Central States Reaches Agreement to Repay $127M Overpayment

The plan reached a settlement with DOJ on Monday that will clear its debt with the PBGC.



The Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Plan reached a settlement with the Department of Justice on Monday and has repaid the federal government in full for a $126,555,536 overpayment the pension received from an assistance program. The fund was also required to pay 2.25% in annual interest on that amount starting from March 26.

The overpayment resulted from the inclusion of 3,479 deceased participants, out of about 360,000 total, in the Central States’ application for a Special Financial Assistance grant. In December 2022, Central States was granted $35.8 billion under the program, which was created as part of the American Rescue Plan Act to keep struggling multiemployer plans solvent through 2051.The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, which administers the SFA program, did not start using the Social Security Administration’s death master file to conduct its death audits of SFA applications until November 2023, and the Central States plan, like all other pension funds, does not have access to it.

The PBGC said in an emailed statement that “With respect to other plans that received SFA before PBGC expanded the scope of its independent death audit, PBGC has full census data audits underway. PBGC is committed to facilitating the return of SFA amounts made to those plans based on inaccurate census data.”

The PBGC has not specifically identified any plans that received overpayments.

Never miss a story — sign up for CIO newsletters to stay up-to-date on the latest institutional investment industry news.

The DOJ wrote in the settlement agreement that “the Plan provided information in support of its contention that its application complied with, and PBGC paid SFA based on, all information requirements, including census data, that were in effect at the time of the application, and that it did not violate any statute, regulation, or instruction in connection with the Plan’s application for and receipt of SFA.”

Thomas Nyhan, the executive director for Central States, said in an emailed statement that “Central States will remain very healthy and at nearly full funding after returning the excess payment, which constitutes roughly 0.35% of the total SFA provided to Central States. An independent actuary has asserted that the funding ratio of Central States, inclusive of the total SFA, is 98.5%.”

Congressional Republicans, including Senator Bill Cassidy, R-Louisiana, and Representative Virginia Foxx, R-North Carolina, had subpoenaed the PBGC, PBGC Director Gordon Hartogensis and PBGC Inspector General Seema Nanda for documents related to the repayment. The subpoenas for Hartogensis and Nanda came after Hartogensis testified on March 20 to a subcommittee of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce that Central States was then negotiating with the DOJ to secure the repayment.

Tags: , ,

Caltech CIO Scott Richland to Step Down in December

The investment chief was at the helm of the university's investment office for 14 years. 



Scott Richland, CIO of the investment office of the California Institute of Technology will step down in December, the university office of the president announced in
a letter on Monday. Scott was appointed CIO of the investment office in 2010, succeeding Sandra Ell. 

Under Richlands tenure, the investment office grew Caltech’s assets to nearly $4.6 billion from $1.6 billion, representing an annualized 8.5% return for the ten-year period ending June 30, 2023. The investment office, under Richland, generated more than $2.7 billion in investment returns, funding $2 billion in distributions to support the university, the president’s letter stated.  

As of fiscal year 2022, the Caltech endowment held 24% of its assets in developed market equities, 7% in emerging markets equities, 25% in alternative securities, 26% in private equity and venture capital, 12% in real assets, 1% in global fixed income and 5% in cash and other asset classes.  

Richland has held a number of positions across his 40-year investment career. Prior to his appointment at Caltech, he held roles including president at Luna Bay Investors, president at Andell Holdings and managing director at AIG Global Investment. He also held several senior and executive roles at SunAmerica.  

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

Richland, who was a finalist for CIO’s 2021 Industry Innovation Awards in the endowments category, sits on the board of directors of Foldax and Pasadena Private lending, and previously sat on the boards of United Educators Insurance and AIG Life and Retirement Companies.  

According to the letter, Richland plans to focus on his board appointments and philanthropic endeavors after he steps down from Caltech. Caltech president Thomas F. Rosenbaum announced in the letter the university will begin a nationwide search for a successor to Richland. 

Richland holds a Bachelor of Arts in political science and government from UCLA, and an MBA from Stanford University Graduate School of Business.  

Related Stories: 

CalPERS Names Stephen Gilmore as New CIO 

Exelon CIO Doug Brown to Retire, Hart to Replace Him 

Texas Permanent School Fund Appoints Stu Bohart as Deputy CIO 

Tags: , , , ,

«