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New Jersey Transit Corporation Pension Plan
The pension plan covers employees across multiple unions, including the Amalgamated Transit Union, and functions as a private-sector retirement scheme embedded...
New Jersey Transit Corporation Pension Plan
The pension plan covers employees across multiple unions, including the Amalgamated Transit Union, and functions as a private-sector retirement scheme embedded within a public transportation corporation. Its governance sits with NJ Transit's leadership — President & CEO Kris Kolluri and Board Chair Diane Gutierrez-Scaccetti — while investment management for the broader pool of state pension assets, of which NJ Transit's plan forms a part, is overseen by the New Jersey State Investment Council and the NJ Department of the Treasury's Division of Investment. The plan's deployment is visibly concentrated in transportation infrastructure and real estate adjacent to NJ Transit's own operations. Holdings include One Penn Plaza East and Two Gateway Center in Newark, a portfolio of transit-oriented development projects around the state, and the agency's rolling stock — locomotives, rail cars, and buses that generate operational utility alongside long-term capital value. The New Jersey Economic Development Authority partners on property acquisitions and TOD ventures, reinforcing a strategy where pension assets co-locate with the agency's service footprint. Team and operational scale are not publicly broken out for the pension plan separately from the transit agency. The plan participates in the state's Common Pension Fund structure managed by the Division of Investment, which pools assets across multiple New Jersey public employee systems, though NJ Transit's plan retains its private-sector classification. Board-level engagement with the North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority provides a policymaking seat that intersects with asset planning. The plan's structural distinction is its hybrid governance: a private-sector pension fund administered by a public transit agency board, with an asset base that includes the actual trains and buses its beneficiaries operate. This is not arm's-length portfolio construction — it is balance-sheet integration where the plan's real assets are also the employer's means of production.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Newark
Corporate office
Newark, New Jersey, United States
Principals
Kris Kolluri
President & CEO
Diane Gutierrez-Scaccetti
Board Chair
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who oversees investment policy for the New Jersey Transit Corporation Pension Plan?
The NJ Transit board holds ultimate fiduciary authority, with President & CEO Kris Kolluri serving as the plan's administrator. Day-to-day investment management and pooling decisions sit with the New Jersey Division of Investment, which manages the Common Pension Fund structure through which NJ Transit's assets are invested alongside other state-affiliated plans.
How is the NJ Transit plan distinct from other New Jersey state pension funds?
It is classified as a private-sector pension plan covering unionized transit employees, not public employees. Despite that classification, the plan participates in the state's Common Pension Fund managed by the Division of Investment, giving it a hybrid status — a private plan inside a public investment pool.
What role does direct infrastructure and real estate play in the plan's asset mix?
The plan holds a significant concentration in transportation-related real assets, including commercial buildings in Newark, a statewide transit-oriented development portfolio, and NJ Transit's own rolling stock. These are not purely financial investments — they are operational assets that support the employer's transit mission while contributing to the pension portfolio.
How does the plan interact with the New Jersey State Investment Council?
The State Investment Council sets policy for the Common Pension Fund that pools assets from multiple state programs, including NJ Transit's plan. NJ Transit does not directly control day-to-day asset management; that function is executed by the Division of Investment under council policy.
Does the plan's investment strategy involve external fund commitments?
Public detail on fund-versus-direct allocations is thin. The plan's disclosed holdings emphasize direct ownership of real estate and infrastructure tied to NJ Transit's operations. Broader public-market and alternative-asset exposure is managed through the Common Pension Fund structure and not itemized publicly by the transit agency.
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