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Corcoran, Bruce – School Business Affairs, 2012
The landscape of public education retirement plans is in an upheaval. A variety of economic, demographic, and political factors make it increasingly difficult for defined-benefit pension plans alone to provide educators with an adequate retirement. As a result, for the nearly seven million educators in America's public primary and secondary…
Descriptors: Public Education, Best Practices, Misconceptions, Teacher Employment Benefits
Kevin, John – School Business Affairs, 2012
As school districts continue to seek administrative efficiencies and cost reductions in the wake of severe budget pressures, the resources they devote to creating or expanding retirement plan consortia is increasing. Understanding how to structure a retirement plan consortium is paramount to successfully achieving the many objectives of…
Descriptors: Retirement, School Districts, Consortia, Efficiency
Mitchell, Bernadette – School Business Affairs, 2012
There's not a school business official in the country who isn't dealing with budget cuts and trying to do more with less. This article shares some proven strategies to help school districts reduce spending and address personnel issues associated with retirement plans. Because public education employers are exempt from the Employee Retirement…
Descriptors: Retirement, School Districts, Public Education, Wages
Zeman, Gail M. – School Business Affairs, 2013
The definition of "retirement" is changing with the boomers, just like everything else that generation has done. Call it a new version of outsourcing. For an early career business administrator or an understaffed business office, there are jobs--often projects--that simply do not get done. The projects require time and expertise that…
Descriptors: Consultants, Retirement, School Business Officials, Preretirement Education
Bohling, Joseph – School Business Affairs, 2012
What's the main factor coloring employee satisfaction? Many organizations' leaders think the answer is salary, yet in reality, employee benefits packages are one of the biggest incentives an employer can offer. Educational institutions have done well in providing benefits to employees. However, with an unpredictable economic climate and a complex…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Retirement Benefits, Fringe Benefits, Health Insurance
Stein, Lawrence – School Business Affairs, 2010
For years, people have been taught that maintaining liquidity of assets, particularly at retirement, is beneficial. One's liquidity, that is, monies he/she controls and has ready access to for discretionary withdrawals, translates into uncertainty to the company holding those assets because they can be withdrawn at any time. If one can increase a…
Descriptors: Retirement, Insurance, Resource Allocation, Money Management
Friery, John – School Business Affairs, 2010
Fueled by declining revenue from the housing crisis, skyrocketing energy costs, and an economy in general disarray, the public is pressuring school administrators to make broader and deeper cuts in their operating budgets. As the baby boomers retire, put their houses on the market, and downsize, one will see more downward price pressure on home…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Health Care Costs, Unions, Financial Problems
Lawton, Stephen B. – School Business Affairs, 2009
In April 2009, a high school principal in a large Arizona school district met individually with 18 of his most senior teachers to inform them that they would not have a job the following year. Why didn't tenure protect them from wholesale dismissal? The answer is they all had one thing in common: they were retirees who had been leased or hired…
Descriptors: Principals, High Schools, Boards of Education, Teacher Supply and Demand