| Pension Act Makes Sweeping Changes To Plan Funding Rules and Administration
By the Tax Management Staff Washington, D.C.
The Pension Protection Act of 2006, P.L. 109-280, will have a
far-reaching impact on the operations of private pension plans, in
particular, by requiring pension plans to meet a 100% funding target
in seven years. The Act makes extensive amendments to the benefit
provisions of the tax Code and to the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). The Act was passed by the House of
Representatives on July 28, and by the Senate on August 3, and was
signed by the President on August 17.
INTRODUCTION
The Act, which took a long and sometimes bumpy road to passage by
Congress, replaces the funding requirements for defined benefit
pension plans, imposes new benefit limits on underfunded plans and
changes the premiums that the sponsors of underfunded plans must pay
to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) to insure a minimum
level of benefits to their participants. Also, the Act extends certain
tax incentives for retirement savings, modifies tax provisions
relating to spending for health care, establishes a safe harbor for
employers to provide investment advice to help employees manage their
§401(k) accounts and provides for automatic enrollment of
employees in §401(k) plans.
The Act clarifies the legal standing of cash balance pension plans,
many of which have been in regulatory limbo for years in the IRS's
determination letter program.
Numerous but less well-known provisions in the Act make a variety
of changes to the pension and benefit universe, such as modifications
to the plan asset rules that determine when participant contributions
become assets of a plan, and to the prohibited transaction rules,
which prohibit a wide range of transactions between a plan and a party
in interest unless an exemption applies. While many of these
provisions may seem technical, they could have significant effects on
the administration and structure of benefit plans and the manner in
which fiduciaries operate.
DISCUSSION OF ACT PROVISIONS
Title I--Reform of Funding Rules for Single-Employer Defined
Benefit Pension Plans
Minimum Funding Rules
Single-employer defined benefit pension plans are subject to
minimum funding requirements under ERISA and the tax Code. The amount
of contributions required to be made by the plan sponsor for a plan
year under the funding rules generally is the amount needed to fund
benefits earned during that year and that year's portion of other
liabilities that are amortized over a period of years, such as
benefits resulting from a grant of past service credit. The amount of
required annual contributions is determined under one of a number of
acceptable actuarial cost methods. Additional contributions are
required under the deficit reduction contribution (DRC) rules for
certain underfunded plans. No contribution is required under the
funding rules for plans that meet the full funding limit.
Defined benefit plans are required under current law to maintain a
special account, called a “funding standard account,” to
which specified charges and credits are made for each plan year,
including a charge for normal cost and credits for contributions to
the plan.
Beginning with the 2008 plan year, the Act repeals the current-law
funding rules, including the requirement that a funding standard
account be maintained by single-employer plans. The Act includes an
entirely new set of rules for determining minimum required
contributions.1
Funding Standard Carryover or Prefunding Balance. Under
current law, employers have considerable flexibility to choose the
assumptions and methods used to calculate minimum funding
requirements. However, employers with plans that are less than 90%
funded generally must make contributions to those plans on a more
accelerated basis under the DRC rules, using specified interest and
mortality assumptions.
The DRC is the sum of (1) the “unfunded old liability
amount,” (2) the “unfunded new liability amount,”
and (3) the expected increase in current liability due to benefits
accruing during the plan year. The unfunded old liability amount is
the amount needed to amortize certain unfunded liabilities under 1987
and 1994 transition rules. The unfunded new liability amount is the
applicable percentage of the plan's unfunded new liability. Unfunded
new liability generally means the unfunded current liability of the
plan (i.e., the amount by which the plan's current liability exceeds
the actuarial value of plan assets), but determined without regard to
certain liabilities, such as the plan's unfunded old liability and
unpredictable contingent event benefits.
If employers make contributions in excess of the minimum required,
the excess is added to the plan's “credit balance,” under
current law. The credit balance increases each year with earnings at
the interest rate assumed by the plan. The accumulated credit balance
can be applied toward the future years' minimum contribution
requirements.
Under the Act, the minimum required contribution of a plan sponsor
to a single-employer defined benefit plan for a plan year generally
depends on a comparison of the value of the plan's assets with the
plan's funding target and target normal cost. Credit balances can be
used in certain circumstances to reduce otherwise required minimum
contributions. In addition, contributions in excess of the minimum
contributions required under the Act are credited to a prefunding
balance that could be used in certain circumstances to reduce
otherwise required contributions. To facilitate the use of such
balances to reduce minimum required contributions, while avoiding the
use of such balances for more than one purpose, the value of plan
assets are reduced by the prefunding balance and/or the funding
standard carryover balance.
A plan's credit balance under current law becomes the balance of
the “carryover” account under the Act. Contributions in
excess of the minimum required under the Act are added to a new
“prefunding” balance. Both the carryover and prefunding
balances are credited with the plan's actual rate of return each
year.
Plan sponsors are prohibited from using credit balances if their
plans are funded at less than 80%. In other words, plan sponsors can
elect to use the carryover and prefunding balances to reduce the
minimum required contribution only if the plan's funding target
attainment percentage is at least 80%. For the 80% test, the funding
target attainment percentage is determined by subtracting only the
prefunding balance from the plan assets.
Interest Rate. The Act provides a permanent interest rate
based on a modified “yield curve” for plan sponsors to
measure current pension liabilities as they come due. Assets can be
averaged over 24 months, but the result is limited to 105% of market
value as of a plan's valuation date. As under the DRC rules, the
Treasury will establish the standard mortality table. However, some
employers can develop and use plan-specific mortality tables for
minimum contribution calculations.
Amortization Periods. Plan sponsors must make sufficient
contributions in order to meet a full funding target and ease funding
shortfalls over seven years so that all plans are fully funded in
seven years under the Act.
The liability for benefits earned under a plan in past years is the
plan's “target liability.” The liability for benefit
accruals in the current year is the plan's “normal cost.”
The plan's minimum contribution requirement for a year is the normal
cost plus the amounts required to amortize any funding shortfall over
the 7-year period. Under the Act, for the first year, the funding
shortfall is the target liability minus assets. In subsequent years, a
new shortfall amortization will be established to reflect gains or
losses during the preceding year. Generally, both the carryover and
prefunding balances will be deducted from plan assets to calculate the
funding shortfall.
At-Risk Plans. The Act creates an additional liability for
“at-risk” plans. A plan is considered at risk under the
Act if the plan's funding target attainment percentage is both less
than 80% without regard to at-risk liabilities and less than 70%
counting at-risk liabilities. The funded percentage is determined by
subtracting both the carryover and prefunding balances from plan
assets. The 80% test is phased in at 65% in 2008, 70% in 2009, 75% in
2010 and 80% in 2011 and thereafter. The plan determines the at-risk
liabilities by assuming that workers eligible to retire in the next 10
years will retire as early as possible. The at-risk liability is
phased in at 20% per year for each consecutive year the plan is at
risk. If a plan is at risk for the current year and two out of the
previous four years, a load of 4% of liability plus $700 per
participant is added to the at-risk liability. Plans with 500 or fewer
participants are not subject to the at-risk liability.
If a plan sponsor meets one of the above tests, it avoids the
at-risk designation, but is required to make up its overall funding
shortfall over seven years.
Waiver for Business Hardship
Under the Act, the Secretary of the Treasury may waive the minimum
funding standards for no more than three of any 15 consecutive years
(five of any 15 years for multiemployer plans) if an employer (or 10%
or more of the employers contributing to a multiemployer plan) is
unable to satisfy the funding requirements for a plan year without
temporary substantial business hardship and satisfying the
requirements would be adverse to the interests of the plan
participants in the
aggregate.2
Benefit Limits Under Single-Employer Plans
Under current law, employers in bankruptcy may not make a benefit
increase effective until the employer reorganizes. Also, if a plan's
new current liability funding percentage is less than 60%, an increase
generally may not be effective until the employer has brought the
plan's funding up to 60%.
The Act includes limits based on the plan's “adjusted funding
target attainment percentage.” The funding target attainment
percentage is the ratio of assets (minus carryover and prefunding
balances, see above) to target liability (without regard to at-risk
status, see above). The adjusted percentage is determined by adding
the amount of annuity purchases for non-highly compensated employees
in the last two years to both assets and liabilities.
If the adjusted funding target attainment percentage is below 60%
for a plan year, the Act prohibits the plan from triggering shutdown
benefits or accelerated payments--including lump sums--during the
year, and freezes benefit accruals. If the percentage is below 80%, a
plan can not have benefit increases. Between 60% and 80%, lump sum
payments is limited to the lesser of the present value of the
participant's PBGC guaranteed benefit and 50% of the lump sum the
participant otherwise would receive. The balance of the benefit is
payable in the form of an annuity.
