DOL’s Proposed Regulations: Safe Harbor for ERISA Fiduciary Responsibility Pertaining to Automatic Rollovers

As part of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 ("EGTRRA"), Congress enacted a provision requiring a plan to roll over the accounts of participants that exceed $1,000 (but do not exceed $5,000) and are distributable, if…

As part of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (“EGTRRA”), Congress enacted a provision requiring a plan to roll over the accounts of participants that exceed $1,000 (but do not exceed $5,000) and are distributable, if the participant does not elect to roll over the account directly or to receive the distribution. This EGTRRA provision, however, was not effective until the DOL issued guidance, and EGTRRA required the DOL to issue this guidance by June 7, 2004. In accordance with its directive, the DOL has issued proposed regulations providing this guidance and establishing a safe harbor pursuant to which a fiduciary of a pension plan subject to Title I of ERISA will be deemed to have satisfied his or her fiduciary responsibilities in connection with the provisions. Also, the DOL has issued a notice of proposed class exemption permitting a fiduciary of a plan, who is also the employer maintaining the plan, to establish, on behalf of its separated employees, an individual retirement plan at a financial institution which is the employer or an affiliate.

While there will be more on this later, a few observations are as follows:

(1) On January 7, 2003, the DOL published a notice requesting information on a variety of issues relating to the development of this safe harbor. In response, the DOL received 17 comment letters which you can access here.

(2) With respect to requirements of the USA Patriot Act (“Act”), commenters had pointed out that the customer identification and verification provisions (“CIP”) of the Act might preclude banks and other financial institutions from establishing individual retirement plans without the participation of the participant or beneficiary on whose behalf the fiduciary is required to make an automatic rollover. This is because in most of the situations where a fiduciary is required to make an automatic rollover to an individual retirement plan, the participant or beneficiary is unable to be located or is otherwise not communicating with the plan concerning the distribution of plan benefits.

However, the proposed regulation notes that, in response to these issues, Treasury staff, along with staff of the other Federal functional regulators, have advised the DOL that they interpret the CIP requirements of section 326 of the Act and implementing regulations to require that banks and other financial institutions implement their CIP compliance program with respect to an account, including an individual retirement plan, established by an employee benefit plan in the name of a former participant (or beneficiary) of such plan, only at the time the former participant or beneficiary first contacts such institution to assert ownership or exercise control over the account. The proposed regulation states that “CIP compliance will not be required at the time an employee benefit plan establishes an account and transfers the funds to a bank or other financial institution for purposes of a distribution of benefits from the plan to a separated employee.”

In January of this year, Treasury staff, along with staff of the other Federal functional regulators, issued guidance on this matter in the form of a question and answer, published in a set of “FAQs: Final CIP Rule,” which you can access here and here. The FAQs provide:

. . .[I]n light of the requirements imposed on the plan administrator under EGTRRA, as well as the requirements in connection with plan terminations, the former employee will not be deemed to have “opened a new account” for purposes of the CIP rule until he or she contacts the bank to assert an ownership interest over the funds, at which time a bank will be required to implement its CIP with respect to the former employee.

This interpretation applies only to (1) transfers of funds as required under section 547(c) of EGTRRA, and (2) transfers to banks by administrators of terminated plans in the name of participants that they have been unable to locate, or who have been notified of termination but have not responded, and should not be construed to apply to any other transfer of funds that may constitute opening an account.

(3) Commenters had raised issues concerning state escheat laws which would apply since ERISA does not govern IRA’s and thus would not preempt state escheat laws which could apply. The proposed regulation states that “[i]ssues raised by commenters concerning the possible application of state laws are beyond the scope of this regulation.”

(4) Many had hoped that the safe harbor would also apply to rollovers of amounts less than or equal to $1,000. (EGTRRA limited the automatic rollover provision to amounts in excess of $1,000 but less than $5,000.) The DOL declined to extend the safe harbor to distributions less than or equal to $1,000, stating that “[w]hile the Department agrees with the commenter that similar considerations may be relevant to such rollovers, the Department did not adopt this suggestion in light of Congress’ direction to provide a safe harbor for automatic rollovers of mandatory distributions described in section 401(a)(31)(B) of the Code.”

