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Dallas Police & Fire Pension System
Texas voters created the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System by constitutional amendment in 1916, carving out an independent entity from the City of Dallas...
Dallas Police & Fire Pension System
Texas voters created the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System by constitutional amendment in 1916, carving out an independent entity from the City of Dallas to provide retirement, death, and disability benefits for the city’s sworn officers and firefighters. Executive Director Kelly Gottschalk handles day-to-day administration, while Chairman Michael Taglienti — himself a Dallas police officer — leads a board that wades into direct investments uncommon among municipal pension funds. The fund blends traditional benefit-payment management with a private-markets portfolio spanning direct real estate, natural resources, private credit, and special-situation strategies. Confirmed real estate holdings include Museum Tower, a 42-story luxury residential high-rise at 1918 North Olive Street, alongside interests in RED Consolidated Holdings and The Union mixed-use development — all within the Dallas city limits. On the funds side, DPFP participates via co-investment and secondary purchases, disclosed commitments to Hearthstone MS II & III, and targets buyout, distressed-debt, mezzanine, and early-to-late-stage venture structures. Deployment reaches across U.S. markets, with a pronounced preference for in-state and local Dallas exposure. The system’s board of trustees governs a roughly $2.0B–$2.5B asset base (Altss estimate), navigating a fractious relationship with the City of Dallas that resulted in a board-approved funding agreement via agreed judgment in 2024 to resolve litigation. In December 2024 the board voted 6-5 to approve that funding deal, which opened the door for possible supplemental payments to retirees — an operational pivot that directly shapes the fund’s liquidity posture and long-term allocation capacity. The system operates under supervision of the Texas Pension Review Board and maintains associations with TEXPERS and NCPERS, linking it to the broader public-plan governance network. What distinguishes DPFP is its structural independence: it is not a city department but a constitutionally chartered single-employer contributory plan that owns hard real estate assets directly while simultaneously deploying into commingled funds. That hybrid architecture — blending direct Dallas property ownership with private-fund secondaries and co-investments — gives a municipal safety-worker pension an allocation profile more typical of a small endowment or family office, a reflection of a board empowered to bypass intermediaries in ways most public plans cannot.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1916
AUM
2045 (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Dallas
Corporate office
4100 Harry Hines Boulevard, Ste. 100, Dallas, TX, United States
Principals
Michael Taglienti
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Altss tracks 1 additional named team member 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 Dallas Police & Fire Pension System?
Kelly Gottschalk serves as Executive Director. Michael Taglienti chairs the Board of Trustees. Meketa Investment Group acts as general investment consultant.
Does Dallas Police & Fire Pension System participate in fund commitments or only direct deals?
The system holds both fund commitments and direct ownership. Museum Tower is held outright. Private equity exposure includes commitments to Huff Energy Fund LP and Industry Ventures Partnership IV.
What asset classes does Dallas Police & Fire Pension System target?
Allocations cover public equities through multiple global and small-cap managers, private equity at an 8.07% current weight, real estate via direct holdings, and natural resources including timber and farmland.
Where does Dallas Police & Fire Pension System maintain geographic exposure?
Public equity mandates are global. Real estate assets sit in Dallas. Natural resources holdings and private market funds cover the United States and North America.
How is Dallas Police & Fire Pension System related to the City of Dallas?
The City of Dallas sponsors the plan and serves as primary contributor. The pension operates as an independently governed entity under its own Board of Trustees.
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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