The restrictions do not apply to plans that are 100% funded without
reducing assets for credit balances. Collectively bargained plans will
have to convert carryover and prefunding balances to assets if the
conversion eliminates a restriction. Special rules apply to new plans
and to plans of employers in
bankruptcy.3
Delayed Effective Date for Funding and Benefit Limits for Certain
Plans
The Act delays the effective date of the funding and benefit limit
rules discussed above for rural electric, agricultural, and telephone
multiple employer plans until 2017; eligible government contractors
until the earlier of when the Cost Accounting Standards Board allows
recovery of the new contribution rates or 2011; and until 2014 for
plans of employers that took over sponsorship of a plan so that the
PBGC did not have to terminate the plan. In addition, the Act modifies
existing special rules for “a company that is engaged primarily
in the interurban or interstate passenger bus
service.”4
Restrictions on Nonqualified Deferred Compensation
Under current law, employers may set aside or reserve money to pay
nonqualified deferred compensation as long as the plan is not
considered funded. The Act prevents such a reserve for certain
executives if the employer or a member of its controlled group is
bankrupt, has an at-risk plan (generally less than 80% funded; see
above) or a plan that has terminated without having sufficient assets
to pay all benefits.
The Act denies an employer a deduction for “gross ups”
intended to cover penalties incurred by prohibited funding of
nonqualified
arrangements.5
Title II--Funding Rules for Multiemployer Defined Benefit Plans
and Related Provisions
Multiemployer plans are subject to the same general funding rules
as single-employer plans except that longer amortization periods apply
to multiemployer plans than to single-employer plans. The Act retains
the funding standard account approach under current law for
multiemployer plans but reduces longer amortization periods to 15
years and allows the plan to stop using the shortfall method. A
multiemployer plan can get an automatic five-year amortization
extension, and another five years with IRS approval. The amortization
extension interest is the funding rate but the old rate is
grandfathered for extensions under applications filed before June 30,
2005.6
The Act adds new funding rules for multiemployer plans that are in
endangered, seriously endangered, or critical status, including some
relief from excise taxes for an accumulated funding deficiency. Status
generally is based on current funding percentages and projected
accumulated funding deficiencies. A plan less than 80% funded is in
endangered status, and if the plan has an accumulated funding
deficiency for six succeeding plan years, the plan is in seriously
endangered status. A plan less than 65% funded is in critical status.
Endangered (and seriously endangered) plans must develop funding
improvement plans that will increase the plan's funding percentage
over 10 or 15 years. Critical plans must adopt a rehabilitation plan
that sets goals for how the plan will get out of critical status
within 10 years.7
The Act expands from three to five years the time multiemployer
plans in reorganization must determine whether they will be
insolvent.8
Employers withdrawing from multiemployer pension plans are subject
to withdrawal liability. The Act repeals the limitation on the
withdrawal liability of insolvent employers and updates the rules
relating to limitations on withdrawal liability based on the company's
net worth, effective for sales beginning in 2007. The Act also
addresses withdrawal liability if work is contracted out (effective
for work after August 17, 2006); makes the employer participation
rules available for building and construction trade plans; amends the
fresh start option rules for calculating withdrawal liability
(effective for withdrawals after 2006); and changes the withdrawal
liability payment rules if the plan alleges a transaction was
undertaken to evade or avoid withdrawal
liability.9
The Act extends the ERISA retaliation prohibition against
participants for enforcing their ERISA rights to contributing
employers of multiemployer
plans.10
The Act provides an exception from the new multiemployer plan rules
for benefit increases made pursuant to an agreement with the PBGC
prior to June 30, 2005, as long as the increases are funded in
accordance with the
agreement.11
Multiemployer plans that have an accumulated funding deficiency are
subject to an excise tax. The Act exempts a small, fishery-related
multiemployer plan from any excise taxes that accumulate prior to the
earlier of the plan adopting a rehabilitation plan or
2009.12
The Act includes a sunset provision for the new funding rules for
endangered/critical plans and the automatic five-year extension for
multiemployer plans. These provisions sunset in 2014, except that any
plan already in endangered or critical status can continue to follow
its plan.13
Title III--Interest Rate Assumptions
30-Year Treasury Rates
Current law requires the use of a 30-year Treasury rate for certain
calculations. For 2004 and 2005, a long-term corporate bond interest
rate was substituted by the Pension Funding Equity Act of 2005, P.L.
108-218, §101, for the 30-year Treasury rate for plan funding and
PBGC premiums. The Act extends the 2004 and 2005 temporary rates to
2006 and 2007.14
Interest Rate Assumption for Determination of Lump Sum
Distributions
A plan's lump sum payment under current law to a participant or
beneficiary must be no less than the present value of the annuity to
which the participant or beneficiary would have been entitled. For
this calculation, the plan must use specified interest and mortality
assumptions. The interest rate is the rate on 30-year Treasury
bonds.
The Act requires that the plan calculate lump sum values using a
three-segment yield curve. The yield curve value is phased in over
five years at 20% per year, and the remainder is based on the existing
methodology. The phase in starts in 2008, and in 2012 the yield curve
is fully phased-in. The yield curve is based on a monthly interest
rate not the funding yield curve's 24-month
average.15
Interest Rate Assumption for Applying Benefit Limitations to Lump
Sum Distributions
The maximum benefit a participant may accrue and receive under
current law is stated in terms of an annuity. The tax Code specifies a
minimum interest rate that may be used for conversion to other forms
of payment. The permanent rate is the same as the rate for minimum
lump sums. However, the Pension Funding Equity Act of 2005, P.L.
108-218, §101, temporarily provided (through 2005) for a
conversion at 5.5%.
The Act provided that the rate cannot be less than the greater of
5.5%, 105% of the minimum distribution interest rate, or the rate
specified in the plan.16
Title IV--PBGC Guarantee and Related Provisions
PBGC Premiums
Single-employer plans that have unfunded vested benefits must pay
the PBGC a variable rate premium (VRP) equal to $9 per $1,000 of
unfunded vested benefits. No VRP is due if the plan is fully funded.
For 2004 and 2005, the unfunded vested benefits were valued using 85%
of a rate based on investment-grade corporate bonds. Act §301
extends that methodology in 2006 and 2007. The Deficit Reduction Act
of 2005, P.L. 109-171, created a temporary (five year) termination
premium. The Act requires the use of the yield curve's segment rates
for the premium calculation, eliminates the full funding exception to
the variable rate premium, and makes the termination premium
permanent.17
Commercial Airlines
The Act includes relief for the airline industry in the form of a
longer amortization period and a higher amortization interest rate.
The Act also adds somewhat different rules which applies to airlines
that freeze their plans and those that do not. In addition, the Act
increases the termination premium paid to the PBGC by certain
airlines.18
Limits on PBGC Guarantee of Shutdown and Other Benefits
If a plan is amended to increase benefits, the PBGC guarantee of
the increased benefits is phased in over five years from the date of
the plan amendment. A shutdown benefit generally is based on a
provision already in the plan, so the shutdown does not trigger a
phase-in period. The Act treats a shutdown or other contingent event
as an amendment that triggers the phase-in of guaranteed
benefits.19
Rules Relating to Bankruptcy of Employer
The PBGC guarantees and asset allocations are tied to the date a
plan terminates. The Act provides that if a plan terminates after the
employer goes into bankruptcy, the bankruptcy date is treated as the
plan's termination date for purposes of: (1) determining the
applicable maximum guarantee and the five-year phase in of the
guarantee; and (2) determining who, and what benefit, is in asset
allocation priority category
three.20
PBGC Premiums for Small Employers
Small plans do not pay a variable rate premium to the PBGC. The Act
requires that an employer with 25 or fewer employees pay a special
reduced variable rate premium for each participant equal to $5 times
the number of participants in the
plan.21
Interest on PBGC Premium Overpayments
Presently, the PBGC charges interest on underpayments but is not
authorized to pay interest on overpayments. The Act authorizes the
PBGC to pay interest on premium
overpayments.22
Substantial Owner Benefits in Terminated Plans
Under current law, 10% owners are designated as “substantial
owners” and special rules apply to them with respect to
guaranteed benefits in terminated plans. The Act simplifies the rules
by substituting majority owner rules (50% or more owners) for
substantial owner rules and applying the special guarantee limitation
(now on majority owners). The Act also changes the allocation of
assets rules relating to majority
owners.23
Acceleration of PBGC Computation of Benefits
The PBGC shares benefit recoveries from an employer with
participants based on the proportional losses of the PBGC and the
participants. Smaller terminations use an average recovery ratio
(SPARR) to accelerate processing (i.e., rather than applying separate
ratios for each plan, the PBGC annually calculates an average ratio
based on the last five years). Before doing the allocation, the PBGC
must split the recovery between return of due and unpaid contributions
(DUEC) and recovery of employer liabilities. The Act changes the SPARR
rules so that the most immediate two years are not counted in the
five-year averaging period. In addition, the Act ceates a similar
averaging ratio for
DUEC.24
Controlled Groups--Cessation or Change in Membership
When a plan spins off part of the plan, the allocation of assets
and liabilities between the parties generally is done using the PBGC
termination assumptions. The Act adds a special rule allowing the
plan's interest rate to be used instead for certain corporate
transactions involving fully funded plans and investment-grade
employers.25
Missing Participants
The Act expands the PBGC's missing participant program to cover
terminating multiemployer plans, terminating defined benefit plans of
small professional plans, and terminating defined contribution
plans.26
Director of PBGC
The Act makes the PBGC Executive Director's position a presidential
appointment subject to Senate confirmation by both the Finance
Committee and the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
Committee.27
PBGC Annual Report
The Act requires the PBGC's annual report to include additional
information on the PBGC's microsimulation forecasting model (Pension
Insurance Modeling System), including the specific parameters used for
the PBGC forecast and the impact on the PBGC deficit or
surplus.28
Title V--Disclosure
Defined Benefit Plan Funding Notice
The Act requires plan administrators to provide participants a
summary of the annual report (SAR) 60 days after the annual report is
filed. Plan administrators of certain underfunded single-employer
defined benefit plans are required to send a funding notice to
participants and beneficiaries at the same time as they send the
SAR.
