GE’s $1.7 Billion Pension Gamble
A pension is not a gift. It is a promise. It is deferred wages, earned through decades of loyalty and labor. For 70,000 former General Electric employees, that promise was shattered. The company they built, which recorded a $7.3 billion profit in 2020, decided their secure retirement was a liability to be offloaded to the highest-risk bidder.
A class-action lawsuit filed in the Northern District of New York alleges that GE, its Board of Directors, and its CEO, H. Lawrence Culp, Jr., breached their most sacred legal duty to their former workers. They allegedly took a pension plan protected by federal law and transferred it to a risky, private equity-controlled insurer named Athene. In doing so, they not only gambled with the life savings of thousands but also stripped them of the very legal protections designed to prevent such a betrayal.
The Non-Financial Ledger: A Betrayal of Trust
This is about more than money. It’s about dignity. Imagine working for a company for years, even decades, under the assumption that your retirement is secure. You plan your life around that promise. You trust that the fiduciaries managing your money are acting “solely in the interest” of you and your family.
Then, one day, you learn that your security has been traded away. The stable, federally-protected pension plan you counted on is gone. In its place is an annuity from a company you’ve never heard of, one described in court documents as having a “highly complex offshore structure and risky asset portfolio.” The peace of mind you earned is replaced by a constant, gnawing anxiety: will the checks keep coming? This is the non-financial cost of GE’s decision: the calculated destruction of security for tens of thousands of families.
The Law They Allegedly Broke
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) is not a suggestion; it is the law. It sets the highest possible standard for those managing employee pensions. The lawsuit against GE lays out the violations in stark terms. The company’s fiduciaries had one primary job when transferring a pension: find the “safest annuity available.” The evidence suggests they did the opposite.
ERISA imposes strict fiduciary standards of conduct on fiduciaries, which are “the highest known to the law.”
Donovan v. Bierwirth, 680 F.2d 263, 272 n.8 (2d Cir. 1982)
Although ERISA does not prohibit an employer from transferring pension obligations to an insurance company, ERISA does require that a fiduciary obtain the βsafest annuity available.β
29 CFR Β§ 2509.95-1
Defendants did not select the safest annuity available to ensure long-term financial security for GE retirees and beneficiaries. Instead, Defendants selected Athene, which is substantially riskier than numerous traditional annuity providers.
Complaint, Civil Action No. 1:24-cv-822
The Cost of Business
This wasn’t a mistake; it was a calculation. Choosing a riskier annuity provider like Athene likely saved General Electric a significant sum. That corporate saving was paid for by imposing massive, uncompensated risk on its most vulnerable stakeholders: its retirees. Here is the cold math of their decision.
Mapping the Fallout: A Blueprint for Corporate Raids
This case is a flashing red warning light for every worker in America with a pension. It provides a blueprint for how corporations can legally jettison their responsibilities to their workforce, magnifying economic inequality and social instability.
Economic Inequality
This is a direct transfer of risk from a multi-billion dollar corporation to the individual. GE protects its bottom line, and its former workers, people like Accounting Clerk Julie Bueno and courier Darlene Hollins, are left to worry if their life savings will evaporate. It’s a textbook example of privatizing profits while socializing risk onto the working class.
Public Health
The stress induced by financial insecurity is a potent and recognized public health crisis. Forcing 70,000 elderly individuals and their families to live with the “significant risk that they will cease to receive the benefit payments” is an act that will inevitably take a toll on their mental and physical health.
The Watchlist: Who to Hold Accountable
Accountability requires names and institutions. While the courts will decide the legal outcome, public pressure must be applied to those responsible and the regulators who are supposed to prevent these abuses.
Corporate Leadership
- H. Lawrence Culp, Jr.CEO & Chairman of the Board (at the time of transaction)
- The Board of Directors of General Electric CompanyExercised authority over the plan and its management.
- The General Electric Company Pension BoardDirectly appointed to oversee the pension.
Regulatory Oversight
- U.S. Department of LaborThe primary agency responsible for enforcing ERISA and protecting worker pensions. They must be pushed to investigate and create stronger rules.
- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)Responsible for ensuring public companies like GE provide transparent disclosures to investors about such massive financial risks and obligations.
Your Move: From Outrage to Action
This isn’t just GE’s story; it’s a systemic problem. Corporate fiduciaries are increasingly seeing worker pensions as assets to be manipulated for shareholder gain, not as sacred obligations to be protected.
True change comes from below. Support worker rights organizations and local labor unions fighting to protect pensions. Demand your elected officials strengthen ERISA, adding severe penalties for executives who breach their fiduciary duty. Share this investigation. The story of the GE 70,000 must not be forgotten, it must become a rallying cry against a system that puts corporate profit over human lives.
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