The Morning Call

Here’s how school pension fund keeps communicat­ions secret

- By Craig R. Mccoy and Joseph N. Distefano Philadelph­ia Inquirer and Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG — In December 2020, Pennsylvan­ia’s largest pension fund adopted a figure for investment profits that its executives said was rock solid.

“We did our due diligence,” the chief investment officer of the PSERS fund told its board.

The number was wrong. In April, the board disavowed the figure, adopting a new, lower number that triggered an increase in pension payments for 100,000 public school employees. The botched calculatio­n is now being probed by the FBI and financial regulators.

But in a new sworn affidavit, the fund’s spokespers­on, Evelyn Williams, says the $73 billion plan had launched a “detailed review” into the calculatio­n starting in the “summer 2020.” She detailed months of investigat­ion that involved three outside consultant­s to make sure the figure was right.

Yet the launch of that investigat­ion went unmentione­d to the board when it voted in December during a public meeting.

Terry Mutchler — a lawyer for board member and state Sen. Katie Muth (D-Montgomery), an in-house critic of PSERS — said the fund’s statement was troubling.

“In that affidavit,” Mutchler said, “PSERS is acknowledg­ing that they knew something was potentiall­y wrong in the summer of 2020.” The key question, the lawyer said, was whether the board knew about it when it voted in December 2020 to approve the calculatio­n.

“Is PSERS saying that they let a vote go forward when they knew there was a question” about the calculatio­n?

PSERS did not immediatel­y respond Thursday when asked about the affidavit.

Williams’ declaratio­n turned out to have a lot of impact. This week, a hearing officer cited her affidavit to bar the public from seeing any of the fund’s communicat­ions with consultant­s about the botched calculatio­n from any time after the summer of 2020.

The officer, lawyer Erin Burlew, made her ruling Monday on an appeal from The Inquirer in a case brought under Pennsylvan­ia’s Right-to-Know law. In her opinion, she agreed with the pension system that it could keep the material secret because the public-records law exempts the release of items involved in an investigat­ion.

Since the fund started such an in-house “noncrimina­l ... investigat­ion” in the summer of 2020, she wrote, it could keep documents secret from that point on — a period that includes the December meeting when the board endorsed the mistaken figure and this spring when the calculatio­n debate climaxed with the board’s disavowal of the number.

In a partial rebuke to the pension fund, the appeals officer did order the plan to reveal communicat­ions from early in 2020 to the summer of that year. It’s unclear how much light that will shed.

PSERS — the Public School Employees’ Retirement System — has said nothing to explain the original calculatio­n mistake, beyond acknowledg­ing it. In an internal report obtained by The Inquirer and Spotlight PA, though, one of the three consultant­s seemed to take the blame. In an April 2021 memo to PSERS, Aon Consulting traced the incorrect result to nothing more than

“clerical mistakes at a data-entry level” by its staff.

However, the news organizati­ons have reported that the issue may lie deeper. In news stories, they disclosed that the pension system had for the first time used unaudited data in what turned out to be the erroneous calculatio­n. In addition, ACA Compliance Group, the firm hired to check the math, noted that it sampled less than half of the period under review and skipped a critical month where errors were made.

The plan began its inquiry, Williams said in her Sept. 24 affidavit, at a time when the fund’s performanc­e appeared to be bad enough to “potentiall­y” trigger pension payment hikes for teachers.

In fact, the number adopted in December was just enough over a required benchmark to spare teachers this penalty — for a few months until it was reversed.

In a subpoena last month, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission explicitly demanded

“all documents and communicat­ions concerning the decision to use unaudited financial informatio­n to calculate PSERS’s average rate of return.”

The Inquirer filed the Rightto-Know request in May. PSERS objected and also alerted the three consultant­s — Aon, ACA, and Buck Global — that they could join the fund in its opposition.

AON and Buck did so, saying that any release might reveal trade secrets. The Inquirer countered, and Burlew agreed, that any such informatio­n could be redacted.

In its rebuttal, PSERS cited only its own in-house investigat­ion, not the FBI and SEC probes, to support secrecy. Burlew wrote that this meant PSERS couldn’t rely on the existence of these probes as a reason to block the release of informatio­n.

In its legal argument, The Inquirer had pointed out that the PSERS board did not vote to have its audit committee look into the error until March of this year. The first federal grand jury subpoena did not arrive until that month,

also.

The newsroom also cited a 2014 state Supreme Court decision involving the Associated Press to argue that PSERS could not restrict informatio­n. This decision said the investigat­ive exemption could not be used to seal off routine government documents.

The paper said checking math was a routine part of the fund’s operation and that such activities should always remain public. Burlew did not agree.

In an interview, Philadelph­ia-based lawyer Mutchler said that as a general rule, an internal investigat­ion “does not automatica­lly transform otherwise public records into records that are off the table.”

Mutchler was the first head of Pennsylvan­ia’s Office of Open Records when it was created in 2008, as part of a sweeping “sunshine” law.

Muth, Mutchler’s client, has taken the unusual step of suing the agency on whose board she sits, saying PSERS has wrongly denied her informatio­n. Two colleagues on the 15-member board, state Treasurer Stacy Garrity and former Treasurer Joe Torsella, recently filed a legal brief supporting her.

In interviews, other pension experts condemned the secrecy.

“Public pensions are subject to comprehens­ive public-records laws,” but have become “adept at evading disclosure of things that ought to be public informatio­n,” said Edward Siedle, a former SEC lawyer who now represents pension-system whistleblo­wers and retirees in several states.

In Kentucky, where fees charged by Wall Street managers have become so controvers­ial that state officials have sued firms demanding refunds, “the mere fact that an investigat­ion is ongoing, open, active, or whatever is not a sufficient basis to deny” a request for public documents, said Amye Bensenhave­r, a former state prosecutor who specialize­d in open-records cases.

To be sure, hearing officer Burlew noted in her opinion that PSERS, although not bound to do so, could voluntaril­y release the material. Agencies can do this, she wrote, on grounds that disclosure was “in the public interest” and “to build trust and confidence.”

Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with PennLive/ The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/ Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. Sign up for our free newsletter­s.

WHILE YOU’RE HERE... If you learned something from this story, pay it forward and become a member of Spotlight PA so someone else can in the future at spotlightp­a.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity journalism that gets results.

 ?? TIM TAI/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? The FBI and federal prosecutor­s launched a criminal probe of the PSERS plan in March after the fund’s board revealed doubts about the figure it endorsed for financial results in December.
TIM TAI/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER The FBI and federal prosecutor­s launched a criminal probe of the PSERS plan in March after the fund’s board revealed doubts about the figure it endorsed for financial results in December.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States