Oklahoma City Fire & Rescue Pension Fund
public plan · City of Oklahoma City · Norman, OK
Funding History
What This Means for You
Oklahoma City Fire & Rescue Pension Fund is significantly underfunded at 50%, with $859.4M in unfunded liabilities affecting 6,676 participants. Plans at this funding level face difficult choices: raising contributions substantially, reducing future benefit accruals, or in extreme cases, applying for benefit suspensions. Public plans cannot declare bankruptcy, but severe underfunding may lead to reduced cost-of-living adjustments or increased employee contributions. If you are a participant, it is important to understand your options and consider diversifying your retirement income sources.
Year-by-Year Funding
| Year | Assets | Liabilities | Funding Ratio | Contributions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $859.8M | $1.7B | 50.0% | $48.2M |
| 2024 | $827.9M | $1.6B | 52.6% | $41.8M |
| 2023 | $791.2M | $1.5B | 51.8% | $42.4M |
| 2022 | $741.5M | $1.4B | 52.6% | $41.8M |
| 2021 | $705.6M | $1.4B | 49.2% | $35.5M |
Frequently Asked Questions
Oklahoma City Fire & Rescue Pension Fund is 50% funded, meaning it has 50 cents in assets for every dollar in future benefit obligations. This is significantly underfunded and participants should monitor the situation closely.
Oklahoma City Fire & Rescue Pension Fund has 6,676 total participants, including 2,455 active employees and 4,221 retirees currently receiving benefits.
Oklahoma City Fire & Rescue Pension Fund is not covered by the PBGC. Benefits depend entirely on the plan's assets and the sponsor's ability to fund it.
The Pension Health Score (0-100, A-F) measures a pension plan's financial strength based on funding ratio (50%), funding trend over 3 years (30%), and PBGC risk level (20%). Higher scores indicate more secure retirement benefits.
Pension Health Score is calculated from funding ratio, 3-year funding trend, and PBGC risk classification.