Currently, multiemployer defined benefit plans must provide a
funding notice within two months after the annual report. The Act
creates a new funding notice that is due 120 days after the beginning
of the plan year for multiemployer and single-employer defined benefit
plans, or with the filing of the annual report for plans with 100 or
fewer participants.
The Act requires the plan administrator to send the notice to the
PBGC, participants, beneficiaries, unions, and, in the case of
multiemployer plans, employers contributing to the plan. The notice
will include detailed information on plan funding. A multiemployer
plan will provide additional information, including whether the plan
is in endangered or critical status and information on how to get a
copy of the funding improvement or rehabilitation plan. The Secretary
of Labor is required to publish a model notice by August 17, 2007.
The Act also repeals ERISA §4011, which requires the plan
administrator of a plan that is subject to the additional premium
under ERISA §4006(a)(3)(E) to provide notice of the plan's
funding status to participants and
beneficiaries.29
Multiemployer Pension Plan Information
The Act expands the ability of participants, beneficiaries, unions,
and contributing employers to get plan actuarial and financial
information from multiemployer plans. Each multiemployer plan
administrator is required to furnish the plan information, upon
written request, within 30 days. In addition, the plan sponsor or
administrator of a multiemployer plan is required to provide a notice
containing estimates of potential withdrawal liability to contributing
employers generally within 180 days after a written request. Civil
penalties of up to $1,000 per day can be imposed for each violation.
The Act also requires that contributing employers of defined benefit
plans or individual account plans subject to the minimum funding
standards under Code §412 be entitled to notice of any plan
amendment that would significantly reduce the rate of future benefit
accruals.30
Additional Annual Reporting for Defined Benefit Plans
The Act deletes the SAR for defined benefit plans. Single-employer
and multiemployer defined benefit plans are required to provide
additional information on the annual report filed each year. If
liabilities to participants or beneficiaries under a plan at the end
of the plan year consist of liabilities under two or more pension
plans as of immediately before the plan year, the annual report is
required to include the funded percentage of each pension plan and of
the plan for which the report is filed as of the last day of the plan
year. A multiemployer plan also is required to include information
about contributing employers and participants for whom no employer was
required to make a contribution. The DOL is required to publish a
model notice by August 17, 2007. In addition, a multiemployer plan has
to provide a summary of the required information to contributing
employers and to employee organizations within 30 days of the annual
report.31
Electronic Display of Annual Report Information
The Act requires the DOL to electronically display annual report
information in electronic form within 90 days after receiving it. The
Act also requires employers with intranets to display the information
on the intranet.32
ERISA §4010 Filings with the PBGC
Currently, employers with plans with aggregate underfunding of $50
million or more must provide financial and actuarial information to
the PBGC annually. The information is confidential and the PBGC may
not make it public. The Act eliminates the $50 million filing
requirement and substitutes a requirement that all plans with a
funding target attainment percentage less than 80% file plan actuarial
and employer financial information. In addition to the current
requirement that such plans provide actuarial and financial
information to the PBGC, the Act specifies that the employer must
provide additional funding information, including the plan's funding
target determined as if the plan had been in at-risk status for at
least five plan years. Also, while current law permits a Congressional
committee to request the information, the Act requires that the PBGC
annually submit to the labor and tax committees of the House and
Senate a summary report of the information submitted to the
PBGC.33
Disclosure of Termination Information to Plan Participants
The Act requires the plan administrator or plan sponsor in a
distress termination or in an involuntary termination instituted by
the PBGC to provide participants with information that the employer
gives to the PBGC, with certain confidentiality limitations, within 15
days of filing it with the PBGC. The Act also requires the PBGC to
make the administrative record of the involuntary termination decision
available.34
Notice of Freedom to Divest Employer Securities
The Act requires that the plan administrator provide a written
notice of the right to divest within 30 days before the first date on
which an individual is eligible to divest employer securities. The Act
allows for a civil penalty of up to $100 per day for each participant
or beneficiary to be imposed against a noncompliant plan
administrator. The Act also requires the Treasury Secretary to issue a
model notice within 180 days of August 17,
2006.35
Periodic Pension Benefit Statements
The Act sets out specific requirements for single and multiemployer
plans to provide to participants periodic benefit statements, which
currently are not required on a regular basis. Defined benefit plans
are required to provide individual benefit notices every three years
or upon written request. In the alternative, the defined benefit
statement requirement can be met by notifying participants annually
how to obtain the information. Defined contribution plans must provide
individual benefit notices annually; however, where there is
individual investment direction, the plan is required to provide the
notice quarterly. The Act allows for a civil penalty of up to $100 per
day for each participant or beneficiary to be imposed against a
noncompliant plan administrator. In addition, the DOL is required to
develop model benefit statements by August 17,
2007.36
Notice to Participants or Beneficiaries of Blackout Periods
The Act removes the blackout notice requirement imposed by
§306 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOXA) for self-directed
plans that are one-person or partner-only (or partners and their
spouses) plans.37
Title VI--Investment Advice, Prohibited Transactions, and
Fiduciary Rules
Investment Advice
Under current law, a fiduciary must act in a prudent manner and
solely in the interest of participants and beneficiaries.
Parties-in-interest cannot deal with the plan except pursuant to a
statutory, class, or individual exemption. A party-in-interest may
provide investment advice using an objective computer model of
investment alternatives subject to certain limitations as discussed in
the DOL's Sun America opinion. The Act creates a prohibited
transaction exemption for investment advice tailored to a recipient
and provided by a qualified fiduciary adviser -- an adviser who is
fully regulated by applicable banking, insurance, and securities laws
-- through an “eligible investment advice arrangement.”
Investment advice provided to a participant or beneficiary of an
employer-sponsored retirement plan through a computer model that is
certified by an independent eligible investment expert qualifies, as
long as the only investment advice provided under the program is the
advice generated by the computer model and the transaction occurs
solely at the direction of the participant or beneficiary. Also,
advice provided to employer-sponsored plans and IRAs by a qualified
fiduciary adviser who charges a flat rate fee (without regard to the
investments selected) is permitted.
The prohibited transaction exemption provides that: (1) the
arrangement must be expressly authorized by a plan fiduciary that is
not the person offering the investment advice program, a person
providing investment options, or an affiliate of either; (2) an
independent auditor must determine that the arrangement complies with
the exemption provisions in a written report compiled after an annual
audit; and (3) the fiduciary adviser must provide a disclosure to the
participant or beneficiary. The disclosure has to be written in a
clear and conspicuous manner and provide information including: (1)
any fees and other compensation (for which the DOL is required to
issue a model form); (2) any potential conflicts; (3) past performance
of the plan's investment options; (4) available services; (5) a
statement that the adviser is acting as a fiduciary of the plan; (6) a
statement that the recipient of the advice may arrange for advice from
an unaffiliated advisor; and (7) how participant information will be
used. The disclosure also has to be made before advice is first given,
at least annually thereafter, whenever the worker requests the
information, and whenever there is a material change to the adviser's
fees or affiliations. The fiduciary adviser is required to maintain
evidence of compliance with the exemption for six years after
providing the advice.
The Act also directs the Secretary of Labor to determine, in
consultation with Treasury and by the end of 2007, whether a computer
model is available that takes into account the personal and subjective
criteria about the account beneficiary, that is appropriate for the
broader range of investment options common to IRAs (and Archer MSAs,
health savings accounts, and Coverdell education savings accounts),
and that allows the account beneficiary sufficient flexibility in
obtaining advice to evaluate and select investment options.
