Leonard Gilroy is Vice President of Government Reform at Reason Foundation and Senior Managing Director of Reason's Pension Integrity Project.
Under Gilroy's leadership, the Pension Integrity Project at Reason Foundation assists policymakers and other stakeholders in designing, analyzing and implementing public sector pension reforms. The project aims to promote solvent, sustainable retirement systems that provide retirement security for government workers while reducing taxpayer and pension system exposure to financial risk and reducing long-term costs for employers/taxpayers and employees. The project team provides education, reform policy options, and actuarial analysis for policymakers and stakeholders to help them design reform proposals that are practical and viable.
Gilroy and the Pension Integrity Project have provided technical assistance to several successful pension reform efforts in recent years in Michigan, Colorado, Arizona, South Carolina and other states aimed at tackling persistent pension solvency challenges.
In his role as vice president, Gilroy also leads Reason's government reform efforts, with over 18 years of experience researching fiscal management, government operations, infrastructure public-private partnerships, government contracting, and urban policy topics. He also regularly consults with federal, state and local officials on ways to improve government performance and efficiency.
Gilroy has a diversified background in policy research and implementation, with particular emphasis on competition, government efficiency, transparency, accountability, and government performance. Gilroy has testified before Congress on several occasions and has testified on pension reform before the Arizona, Florida, Michigan, and Texas legislatures. Gilroy works closely with state and local elected officials across the country in efforts to design and implement market-based policy approaches, improve government performance, enhance accountability in government programs, and reduce government spending.
Gilroy's articles have been featured in such leading publications as The Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, New York Post, The Weekly Standard, Washington Times, Houston Chronicle, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Arizona Republic, San Francisco Examiner, San Diego Union-Tribune, Philadelphia Inquirer, Sacramento Bee, and The Salt Lake Tribune. He has also appeared on CNN, Fox News Channel, Fox Business, CNBC, National Public Radio and other media outlets.
Prior to joining Reason, Gilroy was a senior planner at a Louisiana-based urban planning consulting firm. He also worked as a research assistant at the Virginia Center for Coal and Energy Research at Virginia Tech. Gilroy earned a B.A. and M.A. in Urban and Regional Planning from Virginia Tech.
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Reports: State Budgets Steady, But Future Uncertain
Deficits, debt, rising costs loom large in fiscal outlook
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Congress Passes Water Bill Promoting Public-Private Partnerships
WRRDA bill includes federal loans, pilot program for water partnerships
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Sacramento’s Attempt to Placate Unions
The perennial push for anti-privatization legislation
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Criminal Justice Reforms Prompt Evolution in Private Sector Rehabilitation Offerings
In various ways, private sector providing programs to help offenders reintegrate into society
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Reforming Defined-Benefit Pension Systems in Bakersfield and Kern County
Interview with Zack Scrivner, Kern County (CA) Supervisor
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Washington State Legislature Rejects Anti-Privatization Bill
Legislation would have created barriers to competitive contracting
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Detroit Seeking Private Partners for Water/Wastewater System
Operations & maintenance contract, long-term concession among options being explored
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Privatized Parking a Win-Win in Indianapolis
Efficiency, operational improvements enhancing revenue to the city
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From Traditional to Contract City: Navigating Financial Distress in Pontiac
Interview with Louis Schimmel, former Emergency Manager, City of Pontiac, Michigan
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Propping Up Unions at Taxpayers’ Expense
Charter cities challenge California's attempt to take away their fiscal autonomy