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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Brown
will get retirement pay He is a convicted
and imprisoned embezzler and has lost his voting privileges, but Greg Brown
of Sisters is still entitled to full retirement benefits -- though incarcerated
at an out-of-state federal prison at Nellis Camp in North Las Vegas, Nevada.
The only criteria for benefits,
according to a representative from PERS (Public Employees Retirement System),
is "that the person serve 20 years as a public employee and reach the
age of 50."
Former Sheriff Greg Brown
will be 50 this summer. He served in the Sheriff's Department for more
than 20 years before his defeat by current Sheriff Les Stiles in the general
election for sheriff 2-1/2 years ago.
Brown embezzeled $575,000
from Deschutes County and the Sisters-Camp Sherman Rural Fire Protection
District. He made restitution of 98 percent of the funds.
A spokeswoman for the Deschutes
County Sheriff's office said that the issue is "totally out of our hands.
We have no opinion and absolutely nothing to do with the (former Sheriff
Brown's) situation."
Mike Maier, County Administrative
officer, said the issue is "entirely up to PERS," and that Deschutes County
"had no say in the matter whatsoever."
Most of the major daily papers
in the state have editorialized on the embattled state retirement program
issues if not precisely on the Brown entitlement.
State Representative Tim Knopp
is the majority leader of the State House of Representatives and chairman
of the House PERS committee. Ian Hay, a Knopp staffer, said that, "at
present there is no provision in the retirement contract to void benefit
payments to a convicted felon."
Hay said that "the committee,
in it's discussions on the entire Public Employ- ees Retirement System,
will undoubtedly consider this type of extraordinary situation."
Although not a part of Knopp's
efforts, there is pending legislation to take away retirement pay from
convicted felons. Senate Bill 894 was introduced by Ryan Deckert from
Washington County. This would not be retroactive.
A local newsweekly, The Bend
Bugle, ran a feature story by Barney Lerten stating that, "State Public
Employee Retirement System officials later confirmed ... that Brown still
will receive his full PERS benefit starting when he turns 50 this summer,
although the federal plea deal still leaves him vulnerable to efforts
by the Internal Revenue Service to collect unpaid taxes, or the state
elections and ethic agencies to impose fines and penalties."
PERS has a significant budget
effect in cash-strapped school districts.
PERS is costing the Sisters
School District "slightly over $900,000 this year," according to district
financial officer Diane Shelly. "Of that amount, we (the district) contribute
$623,263 which is 12.73 percent of our district salaries. And, in this
district, we also pay the employees' portion of 6 percent to the retirement
fund. That's another $277,000," she said.
Maier said Deschutes Count,
"and two special districts here contributed to PERS a total of $5,849,800
last year.
This breaks out to $5,623,057
for the county; $208,853 for the 911 Service District and $17,890 for
the 4-H Extension," he said.
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