Under the Act, a certified computer model is an option for
providing investment advice related to IRAs only if the DOL determines
an appropriate computer model is available; any person can ask the DOL
to make such a determination. If the DOL determines that an
appropriate model is not available, the DOL must issue a class
exemption that protects IRA account holders from biased advice without
requiring fee-leveling or a computer model. In addition, the exemption
sunsets on the later of two years after an appropriate IRA computer
model becomes available, or three years after issuance of the class
exemption. The amendments provided by the Act do not alter existing
individual or class
exemptions.38
Prohibited Transactions Related to Financial Investments
The Act provides statutory prohibited transaction exemptions for
certain transactions involving block trading (in blocks of at least
10,000 shares with a market value of at least $200,000), regulated
electronic communication networks, service providers who are not
fiduciaries with respect to the assets involved, foreign exchange
transactions, and cross trading (for plans with over $100 million in
assets). The Act also provides relief from certain bonding
requirements for broker-dealers subject to other bonding requirements
and removes foreign and governmental plans from the numerator for
purposes of determining whether more than 25% of a fund is from
pension plan assets.39
Correction Period for Securities and Commodities Transactions
The Act amends the correction period for prohibited transactions
involving certain securities and commodities to 14 days after the
party discovers or should have discovered that the transaction was
prohibited. The Act also provides for abatement of an assessed
prohibited transaction excise tax if there is a
correction.40
Blackout Periods
A plan fiduciary is protected from some liability in self-directed
plans. The Act eliminates the fiduciary's protection during blackout
periods when a participant cannot self direct unless certain specified
requirements regarding reasonable blackout periods are
satisfied.41
Bond Amount
The Act increases the fiduciary bond requirement from at least
$500,000 to $1 million for plans that hold employer
securities.42
Penalties for Coercive Interference
The Act increases the penalties for coercive interference with the
exercise of ERISA rights from a $10,000 fine and one year in prison to
a $100,000 fine and 10 years in
prison.43
Participant Failures to Exercise Investment Elections
The Act extends fiduciary protections similar to those available in
cases in which participants self direct their accounts to situations
in which the participant does not make an investment choice and the
plan sponsor makes a default investment consistent with DOL final
regulations (to be issued within six months after August 17,
2006).44
Annuity Contracts As Optional Forms of Benefit
The Act requires the DOL to issue regulations making clear that the
“safest annuity available” standard under DOL Interpretive
Bulletin 95-1 does not apply to annuities paid as an optional
distribution from an individual account plan to a participant or
beneficiary.45
Title VII--Benefit Accrual Standards
In response to litigation addressing the application of the age
discrimination rules of the Code, ERISA, and the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act (ADEA) to hybrid defined benefit plans and to the
conversion of traditional final-pay plans into hybrid plans, the Act
provides rules for testing defined benefit plans, including hybrid
plans, for age discrimination under the Code, ERISA, and ADEA. The Act
requires a hybrid plan to meet certain conditions for vesting and for
investment credits and prohibits the “wearaway” of
benefits the participant has earned in a conversion to a hybrid plan.
The amendments are prospective only, with no inference for the past.
Applicable defined benefit plans (basically hybrid plans), defined
below, are permitted to treat the hypothetical account balance as the
lump sum value for distributions after August 17,
2006.46
The Act amends the accrued benefit requirements to provide that a
plan is not treated as violating the prohibition against ceasing or
reducing the rate of an employee's benefit accrual solely because the
employee attains a particular age (i.e., the continued accrual
requirement) as long as a participant's accrued benefit as of any date
under the terms of the plan, disregarding the subsidized portion of an
early retirement benefit or retirement-type subsidy, equals or exceeds
that of a similarly situated younger individual who is or could be a
participant. The Act also provides that a plan is not treated as
violating the continued accrual requirements solely because the plan:
(1) provides offsets against plan benefits that are allowable to
applying Code §401(a); (2) provides a disparity in contributions
or benefits with respect to which the Code §401(a) requirements
are met; or (3) provides for indexing of accrued benefits.
The Act defines an “applicable defined benefit plan” as
a defined benefit plan under which all or part of the accrued benefit
is calculated as the balance of a hypothetical account maintained for
the participant or as an accumulated percentage of the participant's
final average compensation. Treasury regulations will have to include
in the term's definition any defined benefit plan, or any portion of
such a plan, which has an effect similar to an applicable defined
benefit plan. An applicable defined benefit plan is treated as
violating the continued accrual requirements unless the plan terms
provide that any interest credit for any plan year must be at a rate
that is at or below market rate (the calculation of which may be
determined by regulation); the plan terms also have to include
specified language related to plan termination. A plan is not
precluded from providing for a reasonable minimum guaranteed rate of
return or a rate of return that is equal to the greater of a fixed or
variable rate, however.
If an “applicable plan amendment”--an amendment to a
defined benefit plan has the effect of converting the plan to an
applicable defined benefit plan--is adopted after June 29, 2005, the
plan is treated as failing to meet the continued accrual requirements
unless, for each individual who was a participant in the plan
immediately before the adoption of the amendment, the post-amendment
accrual benefit under the plan terms is not less than the sum of his
or her accrued benefit for years of service before and after the plan
amendment's effective date; special rules apply for early retirement
subsidies. If the coordination of the benefits of two or more defined
benefit plans established or maintained by an employer has the effect
of adopting an applicable plan amendment, the plan sponsor is treated
as having adopted such a plan amendment as of the date coordination
begins.
Under the Act, an applicable defined benefit plan is treated as
meeting the vesting period requirements of Code §411(a)(2)/ERISA
§203(a)(2) only if an employee who has completed at least three
years of service has a nonforfeitable right to 100% of the employee's
accrued benefit derived from employer contributions.
Regulations Relating to Mergers and Acquisitions. The Act
requires the Treasury Secretary to issue regulations, by August 17,
2007, to deal with situations in which the conversion to a cash
balance plan is made with respect to employees who become employees
through a merger, acquisition, or similar
transaction.47
Title VIII--Pension Related Revenue Provisions
Deduction Limitations
Generally, plans can deduct contributions up to 100% of the plan's
current liability. Contributions in excess of the limit are subject to
a 10% excise tax. Because the plan's liability on termination
generally is higher than its current liability, there is an exception
that allows a deductible contribution equal to 100% of the plan's
termination liability, but only in the year of termination. The Act
increases the deductible limit for single-employer plans to the year's
normal cost (generally the cost of benefits accrued in the year) plus
the amount necessary to fully fund the funding target. In addition,
employers can contribute and deduct a cushion, which is 50% of the
funding target plus additional amounts reflecting projections of the
participants' compensation and the statutory compensation
limits.48
The Act increases the deduction limit for multiemployer plans to
140% of the plan's current
liability.49
Employers that sponsor both defined benefit plans and defined
contribution plans face a combined limit on deductible contributions.
