Today's Federal Register is here and contains the new proposed regulations implementing the notice requirements for the health care continuation coverage (COBRA) provisions of Part 6 of title I of ERISA. The new reg.'s, as mentioned in yesterday's post, set…

Today’s Federal Register is here and contains the new proposed regulations implementing the notice requirements for the health care continuation coverage (COBRA) provisions of Part 6 of title I of ERISA. The new reg.’s, as mentioned in yesterday’s post, set minimum standards for the timing and content of the notices required under COBRA and establish standards for administering the notice process. They also contain model forms for use by administrators of single-employer group health plans to satisfy their notice obligations.

This article by Reuters says Bush will sign the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act today and this article by MSNBC predicts that investors will benefit, particularly with respect to dividend-paying stocks and technology stocks.

FASB made some decisions about pension accounting yesterday. This excellent article–“FASB Names Key Pension Details Companies Should Disclose“–by Arden Dale for the Dow Jones Newswire at Yahoo! News.com provides a very good summary of the decisions affecting pensions. The article quotes FASB Chairman Robert H. Herz as saying that the Board chose “to propose a number of additional disclosures that could help users of financial statements better assess” the pension plan component and quotes Sherry Thompson, a FASB spokesperson, as saying more will be coming from FASB regarding pension disclosure by the end of the year. Today’s edition of the Wall Street Journal has a very good article reviewing what’s going on in the pension disclosure area. FASB is scheduled to make its decision regarding cash balance plan accounting today.

The SEC has issued proposed rules regarding disclosure required by Sections 404, 406 and 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. This article by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants reports on the rules. In addition, today’s edition of the Wall Street Journal also has an article by Deborah Solomon: “Fraud Detector: SEC Sets a New Rule Aimed at Companies’ Internal Controls.”

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