-

CUPE Alberta Responds to Continued Alberta Government Interference in Public Sector Pension Plans

EDMONTON, Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Government of Alberta’s unilateral changes to AIMCo’s board without any consultation with public sector unions representing members in the Local Authorities Pension Plan (LAPP) and the Public Sector Pension Plan (PSPP) shows a deep disregard for the fact that pension funds belong to Alberta workers and retirees, not the government.

Pension security depends on the ability of unions, through a joint governance model, to make decisions about how public pension funds are managed. Changes in 2019 (Bill 22) undermined joint governance to allow provincial interference and risky political investments.

Originally the jointly-governed LAPP Corporation would have had the ability to change investment providers if they determined that was in the best interests of plan members. The Alberta government in 2019 locked them into AIMCo, however, saying that AIMCo would deliver excellent results. Now they say AIMCo is performing poorly and less efficiently. Members’ unions were never consulted on any of the changes.

“Removing the ability of pension plans to move with their feet undermines pension security,” said President of CUPE Alberta Rory Gill. “The solution for AIMCo performance is to restore the right of pension plan members to choose who administers their retirement savings, not have a government minister continue to interfere through political appointments.”

LAPP has shown that it is better equipped than politicians and AIMCo to make investment decisions. When AIMCo had significant losses in early 2020, LAPP investments did not suffer from the same losses because LAPP implemented its own downside-protection strategy – despite still being required to use AIMCo as an investment fund manager. These decisions by LAPP saved the pension fund almost $1.9 billion dollars.

“Politicians need to stop putting their politics into our pensions. Workers and retirees need their hard-earned savings to be focused on returns and reliability, not risking those savings to serve political agendas of the government of the day,” said Gill. “This government needs to restore independent decision making for pension plans, not bring in the Minister to manage AIMCo.”

Contacts

MEDIA
Jocelyn Johnson, Communications Representative
780-700-5592

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

MEDIA
Jocelyn Johnson, Communications Representative
780-700-5592

More News From CUPE

PRESS CONFERENCE: Strike Looms at Children’s Aid Society of Toronto as Child Welfare Crisis Deepens

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Now in a legal strike position, and with child welfare services under mounting strain, frontline workers at the Children’s Aid Society of Toronto are speaking out. CUPE Local 2316 is once again sounding the alarm that workers are facing chronic understaffing, program cuts, and years of provincial underfunding have pushed child welfare services to a breaking point — putting children and families at risk. At a press conference on Tuesday, February 17 at 12:30 p.m., union...

Ottawa projected to lose funding for 725 frontline health care staff and nearly 200 hospital beds by 2027-28: new report

OTTAWA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As hospitals cut hundreds of jobs and eliminate vacant positions amidst budgetary constraints imposed by the Conservative government, the largest health care union in Ontario is warning about longer wait-times, rushed care, preventable mistakes, and overcrowded hallways. CUPE released a new research report, “Driven to the brink: projected cuts to intensify Ontario’s hospital crisis,” which contrasts the additional resources required to simply maintain existing service l...

Ford Government passing the buck on university funding – students, workers and economy will pay the price

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Ontario government made a funding announcement today that will continue deep staff cuts, rising tuition fees and increased student debt. “The minister was long on scapegoating, but short on funding. Ontario has the worst university funding in Canada, and he’s passing the blame for his own cuts to other levels of government, and passing more and more of the costs onto the students, who are already graduating with record debt loads,” said Fred Hahn, president of CUPE...
Back to Newsroom