Business Chicago Union Boss Scores Massive $158,000 Public Pension After Being Rehired For Only One Day
A retired Chicago labor leader secured a $158,000 public pension — about five times greater than what a typical retired public-service worker in Chicago makes — after being rehired for just one day on the city payroll,
Business Insider reports.
According to
The Chicago Tribune, Dennis Gannon will collect approximately $5 million in city pension funds during his lifetime.
Gannon started out in organized labor in 1973. He was 19 years old and made $6.95 an hour working for Streets and San as a steamroller engineer.
During the next 17 years, he worked his way into the role of hoisting engineer foreman, overseeing the use of heavy cranes at road construction sites at a salary of about $56,000. By 1990, Gannon had become a business agent with Local 150 of the International Union of Operating Engineers.
After he left city service, Gannon moved to take advantage of a law that allowed him to stay in the municipal pension fund. Records show that in April 1991, Gannon had Local 150′s business manager write a letter on his behalf making that request.
According to several reports, Gannon’s pension is so high that it exceeds federal limits and required Chicago’s pension fund to file special paperwork with the Internal Revenue Service to give it to him.
“I am extremely proud of my many years of service to the city of Chicago and the working men and women of organized labor,” Gannon wrote in a statement provided to
The Chicago Tribune.