THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

Hefty retiree package for Meeks Bay fire chief


image_pdfimage_print

By Kathryn Reed

Questions are swirling on the West Shore and in Placerville because of the package John Pang received when he retired as fire chief from Meeks Bay Fire Protection District earlier this year.

Pang, who worked for the district from January 1995 to April 2014, will receive a $6,746.09 check each month in retirement pay, according to CalPERS. That’s $80,953.08 a year to do nothing. It’s possible the monthly rate will be recalculated once CalPERS has all of the 2014 payout information.

While he was fire chief his total wages were $146,212 in 2013 and $131,776 in 2012. This was to manage a handful of employees. Meeks responds to about 200 calls a year, most of which are medical aid.

This compares to the South Lake Tahoe fire chief who oversees 37 employees and is paid $157,131.73 per year. In 2013 the South Lake Tahoe Fire Department responded to 3,293 calls; approximately 70 percent were medical aid.

John Pang

John Pang

When members of the Meeks district, who have voluntarily voted to tax themselves to help pay for fire costs, started asking questions the district had outside counsel look into the legalities.

Ed Miller, president of the fire district board, had a prepared statement ready when LTN called. He told Lake Tahoe News further questions could be asked in public at the next board meeting later this month. The statement states that Stephen Lieberman, independent counsel, reviewed Pang’s contract, salary, sick and vacation pay and determined it did not violate CalPERS rules and there was no gifting of public money.

The statement says, “Chief Pang retired with well earned retirement benefits ….”

Miller, at the urging of Lieberman, is not releasing the attorney’s full report. Attorney-client confidentiality was cited.

In 2012, the state Public Employee Retirement System instituted new rules, part of the Public Employees Pension Reform Act. Some of the changes deal with spiking of salaries. This means generating questionable extra pay in the last few years to inflate what the pension payout will be.

CalPERS is using Pang’s last year of wages to calculate his pension. His last year is inflated because of the sick time and vacation payouts.

In 2012, Pang exercised his contractual option to receive a 7.3 percent salary increase in lieu of the district continuing to pay 8 percent into deferred compensation.

In July 2012, El Dorado County Auditor-Controller Joe Harn sent a letter to Miller stating, “Implementing this change will cause an increase to your district PERS actuarial rate for many years to come. Additionally, implementing this change could be construed as income spiking. CalPERS is very sensitive to cases of income spiking and has a research unit dedicated to the review of these potential cases.”

Rosanna Westmoreland with CalPERS said while the agency does 20 to 30 audits a year, spiking and other inappropriate actions are usually investigated when someone anonymously calls the ethics hotline – 866.513.4216. Meeks Bay Fire has not been audited, according to Westmoreland.

“Unless it’s reported, we don’t look to see if there is something inappropriate,” Westmoreland told Lake Tahoe News.

CalPERS relies on the public agency to provide the salary and compensation information for retirees.

Another issue involving Pang is that he used sick leave hours to buy credit in the CalPERS system. In a letter dated July 25, 2014, Harn questions Miller about the legitimacy of doing this. Pang’s final termination pay was worth $503,597. Of that, $302,939 was to be used to purchase additional PERS service from his unused sick leave.

“Since a significant portion of these sick leave hours were awarded to Pang pursuant to his various employment contracts and not accrued by Pang, I believe that it is inappropriate that these hours be used to purchase PERS credits,” Harn wrote.

The district has never responded to Harn.

Included in that final half million-dollar payout was $195,012.54 for Nationwide to pay for Pang’s post-employment health plan. In other words, part of his ongoing perks are taxpayer funded health benefits for the rest of his life.

Ken Corcoran, a resident of the fire district and retired auditor-controller from Contra Costa County, raised similar and more questions. In a May 28, 2014, letter to the board, Corcoran said at most Pang should have been able to accumulate about 1,900 hours of sick time if he never called in sick. But the district paid out 5,080 worth of hours.

“… it is my belief that the proposed conversion of sick leave hours to service time will create an unfunded liability for the district, resulting in many years of increased retirement rates to cover this shortfall,” Corcoran wrote.

In public comments at the May board meeting, Corcoran submitted a letter stating, “I can honestly say that in my extensive work experience in the area of compensation I NEVER encountered a pay package so generous in almost every category. Considering the district has five full time employees, the pay and benefits provided to the chief appear wildly excessive.”

(Miller said in the last couple years the board has changed the compensation package for all new hires.)

Corcoran questioned the comp time vs. administrative leave, and the fact the board allowed Pang to accrue 25 weeks of vacation. (He received five weeks per year.)

But these are all things Miller, the board president, said his investigator found to be legal.

The ethics, according to others, is another matter.

El Dorado County has given the district $2,191,172 from fiscal year ending 2001 through fiscal year ending 2010 because Meeks fire cried poor and needed help.

The residents are paying for fire service. Each parcel is assessed $325 per year. Voters approved Measure Z in 1992 at $85 and Measure R in 1998 at $45. The board imposed a fire protection assessment of $195 in 2009.

 

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (16)
  1. Dogula says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Chief Pang is a nice man. And what he did is absolutely standard operating procedure for people in the fire industry. Just imagine; this one story, multiplied by the hundreds, thousands. Just in California.
    This is how it works in the public sector; Civil servants (!) make more doing nothing than most people make working. And some make it past death; spouses get benefits too.

  2. 4-mer-usmc says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Some type of governing body (the Fire District Board?) had to approve all of this at some point. People get all up in arms at employees (or their associations/unions) that negotiate these sweet deals but seem to forget that it is the individuals sitting on some type of governing body that had to give these deals their stamp of approval. They are the ones that have maltreated their fiduciary responsibility on behalf of, and at the express of, the taxpayers/public.

