David G. Bronner
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David George Bronner | |
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Born | January 22, 1945 |
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Residence | Montgomery, Alabama |
Occupation | CEO Retirement Systems of Alabama |
David George Bronner (born January 22, 1945 in Cresco, Iowa) is an American businessman. He is best known as the head of Retirement Systems of Alabama (RSA), the pension fund for employees of the State of Alabama.
Bronner is the son of George David and Marge Bronner. He received his elementary and high school education in Austin, Minnesota. He obtained his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees at Mankato State University (now Minnesota State University, Mankato), in Mankato, Minnesota. From 1967 to 1969, Bronner was an instructor in the School of Business and Finance at Mankato State. He then entered the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, where he earned a law degree in 1971 and a Ph.D. in 1972.
After teaching in various graduate schools of Education and Business, he was appointed as assistant dean of the Law School at the University of Alabama. Shortly thereafter, Bronner took his present job with RSA in 1973. At that time RSA had approximately $500 million of funds and was owed $1.5 billion by the state. By the end of 2007, the RSA had amassed over $32 billion in investments, making the RSA pension fund the 13th largest pension fund in the United States.
The growth in RSA's asset base is largely the result of a number of highly-public developments and acquisitions. To those in Alabama, the most visible RSA development is the highly successful Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail, which features ten golf course complexes throughout the state and attracts considerable tourist revenue and out-of-state publicity. Bronner directed the fund to purchase a large interest in US Airways, which resulted in him briefly serving as the airline's chairman. RSA has also been a major backer of Community Newspaper Holdings, a chain of over 100 small-market newspapers based in Birmingham, Alabama. The Battle House Tower in Mobile, Alabama is another of Bronner's RSA developments. He also directed the RSA to purchase Raycom Media, now the fifth largest owner of local television stations, with over 50, in the nation.