States all over the country are running  into problems with the retirement funds setup for their employees. CNNMoney.com  recently posted an inn-depth article on how this problem is playing  out now in New Jersey. You can find a segment of the story below, or  read the full  post here.
For years, states all across the country  have been starving their retirement plans. Here's a look at how the  crisis is playing out in New Jersey, where the bill is coming due, and  the state doesn't have the money to pay it.
Even as the nation's economy is showing  some tentative signs of bottoming out, another calamity looms: the public  pension bomb.
For years, states nationwide have shortchanged  the retirement programs that cover teachers, police, and other public  employees; now the stock market plunge has wiped out billions of dollars  from already underfunded plans. California, New York and Illinois are  among the states scrambling to plug multibillion-dollar holes in their  pension systems. The growing obligations raise the specter of higher  taxes, diminished services, or even another round of costly federal  bailouts. 
"States have long needed to reduce  their unfunded liabilities, and widespread investment losses have made  it even more necessary to put money in," says Lance Weiss, author  of a 2006 Deloitte study of state pensions. "But the market crash  also means there's less money available to use for contributions. Everything  is coming together to create a crisis."
To better understand this ticking time  bomb it helps to focus on a single state, and New Jersey makes a compelling  case study. For one thing, its situation is dire. In June 2008 the state  estimated that the plan - one of the nation's largest, covering teachers,  state employees, firefighters, and police - had $34 billion less than  it needed to meet its obligations. Since then the market value of the  plan has dropped from $82 billion to $56 billion (a new estimate of  underfunding is due in July).
Also, New Jersey is in some ways ahead  of the pack in trying to deal with the crisis - Gov. Jon Corzine, a  Democrat, made addressing the problem a central theme of his 2005 campaign  - and the obstacles it is encountering shed light on the hard choices  facing other states.
"The pension obligations could spark  a huge problem for New Jersey," says Thomas Kean, a former Republican  governor. "They must be paid because they are absolutely an obligation  of the state, but as it is, the budget is balanced with chewing gum  and sealing wax." 
To figure out how such a wealthy state  (with a median household income of $65,933, New Jersey ranks No. 1)  dug itself into this hole, set the clock back almost 20 years.
 
