The previous NYCERS executive director retired last May (2025) and in response the NYCERS trustees appointed the current deputy executive director, Liz Reyes, as acting executive executive director.
Since then, the trustees have been persuing a hiring process.
By statute, the NYCERS Trustees are authorized to appoint the agency's executive director. That requires them to adopt an appointing resolution in public session with a recorded vote so that the public knows who the executive director is.
Based on a copy of the alleged appointing resolution, R-6 dated 12/17/2025, the trustees appointed Reyes as the new executive director with a salary of $293,038 at the Decmember 17, 2025 Investment Board Meeting.
This was the last NYCERS board meeting with the previous mayor's rep and the previous comptroller sitting on the Board of Trustees. I seriously thought that the trustees would wait for the new mayor and comptroller to be sworn in before making the appointment.
Interestingly, the resolution was electronically signed by the Mayor Adam's rep on the Board, Bryan Berge - the Chairpeson, as opposed to the standard signature of the executive director.
Also interesting, is that there was a Regular Board meeting on December 11, 2025 which would have been a more appropriate setting for the appointment resolution.
The Problem
The reason I am writting about this issue is that there is no trace of the resloution being adopted during the investment board meeting.
You can ckeck the closing video of the investment mmeting. You can hear the acting executive director make reference to the five investment resolutions that were adopted during the executive session so that there was a piblic record of the resolutions.
This was done because there is no public record of executive sessions of the NYCERS Board of Trustees and resolutions must have some public notice to be valid.
The meeting was then adjorned with no reference to a sixth resolution. That means there is no public notice of the appointment and Reyes may still be only the acting executive director.
There is, however, a stray comment after the meeting ended - "Did you need to add that item? Yeah. So.". There is no other activity after that comment. We have no idea what that item was.
Of course, the trustees can address this issue at the next Board meeting with the new Mayor's rep and the new Comptroller.
In conjuction with this appointment there is a major cloud hanging over Reyes relating to the legacy (LRP) project. The new Board members may have some questions about that project.