The Act provides that contributions to a PBGC-covered defined benefit
plan are deductible without affecting the combined limit. For other
plans, only contributions in excess of 6% of compensation count
towards the combined
limit.50
EGTRRA Provisions Made Permanent
The Act makes the pension and individual arrangement provisions
made under the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of
2001 (EGTRRA), P.L. 107-16, permanent by eliminating the 2010 sunset
in EGTRRA §901.51
The Act makes the EGTRRA provisions relating to the Code §25B
Saver's Credit permanent by eliminating the sunset after
2006.52
Portability, Distributions and Contributions
Although the Code restricts the purchase of pension benefits for
service with another employer, special rules allow qualified
retirement plans of state and local governments to allow participants
to make after-tax contributions to purchase service credit under the
plan for certain periods for which no credit had been given. The
purchase of additional credits for years in which service credit has
been given is not allowed. The rules also allow trustee-to-trustee
transfers from §403(b) or §457 plans to purchase service
credit without tax consequences. The Act allows the purchase of
additional service credits even for years when service credit was
given and provides more flexibility on prior educational service
(elementary or secondary education) that is treated as permissive
service for purposes of buying credit. The Act also provides more
flexibility on trustee-to-trustee transfers so that the participant is
not liable for income tax if the transferee plan improperly allows
service purchase and allows the transfer between plans of unrelated
employers.53
The Act allows rollovers of after-tax amounts in §403(b)
annuities to a qualified
plan.54
The Act clarifies the minimum distribution rules for governmental
plans by requiring the Secretary of Treasury to issue regulations
providing relief from the minimum distribution rules for governmental
plans as long as the plan complies with a reasonable good faith
interpretation of the statute. It is intended that the regulations
apply retroactively.55
The Act allows direct rollovers from eligible retirement plans to
Roth IRAs.56
Certain individuals who received a prior distribution from a plan
may not participate in an eligible deferred compensation plan under
§457. The Act eliminates the prohibition on an individual
participating in an eligible deferred compensation plan merely because
of a distribution from the plan before the Small Business Job
Protection Act of 1996, P.L. 104-188, was
effective.57
The Act modifies the hardship regulations by requiring the
Secretary of Treasury to issue regulations within 180 days after
August 17, 2006, to expand “hardship” to include hardship
of a beneficiary under the plan (even if it is not a spouse or
dependent).58
The Act creates a new exception from the 10% premature distribution
tax for distributions before age 591/2 to a reservist (called up
between September 11, 2001, and before December 31, 2007, for more
than 179 days), and allows the money to be repaid within two years
after the end of active
service.59
The Act allows public safety officers to avoid the early 10%
distribution penalty for distributions based on separation from
service if the officer is at least 50 (rather than
55).60
The Act allows nonspouse beneficiaries to roll over to an IRA or
other plan structured for that purpose amounts inherited as a
designated beneficiary. The inherited amounts are subject to the
annual minimum distribution rules requiring distributions over the
person's life expectancy (recalculated
annually).61
The Act requires the IRS to make available a form for a taxpayer to
file with the IRS directing the IRS to send a refund directly to the
taxpayer's IRA.62
The Act allows individuals who worked for a bankrupt employer whose
officers were indicted and whose employer had a least a 50% match in
the form of employer stock in its §401(k) plan to make an
additional IRA catch-up contribution (three times the otherwise
applicable catch-up amount). The contributions can be made for 2007,
2008, and 2009.63
The IRS has issued guidance that would only allow compensation
earned while an individual is a participant in the plan to be counted
towards the defined benefit plan benefit limits. The Act provides that
the relevant test is compensation while working for the employer, not
only when a participant.64
The Act provides for indexing the adjusted gross income levels for
the saver's credit and IRAs for taxable years after
2006.65
Health and Medical Benefits
The Code allows excess plan assets to be transferred from an
ongoing defined benefit plan to a §401(h) health account (within
the defined benefit plan) to be used for retiree health costs for
retirees covered by the plan. The Act allows a pension plan with
assets in excess of 120% of the plan's current liability (or funding
target) to transfer two or more years of estimated retiree medical
costs to a health account under the plan. The maximum amount that can
be transferred is the lesser of 10 years of estimated retiree medical
costs or assets in excess of 120% of current liability. For all years
for which a transfer has been made, the employer must make
contributions sufficient to maintain the plan's 120% funding level (or
transfer assets back from the health to the pension account). There
also is a cost maintenance requirement that applies throughout the
transfer period and four years thereafter. For employers meeting
certain criteria, the cost maintenance requirement for multiyear
transfers made pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement may be
modified through the collective bargaining
agreement.66
The Act expands the right to transfer excess assets to a health
plan to multiemployer pension
plans.67
The Act allows a plan maintained by a bona fide association to
accumulate reserves of up to 35% of annual costs for medical benefits
(other than post-retirement medical
benefits).68
Tax-free transfers are not available between annuity contracts
without long-term care (LTC) riders and life insurance contracts with
LTC riders. The Act permits LTC riders on annuity contracts and
provide special tax treatment for the LTC component of a life
insurance or annuity contract including allowing the cash value of
such contracts to pay the LTC benefit, making LTC payments to a
reduction in basis, allowing tax-free transfers between annuity
contracts even if one has a LTC rider (with similar rules for life
insurance contracts), and providing special rules that would treat the
LTC rider as a separate contract for certain purposes. The Act also
adds new reporting
requirements.69
Pretax contributions for health insurance only are permitted out of
wages. The Act allows public safety officers to elect to annually
defer up to $3,000 of retirement income to pay for health or long-term
care benefits on a pretax
basis.70
Presently, there is a moratorium on the IRS disqualifying a state
or local government plan because of a violation of the
nondiscrimination rules. The Act extends the moratorium to other
government plans such as federal
plans.71
Miscellaneous Provisions
Payments of life insurance after the covered party's death
generally are not taxable to the recipient. The Act requires
businesses to treat proceeds from corporate-owned life insurance
(COLI) as income unless the insured was an employee within 12 months
of death, or was a director or highly compensated employee or
individual at the time the contract was issued, or the proceeds paid
to the insured's beneficiary are used to buy back any equity interest
owned by the insured at the time of death. The COLI provision also
includes notice and consent requirements and add new reporting
requirements.72
The Act provides that a church plan that self-annuitizes
distributions does not fail the minimum distribution requirements as
long as the plan satisfies the rules applicable to §403(b)
plans.73
The Act extends the exemption for qualified retirement plans from
unrelated business income tax for leveraged investment in real estate
to church annuity plans.74
The Code limits the maximum benefit that participants can receive
from defined benefit plans to highest-three year average compensation.
The Act eliminates this limit for nonhighly compensated employees
covered by church plans.75
The Act provides that for purposes of allocating employer
securities from a suspense account in a gratuitous transfer of
employer securities, the applicable limit that can be allocated to a
participant is based on the fair market value of the securities when
allocated to
participants.76
TITLE IX--Increase in Pension Plan Diversification and
Participation and Other Pension Provisions
Diversification Requirements for Certain Defined Contribution
Plans
The Act requires a defined contribution plan that holds any
publicly-traded employer securities to allow a participant (or any
beneficiary entitled to exercise a participant's rights) to divest
that portion of the account attributable to employee contributions and
elective deferrals invested in employer securities and to reinvest an
equivalent amount in other investment options. With respect to the
portion of the plan account attributable to employer contributions
other than elective deferrals which is invested in employer
securities, the Act requires a defined contribution plan to allow each
participant who has completed at least three years of service (or is a
beneficiary of a such participant or of a deceased participant) to
divest any employer securities and to reinvest an equivalent amount in
other investment options. If the employer contribution portion of the
account consists of employer securities acquired in a plan year
beginning before January 1, 2007, the diversification requirement is
phased in over three years (applied separately with respect to each
class of securities), but this phase-in does not apply to a
participant who has attained age 55 and completed at least three years
of service before the first plan year beginning after December 31,
2005.77
Regarding the reinvestment options for the divested employer
securities, the Act requires the plan to offer not less than three
investment options, other than employer securities, each of which is
diversified and has materially different risk and return
characteristics. Under the Act, a plan will not be treated as failing
to meet this requirement merely because the plan limits the time for
divestment and reinvestment to periodic, reasonable opportunities
occurring no less frequently than quarterly. However, under the Act,
except as provided in regulations and except for any restrictions or
conditions imposed under securities laws, a plan will not meet this
requirement if it imposes restrictions or conditions regarding the
investment of employer securities that are not imposed on the
investment of other plan assets.
Under the Act, the above provisions does not apply to an ESOP if
(1) there are no contributions to the plan (or earnings thereunder)
held within the plan and subject to Code §401(k) or (m), and (2)
the plan is a separate plan for purposes of Code §414(l) with
respect to any other defined benefit plan or defined contribution plan
maintained by the same employer or employers. Also, the Act excludes
“one-participant retirement plans,” as defined under the
Act, from application of the above provisions.
Increasing Participation Through Automatic Contribution
Arrangements
The Act allows a “qualified automatic contribution
arrangement” to meet the actual deferral percentage requirements
of Code §401(k)(3)(A)(ii) and the matching contribution
percentage requirements of Code §401(m)(2). The Act also excludes
such an arrangement from the definition of a top-heavy plan and amends
§514 of ERISA to supersede any law of a state which directly or
indirectly prohibits or restricts the inclusion in any plan of an
automatic contribution arrangement.
Under the Act, each employee eligible to participate in the
arrangement is treated as having elected to have the employer make
elective contributions in an amount equal to a qualified percentage of
compensation. Under the Act, the qualified percentage is any
percentage determined under the arrangement if such percentage is
applied uniformly, does not exceed 10%, and is at least: (1) 3% during
the period ending on the last day of the first plan year which begins
after the date on which the first elective contribution is made with
respect to such employee; (2) 4% during the first plan year following
that plan year; (3) 5% during the second plan year following that plan
year; and (4) 6% during any subsequent plan year. The Act provides
that the election treated as having been made ceases to apply with
respect to any employee who makes an affirmative election to not have
such contributions made or to make elective contributions at a level
specified in that affirmative election. Under the Act, the automatic
enrollment provision may be applied without taking into account any
employee who was eligible to participate in the arrangement (or a
predecessor arrangement) immediately before the date on which the
arrangement became a qualified automatic contribution arrangement and
had an election in effect on such date (either to participate in the
arrangement or to not participate in the arrangement).
According to the Act, under the above provision, employers are
required to: (1) make matching contributions on behalf of each
employee who is not a highly compensated employee in an amount equal
to the sum of 100% percent of the elective contributions of the
employee to the extent that such contributions do not exceed one
percent of compensation plus 50% of so much of such compensation as
exceeds one percent but does not exceed six percent of compensation;
or, without regard to whether the employee makes an elective
contribution or employee contribution, make a contribution to a
defined contribution plan on behalf of each employee who is not a
highly compensated employee and who is eligible to participate in the
arrangement in an amount equal to at least three percent of the
employee's compensation. The Act provides that an arrangement is not
treated as meeting the above requirements unless, with respect to
employer contributions (including matching contributions) taken into
account for this purpose, any employee who has completed at least two
years of service has a nonforfeitable right to 100% of the employee's
accrued benefit derived from such employer contributions and the
distribution requirements of §401(k)(2)(B) are met with respect
to all such employer contributions.
