In
Sioux Falls, South Dakota, a
17-year-old J.C. Penney employee was sent home for wearing short her boss said
were “too revealing.” The girl pointed out that she bought the shorts in the
J.C. Penney career department. A local news station reported that her boss told
her shorts were not allowed and asked her to go home and change. When he asked
how long it would take her to change and come back, she quit.
In
Hernando County, Florida, a driver
refused to move his SUV from the sidewalk right outside the main entry and exit
door at the county jail. After multiple refusals, he backed up into a bench and
then accelerated forward, driving through the jail’s lawn, according to the
local ABC News station. He then turned back toward the jail and deputies said
he took aim with his vehicle at a deputy’s patrol car. The man turned abruptly,
drove in a circle and struck a flagpole. He was ordered from the vehicle and
taken into custody.
On I-65 in Indiana, a state trooper pulled
over a man for speeding. The man was traveling with his daughter who has Down
Syndrome. The trooper decided to make the daughter a state trooper for five minutes
and asked her whether she wanted to issue her dad a warning or a ticket. The girl
chose a ticket. However, the good-hearted trooper only issued a warning. The Indiana
State Police responded to the man’s post about the incident that they are glad
the daughter is on their side.
In Acadiana, Louisiana, the
St. Landry Parish law enforcement is angry someone robbed Stelly’s Supermarket
and gives a very real Crime Stoppers report.
An analysis from the National Institute on Retirement Security
finds Americans in nearly every state are expected to fall far short on
purchasing power in their golden years.
The bleak findings are from the institute’s State Financial
Security Scorecards research project, which gauges the retirement readiness of workers in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Each state’s
score is determined based on three primary factors, including anticipated
retirement income; major retirement costs, such as housing and health care; and
labor market conditions for older workers.
Unsurprisingly, scorecard findings show states struggle on
worker retirement readiness when a poor labor market for older workers is combined
with high costs for health care and housing. Take California, for example. With
a three-out-of-10 score, the state ranks low due to a lack of potential
retirement working income and low workplace retirement plan access, despite a
relatively robust economy overall. South Carolina’s problem is somewhat different: Also
scoring a three out of 10, the state’s generally sluggish economy brings low
potential income during working years and retirement, even though housing and
health care prices in the state may be lower than other markets.
According to the Scorecards project, the highest-ranking
states include Wyoming, Alaska, Minnesota and North Dakota,
due primarily to their relatively strong labor markets and lower retiree costs.
During a webcast covering the findings, a panel of experts warned even these
states show “weak outlooks in terms of potential retirement income for retirees.”
Put another way, even workers in the top-ranked states have far less saved than
they are likely to need to fund a comfortable retirement.
For example, North Dakotans, who scored an eight out of 10, only
have an average defined contribution retirement account balance of only $27,700.
This is “nowhere near the level of accumulated savings required to ensure
self-sufficiency through retirement,” researchers explained.
Diane Oakley, executive director of the National Institute
on Retirement Security, warned the retirement savings shortfall “has become
increasingly important at the state level because policymakers know it can have
a deep impact on strained state budgets. State programs must fill the gap and
help Americans meet their most basic needs for food, shelter and medicine.”
NEXT: Policy
interventions are needed
The National Institute of Retirement Security says these
state scorecards “are designed to serve as a tool for policymakers to identify
areas of focus for state-based policy interventions that will strengthen
Americans’ ability to financially prepare for retirement.” Researchers observe all states should take heed of this message, as no state ranks in the top group of states on all eight scorecard variables considered.
Indeed, for every state, “at least one indicator of potential retirement income is lower, one measure of retiree costs is higher, or one labor market variable is worse than in at least one other state." Beyond this, the data underlying the Scorecards project indicates key areas of trouble that affect most or all states. For instance, the highest ranking state for workplace retirement plan participation in 2012 had only 54% of private employees participating in a pension or 401(k). In addition, the number of states with more than 30% of older households experiencing a housing cost burden increased from 14 in 2000 to 31 in 2012.
Another expert called in to discuss the Scorecard project
was Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, founder of the Georgetown University Center on
Retirement Initiatives founder and former Maryland Lieutenant Governor.
“Out of crisis comes opportunity,” she said. “States now are trying different ways to make sure that middle
class workers don’t fall into poverty once they stop working, which harms individuals
and their families.”
She said policymakers need to “get a better read on
financial security issues in their state,” which should in turn lead to sensible policies to help
Americans get back on track when it comes to preparing for retirement.
Hank Kim, executive director and counsel with the National
Conference on Public Employee Retirement Systems, echoed those sentiments. He
feels the Scorecard project “makes it abundantly clear that achieving financial
security in retirement is an increasingly elusive goal for Americans.”
Kim pointed specifically to the Secure Choice Pension initiative being rolled out in
Illinois as a promising public policy approach to the retirement income crisis.
The Secure Choice system will bring the “documented performance and
efficiency of public sector pension management” to more private sector workers in the state, he
said. Highlighting the scope of the retirement problem, Illinois still only scored a five out of 10 for average worker retirement readiness. Kim and the others interpreted this to mean both public policy and private employer action is required to fully fix the problem.
These State Financial Security Scorecard project was
conducted with support from AARP. The full state-by-state ranking is presented here.