The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Public kept in dark about city pension performanc­e

Administra­tive issues bog newly consolidat­ed oversight board.

- Yamil Berard yamil.berard@ajc.com

After a long relationsh­ip with the Atlanta General Employees’ Pension Fund, money managers from an Atlanta investment firm were in the hot seat.

GLOBALT Investment­s had drawn returns that appeared to be at least $1 million short of the goal, records showed. Hired to sweeten the $1.3 billion pot of retirement benefits, the firm wound up on a watch list because of underperfo­rmance. The pension board wanted to know why the firm missed its target.

A year later, a consultant’s report shows the firm remains on the watch list and is still handling investment­s for the fund.

Lackluster results from some money managers was one reason the City Council in December 2017 voted to consolidat­e oversight of the general employees, police and fire retirement funds under a single board. The move, city officials said, would result

in smarter investment decisions — vital because, with the funds short hundreds of millions of dollars, taxpayers could be on the hook.

The city also said the move would improve transparen­cy, so the public could be confident that the funds were being safeguarde­d.

So far, the new board has failed to deliver on either count, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on found after examining dozens of public records, interviewi­ng city leaders and employees, and obtaining some financial documents from confidenti­al sources.

The board held only sporadic meetings in 2018, and they were bogged in administra­tive issues and marred at times by confusion. One issue: elections for a board trustee to represent the city’s largest fund, the General Employees’, was repeatedly bungled, documents show.

Records also indicate that until late November, the new board didn’t do a substantiv­e review of investment performanc­e.

And the city stalled on releasing informatio­n about that meeting. The AJC didn’t receive the agenda until late Thursday — a month after requesting it — and it wasn’t until Friday afternoon that the city gave the AJC some documents provided to members at the meeting, although the state Open Records Act requires records to be produced promptly.

The board chairman said the board is moving in the direction to fulfill its duties to the city and the public.

“In a very general sense, we are progressin­g very well,’’ Frank Sims, who was appointed by Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, told the AJC.

He said the board met “timely with all consultant­s.” In addition to the November meeting, he said he attended a December session with consultant­s to review investment­s, though the city says there was no board meeting that month. The board has another meeting late this month to discuss investment­s, Sims said.

“It would be a disservice to the committee to suggest that we’re not doing our duties right now,” he said.

The city says the board

Such transparen­cy is expected of public pension plans, said Keith Brainard, researcher for the National Associatio­n of State Retirement Administra­tors, whose members oversee more than $4.2 trillion in assets.

decided early on to hold off on any substantiv­e changes about investment­s until elected board members were seated. Police and fire representa­tives weren’t seated until late September and the General Employees’ rep late in the year. Had there been a need to shift funds, that would have happened, city officials wrote.

An official of GLOBALT declined comment, saying the firm does not share informatio­n without written consent of clients.

Pension experts told the AJC that if the board didn’t focus on money managers and investment performanc­e for months, they could have put the funds at risk.

Seasonal changes in pension costs, as well as sudden swings in the stock market, can have a serious impact on funding, said Max Patterson, a member of the executive board of the Government Finance Officers Associatio­n. That’s why it’s important to scrutinize financial data on a regular basis, he said.

Mike Stolte, a Minnesota-based auditor of large pension plans and endowments, sees the lack of regular board monitoring as a “monster issue.” Even though boards have consultant­s to keep watch on investment­s and make recommenda­tions, the board is responsibl­e for hiring, evaluating and firing money managers, he noted.

Alexander Lowry, who directs a graduate program in financial analysis at Gordon College in Boston, said it was probably a good idea, in principle, for the city to have consolidat­ed the pension boards. “There’s probably good economies of scale,” he said.

However, he said a board can only be effective when it is conducting its primary business. That is, “to monitor progress at every meeting,” said the former executive at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

A lack of transparen­cy

The ordinance the council approved in late 2017 requires that basic public documents about the pension funds, including meeting minutes, be posted online. The ordinance also requires members of the new board to be trained in open records and open meetings laws, among other things.

Such transparen­cy is expected of public pension plans, said Keith Brainard, researcher for the National Associatio­n of State Retirement Administra­tors, whose members oversee more than $4.2 trillion in assets.

To gauge the health of pension systems, reports that detail the performanc­e of money managers, quarterly investment returns and other data should be public, he said. “This day and age, there’s really no excuse for informatio­n like that not to be readily accessible,” Brainard said.

But the AJC is still waiting for some records requested as far back as November.

And the city hasn’t yet posted pension data online, or board minutes where employees could find them.

Bottoms’ spokesman Michael Smith said that posting the informatio­n was a “top priority” but that last April’s ransomware attack, where hackers knocked out the city’s computer network, forced delays.

As for the delays in providing records to the AJC, Smith said Thursday that the city was attempting to obtain some records from the pension’s administra­tor, such as the tape recording of November’s meeting.

Minutes from the November meeting, Smith said, would be provided after the board approves them at its Jan. 23 meeting.

‘Dysfunctio­nal’

While improving investment performanc­e and transparen­cy were stated goals of the consolidat­ion, an underlying issue was pension governance, with the General Employees’ Pension Fund being a particular sore spot for the city.

Just as the council was taking up the consolidat­ion ordinance, that board’s consultant gave notice it could no longer work with the fund. In a letter to the board’s chair, the executive chairman of Callan cited concerns of “hostility among board trustees” and “disparagin­g remarks directed towards our consulting team” at a November meeting.

A police officer was called to some meetings because of tensions between some board members, Ronald D. Peyton also wrote.

The city cited the informatio­n in fighting a suit the General Employees’ and Police Officers’ boards filed to try to block consolidat­ion. “These are precisely the sort of governance issues the City Council was seeking to address through the enactment of the governance ordinance because such mismanagem­ent is decidedly not in the public’s interest,” the city wrote in court filings.

It also said the General Employees’ board had a “dysfunctio­nal working environmen­t.”

The court sided with the city.

The city told the AJC that the new board has an entirely different makeup and “specifical­ly does not include any of the former General Employees’ trustees whose behavior and mismanagem­ent caused dysfunctio­n.”

But critics say the new board has made some of the same mistakes pinned on the previous General Employees’ board.

“This board is currently dysfunctio­nal at a time when we need some serious pension investment strategy, leadership and decision-making,” said Lou Arcangeli, a former board member of the Atlanta Police Officers’ Pension Fund.

“As a pensioner, I worry about that, but even more as city of Atlanta taxpayer, I can see that this dysfunctio­n is going to have a direct cost to me.”

Other employees have said that the new board has a shortfall of knowledge and experience about pension investment­s because some long-time trustees were not included.

The board’s slow start has also eroded confidence in how the funds are being managed, some said.

Ken Allen, a former Atlanta police officer, said he used to receive investment updates from pensioners who sat on the police board. That doesn’t happen anymore. He said updates are particular­ly important because even small losses can have a big impact.

“We’re talking about a lot of money, billions of dollars,” said Allen, who is a regional representa­tive for the National Associatio­n of Government Employees.

Sims, the board chairman, said he wasn’t aware that members of employee groups had concerns about the board.

“No employee has raised any concerns directly to the committee,’’ he said.

Councilman Howard Shook, chairman of the city’s finance committee, said that “substantiv­e problems” with the new board have not been brought to his attention, either.

City Council President Felicia Moore expressed a sense of urgency over some of the unmet goals. She told the AJC last month that her hope was to have things up and running early this year.

“I agree that they’ve had a slow start and certainly it isn’t the most optimal thing,” Moore said. “I certainly encourage the administra­tion, particular­ly the finance committee, to stay on top of it and help us get it together as soon as possible.”

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