    The public needs to start paying attention and being informed in advance and not after the fact.

  3. Another X Local says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    John is a great guy & has done nothing illegal. The residents should look at the fire district board who approved his pay/benefit packages. Maybe they should have attended board meetings when the pay/benefit packages were discussed & been informed. John did not do this on his own. And for those like Dogula who paint every civil employee with the same brush, you need to understand that retirement plans for public safety employees are much more lucrative than those for what are called “miscellaneous” employees. The miscellaneous packages are nowhere near as generous.

  4. Justice says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Should have the Grand Jury look into this. In the past manipulation of Pers by higher-ups was a common practice as are huge cash-outs. They used to call bogus spiked-inflated retirements with false claims “Chief’s Disease” for a reason. There may be others involved as well. This district receiving a couple of million from the county and the property owners being heavily taxed is highly suspicious to begin with as to where the money is going for a very small area with few employees. This district should be audited and then a consolidation should be considered.

  5. Tahoebluewire says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    The most overpaid underworked public employees. Hero’s my ass.

  6. Steve says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Thank you El Dorado County Auditor-Controller Joe Harn for watching out for the taxpayers’ best interests, and having the fortitude to stand up and object to outrageous shenanigans in the public sector like this. Don’t back off.

  7. k9woods says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    I for one do not begrudge our public (civil) servants, police, fire, teachers, their well earned retirement packages. That said, it does look like some loop holes allowed what appears to be salary spiking through the use of credits for unused vacation and sick pay. Not sure that should have counted or been allowed.

  8. Tahoebluewire says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    And they ain’t gonna save your house in the event of a fire. At least they did not save our house in the Angora fire. Pardon me if I am not a fan.

  9. 4-mer-usmc says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Tahoebluewire:

    I’m extremely sorry your house couldn’t be saved from the Angora Fire. What an awful day that was–I’ll never forget watching from my back deck that initial plume of black smoke that started rising higher into the sky, and with the wind at my house being so strong on that hot June day I knew right away it was going to be really bad. It’s hard to fathom that some a**-hole could have been so careless as to leave an illegal campfire in a condition where those embers fueled by strong winds on a hot day destroyed 254 homes. That day when I evacuated and drove away from my house with my dog I really thought I was looking at my home for the last time, but I am one of the incredibly lucky few whose home didn’t burn, and every day I am thankful to those individuals who fought that fire and needed to resort to using my garden hoses and attached spray nozzles to help save my house.

    Again, I am so sorry for your loss, but I must respectfully disagree with you that firefighters are the most overpaid, underworked public employees, and admit that I have a world of respect and appreciation for them.

    Spouse – 4-mer-usmc

  10. John says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Many people miss the point of this. It makes no difference if John Pang is a good or great guy. The fact is that he was allowed a retirement package much greater than he made when he was working. The district taxpayers are on the hook for this for the life of Pang and his wife’s life if he passes b/4 her. This is mismanagement and inappropriate at best. There should be an investigation into this by PERS to see if any violations occurred in the retirement package. He was paid a six figure salary plus, vehicle, and all benefits. A package that most of us would have loved to be the recipient of. Why should the taxpayers of Meeks Bay Fire District be responsible for this excessive gift of public funds?

  11. slim says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    John certainly is a great guy and these benefits, etc were set up long before he joined the team. And the same packages go for the police and all the rest.
    If these people didn’t get these benefits, they would have perhaps never taken the job to begin with!
    And its not like they get the immediate help that other areas get in case of fires like Angora so the pressure on them is always more serious.

  12. County Basin Resident says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    This would be one reason that all fire districts should be consolidated within the county. Moneys would be saved by reducing the redundancy in management, procurement, and use of county services by the many individual fire districts located within El Dorado County.
    Not all county fire districts enjoy the same public exposure, but they should if they require taxpayer assistance beyond their district.
    El Dorado County residents should vigorously support all attempts to control wasteful use of resources that belong to county taxpayers.

  13. A. Stewart says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    I retired from the State. After 20 years and ending up an Associate Information Systems Analyst (sounds impressive, doesn’t it?), I retired at $1504/mo., less than half of what I was earning. Please keep in mind the lowly Assistants and Associates when calling State workers the most overpaid and underworked. I feel that firefighters should be paid a lot — IF they have to confront fires a lot. Maybe they should be paid per fire. (And while we’re at it, let’s pay doctors per successful treatment, not for “Well, let’s keep an eye on it — come back in a month.)

  14. sunriser2 says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Is it true that if an employee files a disability claim in the last year or two of employment they get most of their pension tax free?

  15. X Employee says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    Sorry Dogula, but Pang was NOT a nice man.. He did smile a lot but that doesn’t make a person “nice”. That’s called smarmy. He made sure he smooth talked his Board (in his favor only) while they stuffed his pockets full of cash. Meanwhile his staff was left high and dry. Make no mistake the Meeks Bay Fire Department is slowly but surely being amputated one employee at a time. There will be no promotions within MBFD or within the North Tahoe Fire Department who has been given the task of overlooking MBFD because the so called “chief” neglected to bring in a successor. He intentionally left the department a shambles with his “to hell with them” exit, and to insure that the staff he had the honor to oversee be left with absolutely NOTHING but his dust. Nice man? I think “ineffectual leader and crook” is a much more accurate description. Oh, and he was really really cheap, too. This man wouldn’t even shell out $3 bucks for a box of Boy Scout cookies.

  16. fish01 says - Posted: August 12, 2014

    OPM also know as other peoples money has been easy to spend by Boards and other elected officials. This has been a perfect example of “The Music Man: play. It starts with P and rhymes with B which stands for a Board not guarding the henhouse.
    John was only doing what any other opportunistic person would. Ethical? NO but legal? Maybe.