Under the Act, to be considered a qualified automatic contribution
arrangement, within a reasonable period before each plan year, each
employee eligible to participate in the arrangement for that year must
receive an accurate and comprehensive written notice of the employee's
rights and obligations under the arrangement written in a manner
calculated to be understood by the average employee to whom the
arrangement applies. The Act provides specific timing and content
requirements.
The Act provides the following tax treatment of withdrawals of
elective contributions (and related earnings) to an “eligible
automatic contribution arrangement” made within 90 days of the
date of the first elective contribution: (1) the amount of any such
withdrawal is includible in the employee's gross income for the
employee's taxable year in which the distribution is made; (2) no tax
is imposed under §72(t) with respect to the distribution; (3) the
arrangement is not treated as violating any restriction on
distributions under the Code solely by reason of allowing the
withdrawal; and (4) employer matching contributions are forfeited or
subject to such other treatment as the IRS may prescribe.
For these purposes, the Act defines an eligible automatic
contribution arrangement as an arrangement under an applicable
employer plan: (1) under which a participant may elect to have the
employer make payments as contributions under the plan on behalf of
the participant, or to the participant directly in cash; (2) under
which the participant is treated as having elected to have the
employer make such contributions in an amount equal to a uniform
percentage of compensation provided under the plan until the
participant specifically elects not to have such contributions made
(or specifically elects to have such contributions made at a different
percentage); (3) under which, in the absence of an investment election
by the participant, contributions described in (2) are invested in
accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Labor under
ERISA §404(c)(5); and (4) which meets certain notice
requirements.
Under the Act, an applicable employer plan is: (1) an employees'
trust under Code §401(a) which is exempt from tax under Code
§501(a); (2) a plan under which amounts are contributed by an
individual's employer for an annuity contract described in Code
§403(b); and (3) an eligible deferred compensation plan described
in Code §457(b) which is maintained by an eligible governmental
employer described in Code
§457(e)(1)(A).78
Eligible Combined Defined Benefit Plans and Qualified Cash or
Deferred Arrangements
The Act allows a small employer (i.e., an employer with an average
of at least two but not more than 500 employees) to establish a
combined defined benefit-§401(k) plan governed by one document
and having specific accounting for the defined benefit and defined
contribution portions of the trust. Generally, under the Act, the
defined benefit rules apply to the defined benefit portion of the
plan, and the defined contribution rules apply to the defined
contribution portion of the plan. The Act requires the defined benefit
component to satisfy minimum accrual requirements, and if the defined
benefit component is a cash balance plan, the accrual must be in the
form of minimum pay credits. Under the Act, the §401(k) component
is required to have automatic enrollment (including opt-out, notice
and election rights) and meet minimum matching contribution
requirements. The Act requires all contributions and benefits under
and all rights and features under each plan to be provided uniformly
to all participants. Under the Act, a defined benefit plan and
applicable defined contribution plan forming part of an eligible
combined plan for any plan year is treated as meeting the top-heavy
requirements of Code §416 for the plan year, Code §414(k)
does not apply, and the plan is treated as a single plan for purposes
of the reporting requirements of Code §§6058 and
6059.79
Faster Vesting of Employer Nonelective Contributions
Under current law, there is accelerated vesting in defined
contribution plans but only for matching employer contributions. They
must be 100% vested after three years (three-year cliff vesting) or
vest at a rate of 20% a year starting with year two (two-to-six-year
phased vesting). Employee contributions are always 100% vested.
The Act applies accelerated three-year cliff vesting or
two-to-six-year phased vesting to all employer contributions in a
defined contribution plan (nonelective employer contributions as well
as matching
contributions).80
Distributions During Working Retirement
Under current law, defined benefit plans are prohibited from
allowing in-service distributions before normal retirement age. The
Act allows in-service distributions once the participant is age
62.81
Pension Plans of Indian Tribal Governments
Under the Act, a governmental plan includes a plan which is
established and maintained by an Indian tribal government, a
subdivision of an Indian tribal government, or an agency or
instrumentality of either, and all of the participants of which are
employees of such entity substantially all of whose services as such
an employee are in the performance of essential governmental functions
but not in the performance of commercial activities (whether or not an
essential government function). The Act further clarifies that tribal
governments are subject to the same pension plan rules and regulations
applied to state and other local governments and their police and
firefighters.82
TITLE X--Provisions Relating to Spousal Pension Protection
Domestic Relations Orders
The Act requires the Secretary of Labor to issue regulations under
ERISA §206(d)(3) and Code §414(p) not later than August 17,
2007, which clarify that: (1) a domestic relations order otherwise
meeting the requirements to be a qualified domestic relations order,
including the requirements of ERISA §206(d)(3)(D) and Code
§414(p)(3) will not fail to be treated as a qualified domestic
relations order solely because (a) the order is issued after, or
revises, another domestic relations order or qualified domestic
relations order, or (b) of the time at which it is issued; and (2) any
order described in paragraph (1) will be subject to the same
requirements and protections which apply to qualified domestic
relations orders, including the provisions of ERISA §206(d)(3)(H)
and Code
§414(p)(7).83
Divorced Spouses and Railroad Retirement Annuities
The Act amends the Railroad Retirement Act to provide for
entitlement of a divorced spouse to railroad retirement annuities
independent of the actual entitlement of the
employee.84
Railroad Retirement Benefits to Surviving Former Spouses
The Act amends the Railroad Retirement Act to provide that the
surviving spouse's annuity under Tier II railroad retirement benefits,
which he or she is receiving pursuant to a divorce decree, is not
terminated because of the death of the participant (unless the divorce
order so provides).85
Requirement for Additional Survivor Annuity Options
Under the Act, if a pension plan participant elects a waiver of the
qualified joint and survivor annuity (QJSA) form of benefit or a
qualified preretirement survivor annuity form of benefit, the
participant can elect a qualified optional survivor annuity, defined
as an annuity: (1) for the life of the participant with a survivor
annuity for the life of the spouse which is equal to the applicable
percentage of the amount of the annuity which is payable during the
joint lives of the participant and the spouse; and (2) which is the
actuarial equivalent of a single annuity for the life of the
participant. Under the Act, if the survivor annuity percentage is less
than 75%, the applicable percentage is 75%, and if the survivor
annuity percentage is greater than or equal to 75%, the applicable
percentage is 50%. For these purposes, the Act defines the term
“survivor annuity percentage” as the percentage which the
survivor annuity under the plan's QJSA bears to the annuity payable
during the joint lives of the participant and the spouse. The Act
requires the plan to provide a written explanation of the qualified
optional survivor annuity in its required notice to
participants.86
TITLE XI--Administrative Provisions
Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System
The Act provides the Secretary of the Treasury with full authority
to establish and implement the Employee Plans Compliance Resolution
System (EPCRS) or any successor program and any other employee plans
correction policies, including the authority to waive income, excise
or other taxes to ensure that any tax, penalty or sanction is not
excessive and bears a reasonable relationship to the nature, extent
and severity of the failure. The Act directs Treasury to continue to
update and improve the EPCRS or any successor program, giving special
attention to: (1) increasing the awareness and knowledge of small
employers concerning the availability and use of the program; (2)
taking into account special concerns and circumstances that small
employers face with respect to compliance and correction of compliance
failures; (3) extending the duration of the self-correction period
under the Self-Correction Program for significant compliance failures;
(4) expanding the availability to correct insignificant compliance
failures under the Self-Correction Program during audit; and (5)
assuring that any tax, penalty or sanction that is imposed by reason
of a compliance failure is not excessive and bears a reasonable
relationship to the nature, extent and severity of the
failure.87
Notice and Consent Period Regarding Distributions
Generally, under present law, an election of a form other than a
joint and survivor annuity must be made no earlier than 90 days before
the benefit's annuity starting date. The Act changes the consent
period for joint and survivor notices and consents from “no
earlier than 90 days” to “no earlier than 180 days”
before the benefit's annuity starting
date.88
Reporting Simplification
The Act directs the Secretary of the Treasury to modify the
requirements for filing annual returns with respect to one-participant
retirement plans to ensure that such plans with assets of $250,000 or
less as of the close of the plan year need not file a return for that
year. For these purposes, the Act defines a “one-participant
retirement plan” as a retirement plan with respect to which the
following requirements are met: (1) on the first day of the plan year,
(a) the plan covered only one individual (or the individual and the
individual's spouse) and the individual owned 100% of the plan sponsor
(whether or not incorporated), or (b) the plan covered only one or
more partners (including a two-percent shareholder as defined in Code
§1372(b) of an S corporation) (or partners and their spouses) in
the plan sponsor; (2) the plan meets the minimum coverage requirements
of Code §410(b) without being combined with any other plan of the
business that covers the employees of the business; (3) the plan does
not provide benefits to anyone except the individual (and the
individual's spouse) or the partners (and their spouses); (4) the plan
does not cover a business that is a member of an affiliated service
group, a controlled group of corporations, or a group of businesses
under common control; and (5) the plan does not cover a business that
uses the services of leased employees. The Act also requires the
Secretaries of the Treasury and Labor to provide for the filing of a
simplified annual return for any retirement plan which covers less
than 25 participants on the first day of a plan year and which meets
the requirements described in (2), (4) and (5)
above.89
Local Educational Agencies and Other Entities
Voluntary Early Retirement Incentive Plans. The Act provides
for treatment of certain voluntary early retirement incentive plans
maintained by (1) a local educational
agency,90 or (2) an education
association described in Code §501(c)(5) or
(6)91 which principally
represents employees of one or more agencies described in (1) above
and is exempt from tax under Code §501(a). Under the Act, if (1)
such a plan makes payments or supplements as an early retirement
benefit, a retirement-type subsidy, or a benefit described in the last
sentence of Code
§411(a)(9),92 and (2)
such payments or supplements are made in coordination with a qualified
defined benefit plan and a trust exempt from tax under Code
§501(a) and which is maintained by an eligible governmental
employer or by an education association described above, the plan is
treated as a bona fide severance pay plan not providing for the
deferral of compensation with respect to such payments or supplements,
to the extent such payments or supplements can otherwise be provided
under the defined benefit plan (determined as if Code §411
applied to the defined benefit plan). The Act provides an exemption
from the age discrimination provisions of the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA) for voluntary early retirement incentive
plans described above.
