Breaking

9-Year-Old Boy Dies After Being Shot in Head in Croixville Housing Community; Police Detain 15-Year-Old

Concerned Residents Clean Christiansted Town Using Their Own Tools, Money, and Some Help from the VI Fire Service

Territory May See Veterans Cemetery Through DeGazon-Sponsored Bill

Credit and Debit Cards of WAPA Customers Were Compromised Since August 30th, WAPA Says, Authority to Finally Start Issuing Notification Via Mail and Email

Sports Tourism in VI Gains Momentum as DC United Team is set to Play Exhibition Soccer Game on St. Croix

Carnival Breeze Brings 3,700 Tourists to St. Croix During Maiden Call; Senators, Tourism Officials Want to See More

Limetree Bay Willing To Provide $10 Million To Help Add Life to a Dying G.E.R.S.

American Airlines to Serve St. Croix With New Flights Next Summer

The Sudden Death of Influential Roots Reggae Visionary, Vaughn Benjamin of Midnite Band and Akae Beka, Has Rocked the Virgin Islands and Reggae Community Around the World

Arthur A. Richards K-8 School Hosts Anti-Bullying Campaign

Come Out. Hang Out. Have Fun at The Meat Up, One of St. Thomas’ Latest Hot-Spot for Good Food with Friends and Family.

UVI Board of Trustees Approves $47.1 Million Fiscal Year 2020 Budget; Sets $3 Million Fundraising Goal

Man Dies During Early Morning Car Accident on St. Croix; Driver of Car Arrested (Updated)

'You Did Everything You Could to Prevent this from Happening': An Emotional Goodbye to Young Aaron Benjamin

Back in Business: Cost U Less on St. Thomas Opened its Doors Friday to Thousands of Customers 2 Years after Irma and Maria

Bill Aimed at Regulating Credit Use by Gov't Departments and Agencies Among Others Held in Committee

Juan Luis Hospital Announces Completion and Availability of Mobile Dialysis Facilities

Tractor Trailer With Tank Carrying Thousands Of Gallons of Liquified Gas Flips Near Cool Out Bar; Driver Injured But Alive

Credit and Debit Card Hack Through WAPA Appears to be Widespread in Virgin Islands; WAPA Says Support Services Will be Made Available to Affected Customers

Facing Life in Prison Without Parole, Mother and Boyfriend Plead Not Guilty in Murder of 4-Year-Old Boy

Over 300 Retirees Haven’t Started Receiving Payment From GERS. For Some, It’s Been Over A Year.

Breaking News / Featured / Government / News / Top Stories / Virgin Islands / February 11, 2018

The Government Employees’ Retirement System (G.E.R.S.) has not started releasing retirement payments to 308 retirees, G.E.R.S. Administrator Austin Nibbs revealed during a town hall meeting the G.E.R.S. board held on St. Croix on Thursday.

Grumbles could be heard in the crowd of attendees following the revelation, which was shown on a chart seen on a wide projector screen in the Cardiac Center’s conference room at the Juan F. Luis Hospital.

The problem, Mr. Nibbs said, is that the government of the Virgin Islands has not made good on its lawful responsibility to fund the system. Figures released by G.E.R.S. show the G.V.I. owing $1.6 billion after failing to fund the system over the course of 26 years.

Compounding an already dire situation, the government has stopped  remitting payments altogether to G.E.R.S. from July of 2017. From that time, according to Mr. Nibbs, the G.V.I. has not paid the contributions that are deducted from employees’ checks; it has not paid its share of the contributions, and the government has not been remitting loan payments deducted from the checks of government employees owed to G.E.R.S.

“So we’re about $39 million down. Meaning they owe us these monies, and this is creating a problem for us. Because what happens, we now have to go to our portfolio and drawdown funds to make sure that we have enough funds to pay the retirees,” Mr. Nibbs said. He said the retiree payroll is $20.5 million a month, “and we’re taking in $10 million or less a month.”

The nonpayment is causing more newly retired Virgin Islanders to be added to the backlog of retirees who haven’t started to receive annuities. Like Mr. Nibbs explained, “If you retire let’s say in December 2017, you owe me from August. So I have to wait for [payments from] August, September, October, November, December before I even look at your case,” Mr. Nibbs said, speaking on behalf of the system. “So it could be a year because we have a backlog. This is a major, major, major problem right now.”

