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Baltimore Fire & Police Employees' Retirement System
The Baltimore City Fire and Police Employees' Retirement System launched in 1962 as a contributory, defined-benefit plan covering every sworn officer in the...
Baltimore Fire & Police Employees' Retirement System
The Baltimore City Fire and Police Employees' Retirement System launched in 1962 as a contributory, defined-benefit plan covering every sworn officer in the city's fire and police departments. Active members contribute 10% of compensation, and the plan's benefit provisions are written into Article 22 of the Baltimore City Code, requiring City Council action to amend. The 11-member Board of Trustees mixes ex-officio city officials — including Comptroller Bill Henry — with mayoral appointees and elected retiree representatives. Robert Holley leads investment operations as Senior Investment Officer. The system deploys capital across a deliberately varied set of alternative sleeves: industrial real estate, commercial and mixed-use property, digital infrastructure, private credit, and renewable energy. Confirmed commitments include Dalfen Last Mile Industrial Fund V, Madison International Real Estate Liquidity Fund IX, LaSalle Value Partners US IX, IPI Partners Fund III, Grain Communications Opportunity Fund IV, Oak Hill Advisors Strategic Credit Fund III, and Carlyle Renewable & Sustainable Energy Fund II. It pursues buyout, co-investment, venture, secondaries, and distressed debt — a spread that spans early-stage startup exposure through late-stage control deals and turnaround situations. Its real-asset footprint touches New York City, Washington, DC, and broader US industrial markets. The workforce operates from a recently opened Light Street office in Baltimore. No adjacent philanthropic foundation or separate operating business appears in public filings, but the plan's membership affiliate networks — the International Association of Fire Fighters and the National Association of Police Organizations — supply a distinctive sourcing web. In November 2025, the fund identified and contained an attempted cybersecurity intrusion (per the firm's website), the kind of operational detail municipal plans rarely surface publicly until well after resolution. The board structure separates the system from a typical corporate pension: retired lieutenant Thomas G. Nosek sits as the retiree representative, while T. Rowe Price's Paige Davis, Jr. brings institutional asset-management muscle as a mayoral appointee. That hybrid governance — union retirees, city finance officers, and a vice president from a global public-markets manager all voting on commitments — shapes an allocation process that is slower but more broadly tested than a single-CIO shop, and it funnels every alternative bet through a committee of people who have worn the uniform.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1962
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Baltimore
Corporate office
100 Light Street, 9th Floor, Baltimore, MD, United States
Principals
Peter E. Keith
Board of Trustees Member
Robert A. Haukdal
Board of Trustees Member
Bill Henry
Ex-officio Board Trustee
Robert Cenname
Board of Trustees Member (Representing Director of Finance)
Brian Nadeau
Ex-officio Board Trustee (Representing Police Commissioner)
Khalilah N. Yancey
Board of Trustees Member (Representing Fire Chief)
Mildred O. Forbes
Board of Trustees Member
Paige Davis, Jr.
Board of Trustees Member
Joshua L. Fannon
Board of Trustees Member
William MacDonald
Board of Trustees Member
Thomas G. Nosek
Board of Trustees Member
Altss tracks 3 additional named team members for this firm — including direct investment leads, IR, and operating principals not listed on the public website.
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Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Baltimore Fire & Police Employees' Retirement System?
Robert Holley serves as Senior Investment Officer. The Board of Trustees, chaired by Quinton M. Herbert, holds final authority over asset allocation and manager selection.
Does Baltimore Fire & Police Employees' Retirement System participate in fund commitments or only direct deals?
The system invests exclusively through fund commitments and limited partner positions. Documented holdings include multiple real estate, infrastructure, and credit funds.
What asset classes receive the largest allocations?
Private equity carries an 11.85 percent current allocation against an 11 percent target. Real estate and credit vehicles also appear among active holdings.
Where does the underlying wealth come from?
The plan is funded by contributions from the City of Baltimore as plan sponsor and from active fire and police employees.
How is the system related to the City of Baltimore?
The City of Baltimore acts as plan sponsor and primary employer. City Comptroller Bill Henry serves as an ex-officio trustee.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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