DoL Sues Trustees over Plan Loan Violations

August 31, 2011 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - The U.S. Department of Labor has sued trustees of a benefit fund for violating the Employee Retirement Income Security Act with respect to loans issued from the fund.

A press release said an investigation by the department’s Employee Benefits Security Administration found the United Employee Benefit Fund in Northbrook’s trustees David Fensler and Anthony Monaco allegedly approved at least 194 loans from the fund to individual participants between January 1997 and December 31, 2009. Those loans were improper, unsecured, and allowed to become delinquent. Forty-two loans had no supporting documentation, and in some instances, the loans exceeded 50% of the value of the participants’ accrued benefit, which is a separate violation of ERISA.  

According to the announcement, as of December 31, 2009, none of the loans approved by the trustees had been paid back to the fund in full, and only six of the participants had ever made any payments on loans issued to them. Fensler and Monaco allegedly made no effort to enforce the terms of the loan documents or collect payments, in violation of the plan’s governing documents and ERISA.  

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The suit seeks to recover all assets that may be available under the law, which amount to more than $1 million. It also seeks to require Fensler and Monaco to correct the prohibited transactions in which they engaged and to restore to the fund any losses, including lost opportunity costs, resulting from their fiduciary breaches.  

The announced said the United Employee Benefit Fund was established by the Professional Workers Master Contract Group and the National Production Workers Union Local 707 to provide welfare, medical, death, disability, and child care facility benefits to the fund’s participants. As of December 31, 2009, the fund had approximately 281 participants.  

The case is Solis v. David Fensler, Anthony Monaco and United Employee Benefit Fund, Civil Action Number: 1:11-cv-06031.

Hartford-New Haven Tops List of Best Cities for Recent Grads

August 31, 2011 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - CareerBuilder reports 46% of employers plan to hire recent college graduates this year—up from 44% in 2010.

Apartments.com and CareerRookie.com—CareerBuilder’s college job search Web site—have revealed their fourth annual “Top 10 Best Cities for Recent College Graduates” list.  Hartford-New Haven, Connecticut, tops this year’s list with an average rent for a one bedroom apartment of $1,047.  

The rest of the top 10 include: 

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  • Cleveland ($695) 
  • Boston ($1,625) 
  • Denver ($994) 
  • Minneapolis ($941) 
  • San Francisco ($1,560) 
  • Washington D.C. ($1,679) 
  • Philadelphia ($1,068) 
  • Atlanta ($813) 
  • St. Louis ($826) 

 

The “Top 10 Best Cities for Recent College Graduates” list was based on the ranking of top U.S. cities with the highest concentration of young adults (age 20 to 24) from the U.S. Census Bureau (2010), inventory of jobs requiring less than one year of experience from CareerRookie.com (March, 2011), and the average cost of rent for a one bedroom apartment from Apartments.com (March, 2011).

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