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Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 166 AFL-CIO Pension Plan
The Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 166 AFL-CIO Pension Plan is the defined-benefit retirement vehicle for members of the Fort Wayne, Indiana-based local union.
Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 166 AFL-CIO Pension Plan
The Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 166 AFL-CIO Pension Plan is the defined-benefit retirement vehicle for members of the Fort Wayne, Indiana-based local union. Established through collective bargaining, the plan pools contributions from signatory plumbing and pipefitting contractors across the union's jurisdiction. The fund is jointly trusteesed, with equal representation from labor and management, consistent with the Taft-Hartley governance model that structures most building-trades pension plans in the United States. BeneSys, Inc., a third-party administrator based in Troy, Michigan, provides administrative management and day-to-day operations for the plan. The fund's investment portfolio spans multiple asset classes typical of union pension plans, including public equities, fixed income, and alternative investments such as private equity, real estate, and private credit. As a multi-employer plan, it cannot take single-stock concentration risk tied to any one contributing employer's fortunes, so portfolio construction emphasizes broad diversification across sectors and geographies. While individual fund commitments are rarely disclosed publicly, plans of this structure commonly allocate to diversified institutional vehicles alongside co-investment sleeves through consultants like Meketa or NEPC. The fund's current targeted allocation and specific direct investments are not a matter of public record, reflecting the guarded disclosure posture of a plan that does not maintain an investor-facing website. In 2012, the plan's actuary certified it as being in critical status under the Pension Protection Act of 2006, triggering the requirement for a rehabilitation plan — a fact published in the plan's annual funding notices to participants. The rehabilitation plan, jointly adopted by the board of trustees, outlines a schedule of contribution increases and potential benefit adjustments calibrated to eliminate the funding shortfall within prescribed federal deadlines. The plan remains subject to rules under the Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014, which permits deeply troubled plans to apply for benefit suspensions should rehabilitation prove insufficient. Local 166's trustees have not publicly applied for such relief. The plan's structural differentiator is its embedded governance model: joint labor-management trusteeship with no single-family or corporate sponsor. Investment and actuarial decisions are mediated through collective bargaining contributions that fluctuate with construction demand in northeast Indiana, creating a funding dynamic tied directly to the region's commercial and industrial building cycle. This distinguishes it from corporate pensions with centralized treasury functions and from public plans funded by tax revenue. The fund operates BeneSys as its administrative arm but has no publicly named investment committee members — a common pattern for building-trades plans of this size.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Fort Wayne
Corporate office
Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States
Principals
BeneSys, Inc.
Administrative Manager
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who governs the Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 166 Pension Plan?
The Plan is governed by a joint Board of Trustees composed of representatives from both the union and contributing employers, following the standard Taft-Hartley governance model. BeneSys, Inc. serves as the administrative manager, handling day-to-day operations and participant services. Investment consultants advise the trustees on asset allocation and manager selection, though specific consultant names are not publicly disclosed.
What is the Plan's current funding status?
The Plan was certified in critical status in 2012 due to funding deficiencies, requiring the trustees to implement a rehabilitation plan under the Pension Protection Act. In 2022, the Plan received approval for special financial assistance from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation through the American Rescue Plan Act's Butch Lewis program, designed to restore benefits and extend solvency. The exact funded ratio is published annually in the Plan's Form 5500 filing.
Does the Plan invest directly or through fund commitments?
The Plan invests primarily through commingled institutional funds and real-asset vehicles rather than direct deals, consistent with its size and constrained internal resources. Private-market exposure is gained through limited-partnership commitments to private equity and real estate funds. The rehabilitation-plan framework imposes liquidity requirements that limit the degree of illiquid direct investment the trustees can pursue.
How does the rehabilitation plan constrain investment strategy?
The federally mandated rehabilitation plan requires the trustees to prioritize benefit security and liability-matching over aggressive return-seeking, narrowing the acceptable risk budget. Equity allocations must be justified against minimum funding benchmarks, and alternative investments face additional fiduciary scrutiny. The 2022 PBGC special financial assistance grant partially eases these constraints by injecting cash that reduces the near-term liquidity pressure.
What is the Plan's exposure to alternative assets?
The trust commits to private real estate, private equity funds, and other institutional alternatives to capture illiquidity premiums within the rehabilitation framework. Specific commitments are reported annually via Form 5500 Schedule C and Schedule H filings. The Plan does not operate a dedicated co-investment or direct-deal program.
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