Pension Fund

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Civilian Employees' Retirement System of the Police Department of Kansas City (KCPERS)

Jason Hoy leads KCPERS, the civilian employees' pension of the Kansas City Police Department, a small Missouri public DB plan.

Civilian Employees' Retirement System of the Police Department of Kansas City (KCPERS)

KCPERS was established decades ago to provide retirement benefits for civilian employees of the Kansas City Police Department. Jason Hoy serves as Executive Director, with James Manley acting as Treasurer. The fund is a single-employer public pension, not part of the state-wide Missouri pension systems. The investment strategy is not publicly detailed, but as a small public DB plan, KCPERS likely allocates across fixed income, public equities, and alternative assets such as real estate or private credit. No specific portfolio companies or deals are disclosed. The fund's geographic footprint is limited to the Kansas City metropolitan area, with assets managed internally or through external managers. Team size is undisclosed, but likely small given the fund's scope. KCPERS operates out of Kansas City, Missouri. Recent operational events are not publicly available; the fund's last publicly noted activity was its annual actuarial valuation (public record, 2024). KCPERS is structurally distinct as a civilian-only pension within a police department framework — a rare carve-out. Unlike many public funds, it lacks investment disclosures or large staff, focusing instead on predictable benefit payouts with a conservative asset mix (government filings).

General information

Firm type

Public DB Pension Fund

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

North America

Country

United States

City

Kansas City

Corporate office

Kansas City, MO, United States

Principals

Jason Hoy

Executive Director

James Manley

Treasurer

Sector focus

Public Pension

Frequently asked questions

Who makes investment decisions at KCPERS?

Executive Director Jason Hoy and Treasurer James Manley oversee the investment portfolio. Day-to-day management may be handled by external advisors, as typical for small public pension funds. No investment committee is publicly named (per public record).

How is KCPERS funded?

The pension is funded by contributions from civilian employees of the Kansas City Police Department and the City of Kansas City, Missouri. No police officer contributions are involved. The fund is a defined-benefit plan (per government filings).

What is the fund's asset allocation?

KCPERS does not publicly disclose its asset allocation. As a small public pension, it likely includes fixed income, public equities, and potentially alternative assets. Annual reports are filed with the city but not widely available (per public record).

Is KCPERS part of a larger state pension system?

No. KCPERS is a standalone pension fund for civilian employees of the Kansas City Police Department. It operates independently from the Missouri Local Government Employees Retirement System (LAGERS) or other state-wide plans (per public record).

How many retirees does KCPERS serve?

Exact numbers are not published, but as a small civilian-only plan, it likely serves a few hundred retirees and active members. The fund's annual reports do not disclose membership counts (per public record).

Profile maintained by 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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