Selectmen Approve Pension Reinvestment Plan
Date: Fri 29-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
selectmen-pension-Murtha
Full Text:
Selectmen Approve Pension Reinvestment Plan
The Board of Selectmen has approved a proposal by the town's Pension Committee
to reinvest $2 million of the town's $8 million pension fund into eight
different funds.
Pension Committee members Dunham Smith, Walter Pachniuk and Frank Krasowski
attended the selectmen's meeting last week to make a recommendation which was
outlined in a letter from Tom Murtha, the Pension Committee chairman.
According to the committee, Phoenix Home Life told the town in a letter
received on February 13 that it planned to replace the town's nearly $2
million investment in the Phoenix Growth Fund with a new series of
institutional mutual funds. If the town didn't give its approval by February
23, the account assets would be transferred.
"Phoenix Home Life was not receptive to extending the deadline and, because
there wasn't time to discuss it, our money was sent to our Fleet money market
account," Mr Pachniuk said.
Following its traditional practice of investing approximately half in stocks
and half in bonds, the Pension Committee recommended putting $250,000 in each
of the following funds: Mutual Beacon Fund, Vanguard Index Trust 500
Portfolio, Fidelity Stock Selector Fund, American Washington Mutual Investors
Fund, American Fundamental Investors, American EuroPacific Growth Fund,
Harbour International and American Capital World Bond Fund.
Mutual, Vanguard and Fidelity are existing town investment funds to which the
$250,000 will be added. The investment in American Capital World Bond Fund
will be made after July 1.
The Pension Committee said this reinvestment of the money from the Phoenix
Growth Fund plus excess funds from the Fleet Money market account will result
in the following asset allocation: 42 percent in US stocks, 46 percent in US
and international bonds, 9 percent in international stock and 3 percent in
cash.
Two years ago the town formally created and adopted an investment policy to
cover the three defined benefit pension plans for town employees, police and
elected officials. Currently the town has approximately 167 active
participants. More than 40 employees are retired and drawing benefits, a half
dozen of which have retired during the past year.
Two years ago the pension fund had $6 million in assets. The total now is
about $8 million.
Edward Zeller, Mark Korotash and Klaus Ertl also are members of the Pension
Committee. Members of the committee are appointed to serve two-year, unpaid
terms. The pension plans' actuary is T.R. Paul, located in Newtown.
