YEAR END BENEFITS ALERT
Action by
year-end is required for each of the following types of benefit
plans:
·
All cafeteria
plan documents (including premium only plans and flexible
spending account plans) must be amended or restated to comply with
regulations that provide new rules for participation, employee
elections and contributions (see www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/hp526.htm
for details).
·
Final regulations
require all subject deferred
compensation arrangements (severance plans, employment
contracts, incentive compensation plans and other arrangements that
defer receipt of compensation that the employer is legally obligated
to pay into a subsequent tax year) to be amended or restated to
comply with the provisions of Code Section 409A (see New Deferred
Compensation Rules at www.benefitslawgroupofchicago.com/HTML/new-deferred-compensation-rules-2005.htm
for details).
·
All tax deferred
annuity plans covering employees of tax-exempt organizations (Section
403(b) plans) must be amended or restated to comply with
regulations that generally require 403(b) plans to operate more like
401(k) plans (see Benefits Bulletin "Proposed 403(b)
Regulations" at www.benefitslawgroupofchicago.com
for details).
All existing 403(b) arrangements (including those which are
ERISA-exempt) must be documented with a written plan that satisfies
all applicable requirements. In
addition to plan revisions, other matters involving plan service
providers also require attention (see Section 403(b) Final
Regulations: A
Compliance Outline at www.benefitslawgroupofchicago.com/PDF/2008/403b-compliance-outline.pdf
).
·
Regulations
proposed by the Department of Labor that are expected to be
finalized before the end of this year will require specific
participant fee and performance disclosures for all
participant-directed individual
account plans (that is, retirement plans which allow
participants to direct the investment of their own accounts).
Any failure to comply with the regulations, when finalized,
will be a breach of duty by plan fiduciaries.
The required participant disclosures apply generally to all
fees and expenses incurred by the plan (not the plan sponsor) and
are illustrated by the Department of Labor model disclosure chart
with sample information (www.dol.gov/ebsa/modelcomparativechart.doc).
·
In addition to
participant fee disclosures, plan administrators also must make fee
and cost disclosures to the government on a new Schedule C to the
Form 5500 annual report. Plan
service providers (including third party administrators and
recordkeepers) are required to make corresponding fee disclosures as
a condition for their being able to provide services to retirement
plan. These disclosures
will tie into the new Schedule C to Form 5500.
Existing service provider contracts will need to be amended
before the end of the current plan year to require such fee
disclosures and to satisfy other conditions specified in the
proposed regulations (see item 3 of Section 403(b) Final
Regulations: A
Compliance Outline at www.benefitslawgroupofchicago.com/PDF/2008/403b-compliance-outline.pdf
for some of the requirements for service provider contracts).
Required
Action:
Plan administrators
and HR staff should be working right now with plan service providers
and professional advisors to make the required changes in plan
documents and service provider contracts.
Formal document compliance by year-end must be the goal
because retroactive plan changes may be prohibited.
Andrew
S. Williams
Aronberg Goldgehn Davis & Garmisa
330 North Wabash Ave
Suite 1700
Chicago, Illinois 60611
312/755-3145
awilliams@agdglaw.com
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