Posted: 4:08
p.m. Thursday, June 5, 2014
State auditor calms local leaders financial
reporting worries
By
Amanda Seitz
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN — Ohio Auditor David Yost spoke to more than 100 local
government leaders Thursday to address their worries about new financial
reporting standards that will be implemented nationwide in the next year.
The fear is that local governments must now
report projected employee pension debt on their balance sheets— even though in Ohio they wouldn’t
necessarily be held accountable for paying out those pension monies if the
funds ever dried up.
Yost, who spoke at Miami University
Middletown to government leaders from around the state, said the new national
accounting standards have “unintended consequences” for states like Ohio that don’t have such
strict pension rules.
“That’s not really the government’s problem
in Ohio, under state law,” Yost said. “If the debt ever
has to be repaid, it’s really up in the air who would pay it or if it would be
paid. There’s no way in Ohio law to enforce that
currently against a local government.”
The new accounting standards, introduced by
the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, come on the heels of financial
fall outs from public employee pension statements in other areas of the
country, such as bankrupt Detroit. Laws in states such as
Michigan and Illinois require governments to
make good on their pension promises no matter what, but no such law exists here
in Ohio.
In Ohio, taxpayers contribute
between 14 and 18 percent of an employee’s salary to a pension fund. Employees
match those contributions by between 10 percent and 14 percent of their salary.
Some local officials have been fearful that
reporting what public employees are owed in their pension plans could reflect
negatively on local government credit ratings and their ability to borrow
money. Earlier this year, Moody’s credit rating agency downgraded Butler County’s bond rating, in part
because of concerns about the pension obligations.
“That was supposedly one of the factors
that affected our bond rating, even though we had no control over it at all,
we’re not responsible for that,” Butler County Commissioner T.C. Rogers said of
the downgrade and new rating standards Thursday.
The state auditor said he’s met with credit
rating agencies, and state officials are also working with major banks to make
them aware of the financial reporting changes and how employee pension debt
works in Ohio.
“I understand from Moody’s that most of the
reviews have not resulted in a downgrade at this point,” Yost said.
Yost said the full implementation of the
new accounting standards will be implemented within the next year.
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