Elimination of DC to DB Transfer Permitted

November 8, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – A court found an employer did not violate ERISA by eliminating the right to transfer from a DC to a DB plan.

The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington noted that the Department of Treasury has ultimate authority in determining overlapping provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act’s anti-cutback rule and the Internal Revenue Code, and has disseminated a regulation that directly addresses the transfer right at the center of the case. That regulation says: “A plan may be amended to eliminate provisions permitting the transfer of benefits between and among defined contribution [DC] plans and defined benefit [DB] plans.”

According to the court opinion, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in analyzing an identical suit, found the language in the Treasury regulation allowed the employer to eliminate the transfer option (see “Inter-Plan Asset Transfer Elimination Upheld”).

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The district court concluded the Treasury regulation means exactly what it says: a plan may be amended to eliminate the right to transfer funds between plan accounts. Therefore, the plan amendment contested in the current lawsuit did not violate ERISA’s anti-cutback provisions, even if eliminating the transfer option reduced an accrued (but unclaimed) benefit.

Former Airborne Express Inc. employees claimed a 2004 plan amendment to the Airborne Retirement Income Plan (RIP) and Profit Sharing Plan (PSP)violated ERISA’s anti-cut back provision by reducing their monthly annuity pensions. Under both the RIP and the PSP, a participant could elect to receive his benefits as a single life annuity or as a lump sum. Before the 2004 amendment, the RIP contained a provision allowing its receipt of a transfer of the PSP’s account balance.

Airborne was acquired by DHL Holdings Inc. in 2003, now called DPWN Holdings Inc. (DHL). DHL merged the PSP into the company’s equivalent, the DHL Retirement Savings Plan, on December 31, 2004. It also eliminated the right of participants to transfer their DHL Retirement Savings Plan balance to the RIP, effective January 1, 2005. In 2006, DHL merged the RIP into the DHL equivalent, the DHL Retirement Pension Plan.

The court opinion in Andersen v. DHL Retirement Pension Plan is here.

Mercer Appoints Executives, Restructures Regions

November 8, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – Mercer announced executive appointments for its new region structure.

The new region structure incorporates North America, EuroPac (Europe and Pacific—Australia and New Zealand) and Growth Markets.

Pat Milligan has been appointed regional president, North America; Mercer named Simon O’Regan regional president, EuroPac; and Guarav Garg has been appointed regional president, Growth Markets.

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Milligan joined Mercer in 2005, is a member of Mercer’s Executive Committee and has held a number of senior executive roles with the firm including president, Talent. Orlando Ashford, currently head of the Leadership & Organization Performance Segment in the Talent business, will succeed Milligan as president and will join the Executive Committee.

In 1988, O’Regan brought his experience in Europe and the Pacific markets to Mercer, and led businesses in both regions for the company. Gilles Beneplanc, formerly head of EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) will succeed O’Regan as president, Retirement. Both serve on the Executive Committee.

Garg joined Mercer in September from Chartis, the P&C insurance arm of AIG, where he was most recently CEO and managing director of Tata AIG General Insurance Company Ltd. in India. He joined AIG in 2000 and has held country, regional and global positions, with a strong international focus. He is also a member of the Executive Committee.

Additionally, Marcelo Modica will join Mercer as chief people officer. Modica was most recently with JP Morgan Chase, where he was general manager, Chase Hispanic Customer and was managing director and head of HR for Consumer & Business Banking. Previously, he was CHRO for Discover Financial Services and before this held human resources roles at Morgan Stanley, Prudential Securities and Lehman Brothers.

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