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Plumbers & Pipefitters, Locals #502 & #633
Plumbers & Pipefitters Locals #502 and #633 jointly administer multi-employer pension and welfare benefit plans serving union members in the Louisville and...
Plumbers & Pipefitters, Locals #502 & #633
Plumbers & Pipefitters Locals #502 and #633 jointly administer multi-employer pension and welfare benefit plans serving union members in the Louisville and Owensboro areas. Local 502, based on Crittenden Drive in Louisville, and Local 633, headquartered in Owensboro, are both chartered affiliates of the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry. The plans operate as Taft-Hartley trusts, governed by joint boards of labor and management trustees. Scott Lewis serves as Business Manager and Financial Secretary-Treasurer for Local 502, while Neal Hurm holds the Business Manager role for Local 633. The pension plan's investment structure combines fiduciary-directed portfolio management with direct property holdings tied to union infrastructure. The Locals maintain commercial real estate assets including their main benefit office and training center on Crittenden Drive in Louisville, an industrial property on Millers Lane, and Local 633's union hall on Alvey Park Drive West in Owensboro. Plan assets are administered through trust vehicles domiciled in Troy, Michigan, a common jurisdiction for Taft-Hartley fund service providers. Investment allocation strategies for these plans typically span core fixed income, public equities, and an expanding commitment to private-market exposures—including real estate, private credit, and infrastructure—consistent with the long-duration liability profile of a mature building-trades pension. The Locals operate apprenticeship and training programs in partnership with Ivy Tech Community College, funded through separate educational trust funds distinct from the pension assets. These workforce-development vehicles serve dual purposes: maintaining a skilled labor pipeline for signatory contractors and generating employer contributions that support plan funding. Local 502's training center sits adjacent to its benefit office, while Local 633 maintains a separate education trust. The plans participate in the AFL-CIO's broader labor network through their United Association affiliation, and Local 633 holds membership in the Greater Owensboro Chamber of Commerce. As a Taft-Hartley plan, the Locals' investment governance distinguishes them from corporate or public pension funds. Trustees are legally bound to act solely in the interest of plan participants under ERISA, and investment decisions are made by a joint board equally representing labor and management. This fiduciary structure—coupled with the plans' Michigan trust domicile and the presence of directly held union-operating real estate on their balance sheet—creates a capital base that is simultaneously conservative in liability management and structurally tethered to the physical assets of the building trades they serve.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Louisville
Corporate office
Louisville, KY, United States
Additional offices
Owensboro, KY
Principals
Scott Lewis
Business Manager and Financial Secretary-Treasurer, Local 502
Neal Hurm
Business Manager, Local 633
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who serves as trustee or investment fiduciary for the Local 502 and 633 pension plans?
The plans are governed by a joint board of trustees composed equally of labor representatives—typically including the Business Managers of both Locals—and management representatives from signatory contractors. Scott Lewis, as Financial Secretary-Treasurer of Local 502, and Neal Hurm, as Business Manager of Local 633, are key labor-side fiduciaries. Day-to-day investment management is typically delegated to professional third-party advisors and asset managers, given the administrative trust domicile in Troy, Michigan.
How are the pension assets invested?
As Taft-Hartley defined-benefit plans, the Locals' pension assets follow a diversified fiduciary allocation strategy designed to meet long-term participant obligations. While specific portfolio holdings are not publicly disclosed, standard building-trades pension allocations include core fixed income, public equities, and growing exposures to private markets such as real estate, infrastructure, and private credit. The Locals also hold direct real estate through their union halls, benefit offices, and training centers in Kentucky.
What is the relationship between the pension plan and the educational trust funds?
The Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 502 Educational and Training Trust Fund and the Local 633 Education and Training Trust Fund are legally separate vehicles from the pension and welfare plans. Funded by employer contributions negotiated through collective bargaining agreements, they support apprenticeship programs run in partnership with Ivy Tech Community College. The training centers on Crittenden Drive in Louisville and in Owensboro are owned directly by the Locals and are distinct from pension plan assets.
Where are the plan assets held and administered?
The Local 502 and 633 pension and welfare plan assets are administered through trusts domiciled in Troy, Michigan—a common jurisdiction for Taft-Hartley multi-employer fund service providers. This structure suggests engagement with third-party administrators and custodians based in the Michigan fiduciary-services corridor, though the specific firms are not publicly disclosed.
Does the plan invest directly in real estate?
Yes. The Locals directly own several commercial and industrial properties, including Local 502's main benefit office and training center on Crittenden Drive in Louisville, an industrial property on Millers Lane, and Local 633's union hall in Owensboro. These are held as operating assets of the union locals rather than as portfolio real estate within the pension trust, but they represent significant illiquid holdings on the organization's broader balance sheet.
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