Winn-Dixie Retirees Lose Bankruptcy Committee Request

July 12, 2005 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - A Florida bankruptcy judge has turned down a request by a group of retirees from Jacksonville-based supermarket chain Winn-Dixie to appoint a special committee to represent the retirees' interests.

US Bankruptcy Judge Jerry Funk ruled that retirees are already adequately represented by the existing Bankruptcy Court creditors committee and that appointing a separate group would be premature since the retirees are receiving their benefit checks, according to an Associated Press report.  The judge also said Winn-Dixie has not asked that payments to retirees be modified or ended.

“The Court finds that appointing an additional committee would not facilitate a more harmonious resolution of the cases but would instead engender discord, litigation and delay,” Funk wrote.

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Winn-Dixie has consistently said it plans to continue funding two plans, representing 1,042 retirees, many of whom are former company executives. Under the existing plans, the retirees are owed about $105 million. Rank and file employees like checkers do not have a pension plan, only a 401(k), according to the news report.

The plans’ participants recently received new estimates of what they would receive because bankruptcy laws require Winn-Dixie to estimate the value of all claims, Michael Freitag, a Winn-Dixie spokesman, told the AP.  The new valuations are calculated to determine how much a retiree would receive in today’s dollars as a lump sum payment, Freitag said.  If Winn-Dixie liquidated its assets, the new figures would serve as the amount due to the former employees.

Attorney David McFarlin, who represented some of retirees, said his clients will be carefully watching the progress of the bankruptcy case and could again ask for a committee if the situation involving benefits changes.  “The concerns of the plans’ participants haven’t changed,” McFarlin told reporters.  “They haven’t gone away.”

Northern Trust Helps Institutions Comply with Sudan Divestment

December 6, 2005 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Northern Trust Global Investments (NTGI) has announced the creation of seven new institutional index funds to aid US public funds in meeting investment objectives while complying with Sudan divestment mandates.

“We are pleased to introduce a family of funds that help our current clients and other public and private entities meet a socially-oriented investment objective without undue risk to the long-term goal of funding retirement benefits for public employees,” said Lyle Logan, Senior Vice President and Managing Director of Institutional Sales and Client Servicing for NTGI, in the announcement.

The Northern Trust Special Purpose Collective Trust funds will track the return and risk characteristics of major stock and bond indexes while screening out investments in companies that operate in Sudan.   NTGI said it will rely on an independent research firm to identify companies doing business in Sudan, and has completed extensive due-diligence on the resources of the data sources and methodologies of firms offering this information.

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NTGI will construct portfolios that will minimize the tracking variance caused by the elimination of the divested stocks in “Sudan-free” versions of the following indices:

  • Standard & Poor’s 500 Index
  • Standard & Poor’s Growth Index
  • Standard & Poor’s Midcap 400 Index
  • Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index
  • Dow Jones Wilshire 4500 Index
  • MSCI EAFE (Europe Australasia and Far East) Index
  • Lehman Aggregate Bond Index

In addition, Northern Trust will set minimum targets for minority- and women-owned brokerage firms for these funds.

The funds were created to meet the requirements of an Illinois law, passed earlier this year, which orders state public pension funds to divest by July 26, 2007 investment holdings of companies that do business in Sudan (See  Illinois Measure Bars Sudan Investments ).   Similar laws have been passed in New Jersey (See  New Jersey Assembly Bans State Investment in Sudan)and Oregon, and others have been proposed for Indiana, Connecticut, Missouri, New York, Ohio and California, NTGI noted in the announcement.

More information about NTGI is at  www.northerntrust.com .

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