The Official Committee of Retired Employees of the Government of Puerto Rico (COR, for its acronym in Spanish) has reached an agreement with the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico (FOMB) that will substantially improve the treatment of retirement benefits of 167,000 retired government employees as compared to the terms proposed by the FOMB in the fiscal plan approved in May 9, 2019. Retirees with monthly pension benefits of $1,500 or bellow will receive no cuts at all, resulting in the full protection of 74%, or over 123,580, of all current retirees. For those retirees with monthly pensions of more than $1,500, the agreement will limit reductions to a maximum of 8.5% and will ensure a minimum monthly post-cut pension benefit of at least $1,500. Covered under this agreement are the retired employees from the Employees Retirement System of the Government of Puerto Rico, the Teachers Retirement System, and the Judiciary Retirement System. The agreement negotiated by the COR marks significant progress from the terms proposed by the FOMB, which would have affected 75% of the retiree population in Puerto Rico. Major highlights of the agreement include:
“Although, the COR would have preferred no cuts, we believe that significantly worse cuts would have been sought by the FOMB in the bankruptcy process and that ignoring said reality would have been irresponsible from our part and lethal to our community of retirees. Under the circumstances, the COR is convinced that this agreement is the best option to ensure the well-being of our community and the continuity of our pensions,” stated former Judge, Miguel Fabre, chairman of the COR. The agreement will be included in the Commonwealth’s Plan of Adjustment (POA) under Title III of PROMESA, which will be subjected to the vote of impaired creditors at a later date that will be announced by the federal court. The COR will provide information at the appropriate time regarding voting on the POA. Said plan will then be considered for confirmation by Judge Laura Taylor Swain, who is in charge of the Puerto Rico’s bankruptcy proceedings under Title III. “It is important to emphasize that pensions cannot be modified until at least the time when the Court has confirmed a POA for Puerto Rico,” Fabre indicated. Said confirmation will take place after the affected parties have evaluated details of the POA and voted in favor, or against it. The COR will be engaging with retirees to offer additional information about the agreement and its impact on retirees, and the voting process. It is important to stay up-to stay up-to-date with the latest information, register in porturetiro.com or follow Comité Oficial de Retirados on Facebook. About the COR The COR was authorized and appointed in June 2017 by the United States Trustee to represent the collective interests of more 167,000 government retirees from the Employees Retirement System of the Government of Puerto Rico, the Teachers Retirement System and the Judiciary Retirement System in Title III cases to restructure Puerto Rico’s debt, under federal law PROMESA. |
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