(5) The proposed regulations dictate that the mandatory distribution be invested in an “investment product designed to preserve principal and provide a reasonable rate of return, whether or not such return is guaranteed, consistent with liquidity” and that the investment product’s fees meet certain requirements. The DOL in its preamble notes that such safe harbor investment products would typically include money market funds, interest-bearing savings accounts, certificates of deposits, and “stable value products.” The DOL rejected suggestions made by commenters that the participant’s investment in the plan should be “mapped.”

(5) Please note that one of the conditions required to be satisfied in order to meet the safe harbor proposed in the regulations is that participants have to have been furnished with a summary plan description or summary of material modification that describes the plan’s automatic rollover provisions, including an explanation that (1) the mandatory distribution will be invested in an investment product designed to preserve principal and provide a reasonable rate of return and liquidity, as well as (2) a statement indicating how fees and expenses attendant to the individual retirement plan will be allocated, and (3) the name, address and phone number of a plan contact (to the extent not otherwise provided in the summary plan description or summary) for further information concerning the plan’s automatic rollover provisions, the individual retirement plan provider and the fees and expenses attended to the individual retirement plan. In other words, if the Summary Plan Description has not been updated or an SMM issued containing this information, the safe harbor requirements would not be met.

(Some background regarding the EGTRRA provision: EGTRRA amended section 401(a)(31) of the Code to require that, absent an affirmative election by the participant, certain mandatory distributions from a tax-qualified retirement plan be directly transferred to an individual retirement plan of a designated trustee or issuer. Specifically, section 657(a) of EGTRRA added a new section 401(a)(31)(B)(i) to the Code to provide that, in the case of a trust that is part of an eligible plan, the trust will not constitute a qualified trust unless the plan of which the trust is a part provides that if a mandatory distribution of more than $1,000 is to be made and the participant does not elect to have such distribution paid directly to an eligible retirement plan or to receive the distribution directly, the plan administrator must transfer such distribution to an individual retirement plan. Section 657(a) of EGTRRA also added a notice requirement in section 401(a)(31)(B)(i) of the Code requiring the plan administrator to notify the participant in writing, either separately or as part of the notice required under section 402(f) of the Code, that the participant may transfer the distribution to another individual retirement plan.)

Listening In on the Ninth Circuit

Did you know that you can listen to Ninth Circuit oral arguments online now? Blogger Jonathan Soglin of Criminal Appeal explains: The Ninth Circuit announced . . . that recordings of oral arguments are now available on the court's website….

Did you know that you can listen to Ninth Circuit oral arguments online now? Blogger Jonathan Soglin of Criminal Appeal explains:

The Ninth Circuit announced . . . that recordings of oral arguments are now available on the court’s website. The audiofiles will be posted the day after argument and will remain available on the web page for three months. The arguments currently posted include all oral arguments since January 2004. The audiofile search page can be accessed here and the list of all available files can be accessed here. The files, according to the press release and my own trial run, can be played on Windows Media Player.

You can read the Ninth Circuit’s announcement here.

IRS 2004 Scam Alert

The IRS has announced its top ten "Dirty Dozen" list of tax scams for 2004 in a press release here and states as follows: In an update of an annual consumer alert, the Internal Revenue Service urged taxpayers to avoid…

The IRS has announced its top ten “Dirty Dozen” list of tax scams for 2004 in a press release here and states as follows:

In an update of an annual consumer alert, the Internal Revenue Service urged taxpayers to avoid falling victim to one of the “Dirty Dozen” tax scams and a variety of other schemes. In the new 2004 ranking, several new scams have reached the top of the consumer watch list, including abusive trusts and the “claim of right” doctrine.

