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Letter: Detroit’s pension obligations are ‘being managed proactively’

April 12, 2026

Ron Thomas, representing Detroit's Police and Fire Retirement System, contests a news article suggesting the city faces rising, unaffordable pension costs. He argues that growing city revenues, including property and income taxes, adequately support pension obligations, and that Detroit has proactively managed its retirement system through measures like the $455 million Retiree Protection Fund established after bankruptcy. The pension system maintains roughly $3 billion in assets despite paying $300 million annually in benefits during a 10-year payment hiatus, with the legacy plan now 73.

Who is affected

  • Police and Fire Retirement System of the City of Detroit (PFRS)
  • Detroit police and fire retirees (first responders)
  • City of Detroit and its taxpayers
  • PFRS Board of Trustees
  • General Retirement System members
  • Police and fire employees hired after 2014 (hybrid plan participants)
  • Foundation for Detroit's Future

What action is being taken

  • The city is funding the FY 2027 pension contribution of $161.2 million through multiple sources ($76.9 million from general fund, $65.6 million from Retiree Protection Fund, $18.7 million from Foundation for Detroit's Future)
  • The pension boards, actuaries, and advisors are working collaboratively with the city to address obligations
  • A supplemental VEBA has been established to subsidize healthcare costs for the Medicare gap period

Why it matters

  • This matters because it addresses public perception about Detroit's fiscal stability and pension sustainability following the city's bankruptcy. The clarification is significant because mischaracterizations of pension costs as unaffordable could undermine confidence in the city's financial recovery and disrespect the sacrifices made by first responders who have already experienced benefit cuts, including elimination of retiree healthcare and over a decade without cost-of-living adjustments. The situation demonstrates that Detroit's pension obligations are being managed responsibly and are lower than many comparable American cities, countering narratives of impending fiscal crisis.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article (beyond the request for publication of the clarification and encouragement for state, city, and private support to bolster the supplemental VEBA fund).

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com