Employment Retention Plans. The Act also creates an
exception to the rules governing ineligible plans under Code
§457(f) for that portion of any applicable employment retention
plan with respect to any participant, i.e., that portion of the plan
which provides benefits payable to the participant not in excess of
twice the applicable dollar limit determined under Code
§457(e)(15). Also, under the Act, a plan is not treated under the
Code as providing for the deferral of compensation for any year with
respect to that portion of the plan. The Act defines an applicable
employment retention plan as an employment retention plan maintained
by (1) a local educational agency, or (2) an education association
which principally represents employees of one or more such agencies
and which is described in Code §501(c)(5) or (6) and exempt from
taxation under Code §501(a). The Act defines an employment
retention plan as a plan to pay, upon termination of employment,
compensation to an employee of a local educational agency or education
association for purposes of retaining the employee's services or
rewarding such an employee for the employee's service with one or more
such agencies or associations.
Under the Act, applicable voluntary early retirement incentive
plans and applicable employment retention plans described above are
treated under ERISA as welfare plans (and not pension plans) with
respect to such payments and
supplements.93
No Reduction in Unemployment Compensation as a Result of Pension
Rollovers
The Act prohibits states from reducing unemployment compensation
for any pension, retirement or retired pay, annuity or similar payment
that was rolled over and, thus, is not includible in gross
income.94
Revocation of Election Relating to Treatment as Multiemployer
Plan
The Act allows a plan to revoke its election relating to treatment
as a multiemployer plan by August 17, 2007. More specifically, the Act
allows a plan to revoke an election to not be treated as a
multiemployer plan pursuant to procedures prescribed by the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) if, for each of the three plan
years before August 17, 2006, the plan would have been a multiemployer
plan but for the election. The Act also allows a plan that meets the
statutory multiemployer plan criteria (or a plan that was established
in Chicago, Illinois, on August 12, 1881, and sponsored by an
organization described in Code §501(c)(5) and exempt from tax
under Code §501(a)) to elect, pursuant to procedures prescribed
by the PBGC, to be a multiemployer plan, if (1) for each of the three
plan years immediately before August 17, 2006, the plan met those
criteria or is so described; (2) substantially all of the plan's
employer contributions for each of those plan years were made or
required to be made by organizations that were exempt from tax under
Code §501; and (3) the plan was established before September 2,
1974.95
Provisions Relating to Plan Amendments.
Under the Act, with respect to any amendment to any pension plan or
annuity contract which is made (1) pursuant to any provision under the
Act or any regulation issued by the Secretaries of the Treasury or
Labor under the Act, and (2) on or before the last day of the first
plan year beginning on or after January 1, 2009 (January 1, 2011, for
governmental plans as defined in Code §414(d)), such pension plan
or contract is treated as being operated in accordance with the terms
of the plan during the period described below, and except as provided
by the Secretary of the Treasury, the plan does not fail to meet the
requirements of Code §411(d)(6) and ERISA §204(g) by reason
of such amendment.
The Act provides that this section does not apply to any amendment
unless: (1) during the period (a) beginning on the date the
legislative or regulatory amendment takes effect (or in the case of a
plan or contract amendment not required by such legislative or
regulatory amendment, the effective date specified by the plan), and
(b) ending on or before the last day of the first plan year beginning
on or after January 1, 2009 (January 1, 2011, for governmental plans
as defined in Code §414(d)) (or, if earlier, the date the plan or
contract amendment is adopted), the plan or contract is operated as if
the plan or contract amendment were in effect; and (2) the plan or
contract amendment applies retroactively for such
period.96
1
Act §§102, 112; ERISA §303; Code §430 (new). Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
2
Act §§101, 111; ERISA §302; Code §412. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
3
Act §§103, 113; ERISA §206(g); Code §436 (new). Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
4
Act §§104, 105, 106 and 115. Generally effective Aug. 17, 2006.
5
Act §116; Code §409A. Effective as of Aug. 17, 2006.
6
Act §§201, 211; ERISA §304; Code §431 (new). Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
7
Act §§202, 212; ERISA §305; Code §432 (new). Effective for plan years beginning in after Dec. 31, 2007.
8
Act §§203, 213; ERISA §4245; Code §418E. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
9
Act §204; ERISA §§4225, 4205, 4210, 4211, 4221.
10
Act §205; ERISA §510. Effective on Aug. 17, 2006.
11
Act §206.
12
Act §214.
13
Act §221.
14
Act §301; ERISA §§302, 4006; Code §412. Effective on Aug. 17, 2006.
15
Act §302; ERISA §205(g); Code §417(e). Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
16
Act §303; Code §415. Effective for distributions made in years beginning after Dec. 31, 2005.
17
Act §401; ERISA §4006. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
18
Act §402; ERISA §4022; Code §410. Generally effective for plan years ending after Aug. 17, 2006.
19
Act §403; ERISA §4022. Effective for events occurring after July 26, 2005.
20
Act §404; ERISA §§4022, 4044. Effective for bankruptcies initiated 30 days after Aug. 17, 2006.
21
Act §405; ERISA §4006. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
22
Act §406; ERISA §4007. Effective for interest accruing for periods beginning after Aug. 17, 2006.
23
Act §407; ERISA §§4022, 4044, 4021, 4043. Generally effective for notices of intent to terminate or notices of determination given after Dec. 31, 2005.
24
Act §408; ERISA §§4022, 4044. Effective for notices of intent to terminate or notices of determination given at least 30 days after Aug. 17, 2006.
25
Act §409; ERISA §4041. Effective for transactions after August 17, 2006.
26
Act §410; ERISA §§4050, 206. Effective for distributions made after final regulations are issued implementing the provision.
27
Act §411; ERISA §§4002, 4003; Code §5314.
28
Act §412; ERISA §4008.
29
Act §501; ERISA §101(f); ERISA §4011 (repeal). Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007, except that a transition rule applies for reporting of the funding target attainment percentage or funded percentage of a plan with respect to any plan year beginning before Jan. 1, 2008, and the ERISA §4011 repeal is effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
30
Act §502; ERISA §§101, 204, 502; Code §4980F. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
31
Act §503; ERISA §§103, 104. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
32
Act §504; ERISA §104. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
33
Act §505; ERISA §4010. Effective with respect to years beginning after 2007 (i.e., filings for years beginning after 2007).
34
Act §506; ERISA §§4041, 4042. Effective for notices of intent to terminate or notices of determinations occurring after Aug. 17, 2006, except that a notice that otherwise is required to be provided before the 90th day after Aug. 17, 2006, is required to be provided on the 90th day.
35
Act §507; ERISA §§101, 502. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006, except that a notice that otherwise would be required to be provided before the 90th day after Aug. 17, 2006, is required to be provided on the 90th day.
36
Act §508; ERISA §§105, 502. Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006; for collectively bargained plans ratified on or before Aug. 17, 2006, effective on the earlier of (a) the later of Dec. 31, 2007, or the date on which the last CBA terminates, without regard to extensions, or (b) Dec. 31, 2008.