Under the heading "Newswatch," I will in the future be posting titles of articles and links to them for readers without much explanation. (In the manner of some of my fellow bloggers.) I do not always have the time to…

Under the heading “Newswatch,” I will in the future be posting titles of articles and links to them for readers without much explanation. (In the manner of some of my fellow bloggers.) I do not always have the time to write commentary on what I read, but would like to provide links to some noteworthy articles. There is a selfish reason here too, I’m afraid. I would like to go back and refer to some of these from time to time and this will provide the means to do so. I have tried Furl, and think it is great, but unfortunately cannot seem to work it into my schedule.

Some articles for today:

USAToday.com posted an interview with Eliot Spitzer which you can access here. What he had to say about mutual fund fees:

Government has no place setting the fees. But disclosure needs to be improved dramatically. Nobody knows what they are paying. Every prospectus should have the sort of chart you see on a can of soup: three servings, X calories, this much fat, this much carbs. It should be reduced to this sort of simple, comparative basis. Right now, you read a prospectus, who knows what it means?

FASB Update: Medicare Part D Accounting

For those of you following the Medicare Part D Accounting issue closely, FASB has posted its February 18, 2004 Board minutes here and an Action Alert here summarizing what they have decided. You can access previous posts on the subject…

For those of you following the Medicare Part D Accounting issue closely, FASB has posted its February 18, 2004 Board minutes here and an Action Alert here summarizing what they have decided. You can access previous posts on the subject here.

Also, an accounting friend has provided the following insight regarding these developments:

In past two board meetings, FASB has pretty much settled where it’s headed on Medicare Part D accounting. Within next several weeks, a dreaft staff position paper will be published, with a 30-day comment period. If FASB stays on schedule, the key effective date will involve fiscal quarters beginning after June 15, 2004, with a delayed effective date of measurement dates after September 15, 2004, for non-public companies with small plans. Three main actions will be necessary: (1) Employers must determine if their retiree health programs provide prescription drug coverage that is actuarially equivalent to the Medicare Part D coverage, in which instance the employer would be eligible for the special subsidy from the federal government; (2) If the employer determines that their retiree health plan is actuarially equivalent, then the effect of the subsidy payments must be measured and the accounting treatment to be prescribed in the forthcoming staff position paper must be calculated; and (3) Appropriate footnote disclosures for financial statements must be prepared. Any plan amendments (e.g., to make a plan actuarially equivalent) may involve additional actions and calculations for the accounting effects.

For more of this commentary on the developments, continue reading . . .


If an employer determines that its retiree health plan’s prescription drug coverage is not at least actuarially equivalent to Part D and if no amendment is made to the plan to bring it to an actuarially equivalent level, then no action need be taken. If the employer cannot yet determine if its plan is actuarially equivalent (e.g., due to absence of regulatory guidance on that issue), then a disclosure should be made to that effect in financial statement footnotes.

For employers with plans that are determined to be actuarially equivalent, the underlying accounting methodology to recognize the effect of the special subsidy involves reduction of costs under SFAS 106. The cost reductions attributable to future years of service are recognized as reductions in the service cost for each year that the subsidy is attributable. Any reduction in cost attributable to benefits earned to date is treated as a reduction in the accumulated postretirement benefit obligation (APBO). Reduction in APBO is not recognized immediately in the year of implementation, but rather is treated as an actuarial gain, to be recognized over future service periods under the rules of SFAS 106. If a plan amendment is made concurrent with accounting implementation (e.g., to make the plan actuarially equivalent), then the accounting treatment will essentially combine the gain from reduction of APBO for the subsidy with the increase in APBO from the amendment, amortizing any net gain according to the rules for gain/loss recognition and any net increase in APBO as an amendment.

Transition then depends largely upon whether or not the employer had elected immediate implementation versus delayed implementation under FAS 106-1 issued in January. If early implementation had been elected, and if the employer’s methodology differed from the methodology now being set forth by FASB, then an adjustment for the cumulative effect of the change must be recognized in the first quarter of implementation under the new guidance, with reference back to the point of the immediate recognition. If the employer had deferred implementation, yet can reasonably determine its retiree prescription drug coverage to be actuarially equivalent, then a similar cumulative adjustment applies, but only back to the beginning of the first quarter that starts after December 8, 2003.