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Tuesday, October 8, 2024

$5 million worth of pension holdings reported in Vermont for 2022

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Lt. Governor David Zuckerman | twitter.com

Lt. Governor David Zuckerman | twitter.com

In 2022, Vermont had $5 million in total cash and investment holdings in its public pension funds, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's Annual Survey of Public Pensions.

Of that amount, $4.6 million was in state pension funds, and the remaining $409,744 was in local government pension funds.

The survey includes public pensions sponsored by local and state government entities with employees who are compensated with public funds. The local governments include counties, townships, school districts, and special districts.

The data gathered includes revenues, expenditures, financial assets, membership and liabilities information.

It's worth noting that residents in Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming are not subject to state income taxes.

The Census Bureau cautions not all respondents answer all survey questions. Thus, some fields were left blank.

Vermont reported data from 10 pension systems, including three state-level pension funds and seven local-level systems. The total number of pension system members was 63,249 (60,169 at the state level and 3,080 at the local level).

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