California Drivers Pay for Underfunded State Patrol Pension

  • Pension is the lowest funded among those in largest U.S. plan
  • Motorists will pay $10 more in April to meet rising costs

Training officers watch over cadets as they march in formation at the California Highway Patrol Academy in West Sacramento, California.

Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
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Californians in April will start paying more to register their cars -- not to help maintain roads, but to keep the pension checks rolling for the motorcycle cops who policed them.

The retirement fund for the California Highway Patrol is worse off than any other managed by California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the largest U.S. pension, as payments by the state and employees fail to keep up with benefits locked in during the dot-com bubble. As a result, the state’s contributions jumped 14 percent this year to $415 million and are projected to continue rising. A $10 increase to registration fees will help cover the expense.