Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • State-level e-filing in 2026 for investment decision-makers. Beginning in 2026, S.B. 852 requires retirement board trustees, CIOs/principal investment officers, certain investment staff, and consultants with discretionary authority to invest or formulate investment policies for public funds to file Form 700s electronically with the FPPC (not their local agency), via the FPPC’s e-filing system.
  • Who is in—and who is out. This new requirement covers “public officials who manage public investments,” which includes those performing non-ministerial functions such as directing investments, formulating or approving investment policies, establishing asset allocation guidelines, or approving investment transactions. Staff who work under the supervision of the CIO/principal investment officer or chief financial manager remain local-agency filers.
  • Practical compliance steps. Affected filers must obtain FPPC e-filing credentials and submit Form 700s through the FPPC portal starting with 2026 filings; only non-covered officers and employees will continue filing with their local agency.

Beginning in 2026, under Senate Bill 852 (S.B. 852), which Governor Newsom signed into law on October 3, 2025, the Form 700 filing location for certain individuals will change. As relevant to public pension funds, all retirement board trustees, chief investment officers (CIOs), certain investment staff, and consultants who work for the retirement fund and have discretionary authority to invest public funds must now file their Form 700s with the Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) using the FPPC’s electronic filing system, rather than with the retirement fund’s local agency.

S.B. 852’s changes to the Political Reform Act

S.B. 852 amends Section 87500 of the Political Reform Act (the Act) (Cal. Gov’t Code §§ 81000 et seq.). The Act created the FPPC and established California’s campaign finance and disclosure laws for state and local campaigns, candidates, officeholders, and ballot measures. To prevent conflicts of interest by public officials, the Act requires certain state and local officials to file Statements of Economic Interests (i.e., Form 700s). Cal. Gov’t Code §§ 87200-87203. Last year, an amendment to the Act added statutory provisions to specify which public officials must directly file their Form 700s electronically with the FPPC. Id. § 87500(a); 2024 Cal. Stats. ch. 211 (A.B. 1170). For all other public officials not specified in the statute (i.e., in Section 87500(a)), the Act had previously instructed them to file their Form 700s with their local agency. Id. § 87500(c).