Texarkana Gazette

Teacher retirement director resigns, cites personal reasons

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The executive director of the Arkansas Teacher Retirement System Clint Rhoden said Friday that he has submitted his resignatio­n, citing personal reasons.

He said he expects to depart the system sometime in April.

The system’s board of trustees hired Rhoden, who was the system’s associate director of operations, on Oct. 31, 2018, to succeed George Hopkins as executive director of state government’s largest retirement system. The system has more than $20 billion in investment­s and more than 100,000 working and retired members.

Rhoden said he informed the system’s board of trustees Thursday about his resignatio­n. He said he had reluctantl­y applied for the retirement system executive director’s job in 2018 after a large number of the system’s staff asked him to do so.

Rhoden said he made a commitment to the system’s staff and members and himself to serve in the position for three legislativ­e sessions, and “the legislativ­e package of bills sponsored by the ATRS Board is now officially Arkansas law” from this year’s regular session.

It has been a pleasure and a privilege to serve the system’s board and staff, and the thousands of system members across the state of Arkansas, he said.

“I look forward to working with the ATRS board and staff over the next couple of months as I transition to the next adventure in my life,” Rhoden said in a written statement.

“I’ve made many friends during this journey, and I hope to continue those friendship­s down the road,” he said. “My main focus in the future will be to spend time with my family, enjoy nature, and NOT take phone calls, texts, or emails.”

Rhoden submitted his resignatio­n to the system’s trustees two days after he asked a state Senate committee to completely exempt state government’s retirement systems from a bill that would require the state treasurer and public entities to divest certain investment­s with financial services providers on a list maintained by the state treasurer related to the use of environmen­tal, social justice or governance-related metrics.

The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Jeff Wardlaw, R-hermitage, told the Senate Agencies and Government­al Affairs Committee on Tuesday that his House Bill 1307 includes a provision that states “discrimina­ting against energy companies” does not include actions by the investment adviser in accordance with the investment-related guidelines, policies or preference of its clients, so that’s why he believes the impact of the bill will be minimal on state government’s retirement systems. The bill also exempts “indirect holdings.”

Rhoden told the Senate committee that the teacher retirement system’s investment consultant, Aon Hewitt Investment Consulting, estimated two weeks ago the system could lose $7 million a year as a result of the bill.

But Wardlaw said Tuesday he already has amended the bill in good faith to minimize the impact of the bill on state government retirement systems.

The state Senate is scheduled to take action on the bill Monday.

Rhoden said Friday “none of the legislativ­e session had anything to do” with him submitting his resignatio­n to the system’s board of trustees Thursday, and he decided six months ago to submit this resignatio­n at this time.

Board Chairman Danny Knight said Friday that “Clint has been an excellent executive director.”

He said he expects the board of trustees will discuss a search for Rhoden’s replacemen­t as the system’s executive director during its next meeting April 3.

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