A San Francisco appellate court on August 26 handed a third victory to open government advocates wanting to know who’s receiving county pensions.
The decision from California’s First District Court of Appeal in Sonoma County Employees’ Retirement Association v. Superior Court comes on the heels of earlier rulings from Courts of Appeal in Sacramento and San Diego and may signal the end of resistance from county pension organizations which have fought against the disclosure of pension amounts received by their members.
The San Francisco-based court held that state law shields retirees’ birth date and age from disclosure, but not their name and the amount of their pension. Like the other appellate courts, the First District Court of Appeal relied upon the California Supreme Court’s ruling (in a case I handled) that public employee salaries are public information, and said “the taxpaying public has substantially the same interest in [the retirement agency’s] operations and payout levels as it does in the salaries of county employees.”
Finally, the court tersely rejected the argument that retirees would be harmed by disclosure: “We find SCERA’s claim that releasing information to the public about pension benefits will expose its retirees to annoyance and abuse too speculative to outweigh the public’s interest in securing information about how public money is spent.”
The latest decision should put to rest the issue of whether county retirees’ pension amounts are disclosed. And it should shed light on pension payments which are draining the finances of state and local governments throughout the country, making it harder to balance budgets and provide services to residents. The three rulings won’t balance budgets — but they will enable taxpayers and open government advocates to know where public money is going.