SEC inquiry could lead to Fla. oversight changes
By BRENT KALLESTAD
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Two top Florida Democrats want changes
to the makeup of the board that oversees Florida's $130 billion
investment portfolio now under scrutiny from the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission.
State Sen. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach, said Friday he wants
Florida's agriculture commissioner on the oversight board instead
of the attorney general - an office he's seeking.
Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink has pushed for adding a
financial expert to the panel that consists of herself, the
governor and attorney general.
Sink has had concerns about ``governance, transparency, audit
processes and risk management policies'' at the State Board of
Administration since a run on SBA's local government pool two years
ago.
``In other states, the attorney general makes it their duty to
keep a watchful eye on the pension fund making sure the people's
savings are secure,'' Gelber said. ``This will give the Attorney
General more arms length oversight.''
The SEC launched its initial inquiry in February 2008 and
informed the SBA in July 2008 with a formal order of private
investigation, a required step in the legal process that allows
them to subpoena records and take sworn statements.
``There isn't anything new,'' SBA executive director Ash
Williams said Friday. ``The document itself was held as
confidential and the trustees were advised that it was ongoing.''
The trustees presently consist of the governor, CFO and attorney
general. All have been updated on the SEC investigation, according
to representatives from their offices.
A spokesman for the SEC, John Nester, declined comment Friday on
its investigation.
Williams said the local government fund being investigated has
since been outsourced to an SEC-registered receiver,
Pittsburgh-based Federated Advisers, and is performing well.
``We've completely redone all the investment policies to make
the fund as safe as possible,'' said Williams, who was brought back
to Florida last year to take over the management of the SBA.
The SBA reported Wednesday that the fund's assets increased from
$99.6 billion to $110 billion during the quarter ending Sept. 30.
11/06/09 18:27
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