Miller requested the report as part of an examination of the troubles facing the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., the federal pension plan insurer. The PBGC, which insures pension plans covering 44 million people, warned this month that it has a deficit of nearly $22 billion.....pensions apparently are for peons in our great system of economic depravity
By Matt Kelley, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON ? Top executives at four companies that jettisoned their employee pension plans received $49.5 million in retirement and severance benefits in the years before the companies filed for bankruptcy, while retirees saw their benefits cut by as much as two thirds, congressional investigators conclude in a report to be released today.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that pensions at the companies, United Airlines, US Airways, Polaroid and Reliance Insurance, were underfunded by more than $11 billion when the companies turned them over to a government-backed insurance fund. The report says executives at those four companies and six others that abandoned their pension plans took in a total of $350 million in pay and perks in the years leading up to the bankruptcies.
"If the pension is getting deeper into trouble and the executives are getting richer, there's something wrong with that picture," said House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-Calif.
Miller requested the report as part of an examination of the troubles facing the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., the federal pension plan insurer. The PBGC, which insures pension plans covering 44 million people, warned this month that it has a deficit of nearly $22 billion.....pensions apparently are for peons in our great system of economic depravity
