Riley: Top 10 Signs Providence is Bankrupt
Michael G. Riley, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™
Riley: Top 10 Signs Providence is Bankrupt

- The City recently revised its Net Position to an astounding $1.2 billion dollars from an already negative $237 million dollars.
- The Providence Municipal Pension Plan is horribly under-funded -- here is a 2012 picture. Today, the funded ratio is 21.4% -- good for worst in country.
- Providence uses a discount rate of 8.25 % despite a return on reported assets of less than 5%. They have had the same advisor since 1986. Providence 8.25% assumption exceeds 99% of all public pension plans in the United States.
- Pension ARC as a percentage of Payroll: Providence Payroll is 49% versus National Average 17.8%
- Providence OPEC ARC is 23.3% of payroll: Providence pension ARC as percentage of Municipal Tax revenue is 21.3% vs National Average of 7.1% according to a 2015 Standish/Bank New York Mellon report.
- Exorbitant Commercial Tax rates: High commercial tax rates are the hallmark of distressed finance Providence Commercial Property tax rate 6.8 almost exactly Detroit's rate prior to bankruptcy.
- Robbing Peter to pay Paul: Providence has been carrying a loan from the pension plan of between 50 and 65 million dollars. Providence carries on its 2015 balance sheet a current liability titled “due to pension plan” What return do they pay retirees in plan?
- Kiting pension contributions: Providence does not put a penny of ARC into the plan for the year in which appropriated Auditor General Hoyle says he knows of no other city that does this…we used to call that “check kiting.”
- Falsifying assets in Pension plan: As I have written and turned into RI Attorney General and the SEC, MSRB and FBI.
- Ignoring actuarial warnings: In 2012 Buck Consultants was fired after 90 years as actuary then in 2014 and 2015 Segal Co completed new valuations and agreed with me that 63 million in Pension assets did not exist and the assets were reduced in Pension plan…yet in the recent CAFR and after the ruling the Mayor still reported these false assets as in the pension plan.
Bonus reason: Fitch, despite the fact that bondholders are protected by a 2012 state law, lowered their ratings down a grade despite bond priority.
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