As the government has failed to fund the system over the years, G.E.R.S. has had to deplete its portfolio to meet the shortfall. This has caused G.E.R.S. to spend $1.5 billion by either directly drawing down from monies it has invested, or by selling assets. If the current trend continues and there is no infusion of cash into the system soon, G.E.R.S. will have no more than five years of life before it collapses — and it could come sooner, based on market trends.

Mr. Nibbs said the board is considering several actions if G.E.R.S. does not receive an infusion of cash by October 2018. Some include suspending altogether the payment of annuities, or cutting by 30 percent the payment for Tier 1 members. Some of these actions will require legislation, including an idea to levy a sales tax in the territory that would go directly to the system. Such a measure would be controversial, as it would demand a tax from private residents who are not part of government-owned pension system.

As G.E.R.S.’s problems mount, it has been grappling with an exodus of members who are not vested into the system. These members, who have been in G.E.R.S. for less than ten years, have been removing their monies at a rate that is negatively impacting the system. “Contributions are what we need. We’re having a problem with individuals or members who are not vested,” Mr. Nibbs said. He said G.E.R.S. paid out $5.7 million in 2017 to individuals who were not vested into the system and left. In 2016, the total was $8.9 million; it was $4 million in 2015; $7.4 million in 2014, and $6.2 million in 2013.

“That means in the last five years, there were members who were not vested, they resigned, left the island, [and] we had to pay out close to $33 million,” Mr. Nibbs said.

And the exodus saw a notable increase following Hurricanes Irma and Maria last year, with educators withdrawing their monies from the system and leaving the territory for better opportunities on the U.S. mainland.

Asked about the government’s nonpayments, Mr. Mapp suggested at a Gov’t House press conference last week that it was best to do so, as the interest on the funds held by the government is billed at 8 percent — an amount Mr. Mapp said would never be offered by the market.

“We could say to G.E.R.S., ‘Well, no. Bring me the average return on your investment portfolio and then we will pay that as a return.’ We don’t do that because the G.E.R.S. needs any level of financial support it can have,” Mr. Mapp said. “What am I saying? The G.E.R.S. money is better in our hands than in the market. The G.E.R.S. will get its money. It’s good for its money. We have to find a solution to knockdown the unfunded liability.”

At the town hall meeting, Mr. Nibbs disputed the governor’s 8 percent return claim, stating instead the return from the government, when it decides to pay, was somewhere around 6 percent. Asked why he thought the government is withholding the funds, Mr. Nibbs said he heard of tax refunds being issued, a suggestion that the Mapp administration could be using employee contributions to G.E.R.S. to meet other obligations.

If G.E.R.S. decides to stop paying retirees in October 2018 until the local government finds a way to fund the system, the move could force the Mapp administration to find a way to help, if it can (the V.I. government has no access to the bond market, where it’d be able to secure a loan). Such an action, which would come one month before what is expected to be a hotly contested gubernatorial year, could also thrust the pension system to the fore of discussions at political events, and become a determining factor, among other important issues, as to who wins the 2018 race.


Tags: , ,



Ernice Gilbert
I wear many hats, I suppose, but the one which fits me best would be journalism, second to that would be radio personality, thirdly singer/songwriter and down the line. I've been the Editor-In-Chief at my videogames website, Gamesthirst, for over 5 years, writing over 7,000 articles and more than 2 million words. I'm also very passionate about where I live, the United States Virgin Islands, and I'm intent on making it a better place by being resourceful and keeping our leaders honest. VI Consortium was birthed out of said desire, hopefully my efforts bear fruit. Reach me at [email protected].




Previous Post

Division Of Banking And Insurance Meets With Banks To Discuss Hurricane-Related Insurance Claims

Next Post

Man Arrested For Allegedly Beating Female Acquaintance About Body And Head





You might also like

Leave a Reply


More Story

Division Of Banking And Insurance Meets With Banks To Discuss Hurricane-Related Insurance Claims

The Office of the Lieutenant Governor, Division of Banking, Insurance (D.B.I.) and Financial Regulation held a meeting with...

February 10, 2018