37
Act §509; ERISA §101. Effective as if included in SOXA §306.
38
Act §601; ERISA §408; Code §4975. Generally effective for investment advice referred to in Code §4975[(e)](3)(B) or ERISA §3(21)(A)(ii) that is provided after Dec. 31, 2006; for IRA computer model provisions, effective on Aug. 17, 2006. Editor's Note: The statutory language referred to §4975(c)(3)(B).
39
Act §611; ERISA §§3(42), 408, 412; Code §4975. Generally effective for transactions occurring after Aug. 17, 2006, except that bonding relief is effective for plan years beginning after such date.
40
Act §612; ERISA §408; Code §4975. Effective for any transaction which the fiduciary or disqualified person discovers, or reasonably should have discovered, after Aug. 17, 2006, constitutes a prohibited transaction.
41
Act §621; ERISA §404. Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007; for collectively bargained plans ratified on or before Aug. 17, 2006, the earlier of (a) the later of Dec. 31, 2008, or the date on which the last CBA terminates, without regard to extensions made after Aug. 17, 2006, or (b) Dec. 31, 2009.
42
Act §622; ERISA §412. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
43
Act §623; ERISA §511. Effective for violations occurring on and after Aug. 17, 2006.
44
Act §624; ERISA §404. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
45
Act §625. Effective on Agu. 17, 2006.
46
Act §701; ERISA §§203, 204; Code §411; ADEA §4 Generally effective for periods beginning on or after June 29, 2005. The amendments for computation of accrued benefits apply to distributions made after Aug. 17, 2006, for plans in existence on June 29, 2005. The vesting and interest credit requirements apply to years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007, unless the plan sponsor elects to apply them for any period after June 29, 2005, and before the first year beginning after Dec. 31, 2007. For collectively bargained plans ratified on or before Aug. 17, 2006, the vesting and interest credit provisions do not apply to plan years beginning before (a) the earlier of the date on which the last CBA terminates, without regard to extensions made after Aug. 17, 2006, or Jan. 1, 2008, or (b) Jan. 1, 2010.
47
Act §702.
48
Act §801; Code §§404, 404A. Effective for years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007. For 2006 and 2007, the deduction limit is increased from 100% to 150% of the plan's current liability, effective for years beginning after Dec. 31, 2005.
49
Act §802; Code §404. Effective for years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.
50
Act §803; Code §§404, 4972. Effective for contributions for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2005.
51
Act §811.
52
Act §812.
53
Act §821; Code §415. Retroactively effective as if enacted in the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, P.L. 105-34, §1526, and 2001 EGTRRA §647.
54
Act §822; Code §402. Effective for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
55
Act §823.
56
Act §824; Code §408A. Effective for distributions after Dec. 31, 2007.
57
Act §825.
58
Act §826.
59
Act §827; Code §§72, 401, 403. Effective for distributions made after Sept. 11, 2001.
60
Act §828; Code §72. Effective for distributions made after Aug. 17, 2006.
61
Act §829; Code §§402, 403, 457. Effective for distributions made after Dec. 31, 2006.
62
Act §830. The amendment requires the IRS to provide the form for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
63
Act §831; Code §219. Effective for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006, and beginning before Jan. 1, 2011.
64
Act §832; Code §415. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2005.
65
Act §833; Code §§25B, 219, 408A. Effective for taxable years beginning after 2006.
66
Act §841; Code §420. Effective for transfers made after Aug. 17, 2006.
67
Act §842; Code §420. Effective for transfers made in taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
68
Act §843; Code §419A. Effective for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
69
Act §844; Code §§72, 848, 1035, 7702B, 6050U (new), 6724. Generally effective for contracts issued after Dec. 31, 96, but only with respect to taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2009. The reporting requirements are effective for charges for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2009.
70
Act §845; Code §§402, 403, 457. Effective for distributions in taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
71
Act §861; Code §401. Effective for any year beginning after Aug. 17, 2006.
72
Act §863; Code §§101, 6039I (new). Effective for contracts issued after Aug. 17, 2006.
73
Act §865. Effective for church plans in existence Apr. 17, 2002, for any plan year ending after Aug. 17, 2006.
74
Act §866; Code §514. Effective for taxable years beginning on or after Aug. 17, 2006.
75
Act §867; Code §415. Effective for years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
76
Act §868; Code §664. Effective on Aug. 17, 2006.
77
Act §901; ERISA §204; Code §401. Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006. For plans under collective bargaining agreements ratified on or before Aug. 17, 2006, the effective date is the earlier of: (1) the later of (a) Dec. 31, 2007, or (b) the date on which the last collective bargaining agreement terminates (determined without regard to any extension thereof after Aug. 17, 2006); or (2) Dec. 31, 2008. A special effective date rule applies for certain employer securities held in an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP).
78
Act §902; ERISA §514; Code §§401, 414, 416, 4979. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007, except that the ERISA preemption provisions take effect on Aug. 17, 2006.
79
Act §903; ERISA §210; Code §414. Effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2009.
80
Act §904; ERISA §203; Code §411. Generally, effective for plan years beginning after 2006, and not applicable to any employee before the date that the employee has one hour of service under such plan in any plan year to which the amendments apply. For plans under collective bargaining agreements ratified on or before Aug. 17, 2006, the amendments do not apply to contributions on behalf of employees covered by any such agreement for plan years beginning before the earlier of: (1) the later of (a) the date on which the last of such collective bargaining agreements terminates (determined without regard to any extension thereof on or after Aug. 17, 2006), or (b) Jan. 1, 2007; or (2) Jan. 1, 2009. For an employee stock ownership plan which had outstanding on Sept. 26, 2005, a loan incurred for the purpose of acquiring qualifying employer securities, the amendments do not apply to any plan year beginning before the earlier of: (1) the date on which the loan is fully repaid; or (2) the date on which the loan was, as of Sept. 26, 2005, scheduled to be fully repaid.
81
Act §905; ERISA §3(2); Code §401. Effective for distributions in plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
82
Act §906; ERISA §§3(32) and 402; Code §§414, 415. Effective for years beginning on or after Aug. 17, 2006.
83
Act §1001.
84
Act §1002; Railroad Retirement Act §2 (45 U.S.C. §231(a)). Effective Aug. 17, 2007.
85
Act §1003; Railroad Retirement Act §5 (45 U.S.C. §231(d)). Effective Aug. 17, 2007.
86
Act §1004; ERISA §205; Code §417. Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007. For collectively-bargained plans, the amendments do not apply to plan years beginning before the earlier of: (1) the later of (a) Jan. 1, 2008, or (b) the date on which the last collective bargaining agreement related to the plan terminates (determined without regard to any extension thereof after Aug. 17, 2006); or (2) Jan. 1, 2009.
87
Act §1101. No specific effective date is given.
88
Act §1102; ERISA §205; Code §417. Generally effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006. The Act also directs the Secretary of the Treasury to substitute “180 days” for “90 days” each place it appears in Regs. §§1.402(f)-1, 1.411(a)-11(c), and 1.417(e)-1(b) and under the regulations under Part 2 of Subtitle B of Title I of ERISA relating to ERISA §§203(e) and 205. The Act also directs the Secretary of the Treasury to modify the regulations under Code §411(a)(11) and ERISA §205 to provide that the description of a participant's right, if any, to defer receipt of a distribution will also describe the consequences of failing to defer such receipt, and these modifications apply to years beginning after 2006. Further, under the Act, a plan is not treated as failing to meet the requirements of Code §411(a)(11) or ERISA §205 with respect to any description of these consequences made within 90 days after the Secretary of the Treasury issues the required modifications if the plan administrator makes a reasonable attempt to comply with such requirements.
89
Act §1103. For owners and their spouses, effective for plan years beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2007. For plans with less than 25 participants, effective for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2006.
90
As defined in §9101 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. §7801).
91
Code §501(c)(5) includes labor, agricultural or horticultural organizations. Code §501(c)(6) includes business leagues, chambers of commerce, real estate boards, boards of trade, or professional football leagues not organized for profit and no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual.
92
The last sentence of Code §411(a)(9) provides: “[f]or purposes of this paragraph, the early retirement benefit under a plan shall be determined without regard to any benefits commencing before benefits payable under title II of the Social Security Act become payable which--(i) do not exceed such social security benefits, and (ii) terminate when such social security benefits commence.”
93
Act §1104; ERISA §3(2); Code §457; ADEA §4 (29 U.S.C. §623). Generally effective on Aug. 17, 2006. The amendments to the Code apply to taxable years ending after Aug. 17, 2006. The ERISA amendment applies to plan years ending after Aug. 17, 2006.
94
Act §1105; Code §3304. Effective for weeks beginning on or after Aug. 17, 2006.
95
Act §1106; ERISA §3(37); Code §414.
96
Act §1107.
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