Judicial Retirement System of Nevada

| Judicial Retirement System of Nevada | |
| Basic facts | |
| Location: | Carson City, Nevada |
| Top official: | Mark Stevens, chair |
| Year founded: | 2001 |
| Active members: | 111 |
| Website: | Official website |
| Total assets under management | |
| 2022: | $168,454,863 |
- See also: Public pensions in Nevada
The Judicial Retirement System of Nevada (JRS) is a Nevada state pension fund that provides retirement, disability, and survivor benefits to the state's Supreme Court justices, district judges, municipal court judges, justices of the peace, and their families. The Judicial Retirement System of Nevada had $168,454,863 ($168.56 million) in total assets under management as of June 30, 2022.[1]
The management of public pension funds can indicate support or opposition to environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) investment practices. ESG investing considers the extent to which corporations align with and promote certain non-financial standards, such as net carbon emission or corporate board diversity goals. States typically hire asset management companies (AMCs) to direct pension plan investments, some of which have ESG commitments that guide their strategies.
This article features the following sections:
- Background: Information about the structure and functions of JRS.
- Pension performance overview: Overview of the funding level and assets managed by JRS.
- Assets and asset management: Information about the asset management companies (AMCs) that contract with JRS, including a list of contracting AMCs that are participants in the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative and the Climate Action 100+ initiative.
- Governance and accountability: Details about JRS's oversight board, including members and selection.
Background
- See also: Public pensions
The Judicial Retirement System of Nevada (JRS), founded in 2001, is a fund administered by the Nevada Public Employees' Retirement Board. It operates as a defined benefit plan based on a formula established by Nevada state law. These plans—based on the employee's length of service and salary— provide retirement, disability, and survivor benefits to the state's Supreme Court justices, district judges, municipal court judges, justices of the peace, and their families.[1]
JRS served over 111 active members and approximately 72 retirees and beneficiaries as of June 30, 2022.[1]
Pension performance overview
The following table features information about the funding level and assets managed by the Judicial Retirement System of Nevada as of June 30, 2022:[1]
| Judicial Retirement System of Nevada performance (June 30, 2022) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Fiscal year | Percent funded | Total pension liabilities | Total assets |
| 2022 | 100% | $2,850,638 | $168,454,863 |
Assets and asset management
| Environmental, social, and corporate governance |
|---|
| • What is ESG? • Enacted ESG legislation • Arguments for and against ESG • Opposition to ESG • Federal ESG rules • ESG legislation tracker • Economy and Society: Ballotpedia's weekly ESG newsletter |
Asset management companies (AMCs) are hired to manage investment assets for state pension funds across all 50 states.
The Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative (NZAM) suspended operations in January 2025 and relaunched in February 2026 with more than 250 signatories under a revised commitment statement that removed its prior net-zero deadline requirement.[2]
As of October 2024, 391 AMCs were investor participants in the Climate Action 100+ initiative, which aims to align investor engagement with companies toward the goal of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.[3]
List of AMCs contracting with the Judicial Retirement System of Nevada
The Judicial Retirement System of Nevada (JRS) contracted with 3 asset management companies (AMCs) as of March 31, 2022. Of those companies or funds, none were investor participants in Climate Action 100+, and three were members of NZAM as of 2024. The following list identifies the AMCs (and in some cases, the specific funds) contracting with the Judicial Retirement System of Nevada:[4]
- AllianceBernstein (NZAM)
- Mellon Capital
- Payden & Rygel (NZAM)
Governance and accountability
This section features information about the seven-member board of trustees that oversees the Judicial Retirement System of Nevada (JRS). The board— titled the Nevada Public Employees' Retirement Board— is not specific to oversight of the JRS and does exercise oversight duties for other state funds.[5][1]
Board selection method
The board of trustees that oversees JRS is made up of seven governor-appointed members.[1]
Board of trustees membership
A seven-member board of trustees oversees the operation and administration of JRS. The following individuals served on the board as of November 2024:[5]
- Mark Stevens, chair
- Brian A. Wallace, vice-chair
- Dawn Huckaby
- Todd Ingalsbee
- Norma Santoyo
- Jessica Colvin
- Cameron Wagner
See also
- Public pensions in Nevada
- Environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG)
- Arguments about environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG)
- Opposition to environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) investing
- Reform proposals related to environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG)
- State legislative approaches opposing ESG investing
- State legislative approaches supporting ESG investing
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 [https://epubs.nsla.nv.gov/statepubs/epubs/713035-2022.pdf Nevada State Library, Archives & Public Records, "Judicial Retirement System of Nevada Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2022," November 20, 2024]
- ↑ Reuters, "Net Zero Asset Managers initiative relaunches after suspension", February 25, 2026
- ↑ Climate Action 100+, "The Three Goals," accessed June 20, 2023
- ↑ Ballotpedia, "Ballotpedia: Asset management data for state-administered pension funds across the 50 states," March 2023
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Nevada Public Employees' Retirement System, "Retirement Board," November 13, 2024
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