IRS Publishes 2023 Cumulative List of Remedial Amendments

The amendments keep pre-approved plans in compliance with changes to tax law.

The Internal Revenue Service issued the 2023 Cumulative List of Changes in Plan Qualification Requirements for Defined Contribution Qualified Pre-approved Plans; a list of plan amendments required for plans relying on a safe harbor plan.

The IRS permits qualified plans to model themselves off of a safe harbor “pre-approved plan” as a method of obtaining initial plan approval. According to the IRS, plans using this safe harbor normally “will have fewer choices over the design of the plan. The employer must not make any modifications to the plan and can rely on the opinion letter issued to the pre-approved plan as if it were its own determination letter.”

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Since related tax and benefit laws are often updated, plans using the pre-approved model must make remedial amendments to remain in compliance with the standard pre-approved plan. The 2023 Cumulative List is a list of the amendments that must be made for plans seeking approval between February 1, 2024 and January 31, 2025.

Plans have to make required amendments and apply for a new letter in their “remedial cycle.” Many of the newest changes in the 18-page document relate to provisions of the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022. The amendments should also account for the following SECURE 2.0 provisions, among other requirements:

  • The required minimum distribution age for participants born or on after January 1, 1951, must be increased to 73 from 72, per section 107 of SECURE 2.0.
  • The amount that can be spent from a defined contribution plan to purchase a qualified life annuity contract was increased to $200,000 from $125,000 and the percentage maximum was removed, per section 202.
  • Plans are now permitted to increase their involuntary cash out limit to $7,000 from $5,000, per section 304.
  • Victims of domestic abuse may withdraw up to $10,000 (indexed) from a DC plan without an additional 10% penalty, per section 314.
  • Other changes relate to the penalty-free $1,000 emergency personal expense distribution and recontribution of that amount within three years, per section 115.

Other required amendments have their origin in separate legislation from SECURE 2.0. For example, the Bipartisan American Miners Act of 2019 reduced the minimum age when a pension can make a distribution to a participant who is still employed by the sponsor to 59½ from 62.

Retirement Industry People Moves

Ascensus and FuturePlan add regional and sector sales heads; EBRI taps Segal executive for board of directors; SEI asset management head to step down; and more. 

Ascensus, FuturePlan Expand Retirement Sales Teams

Ascensus LLC announced new hires to its retirement sales team as well as its fully-owned third-party administrator, FuturePlan by Ascensus.

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Kate Whitmore

Ascensus’s retirement distribution team has brought on Justin Sabol as regional vice president for the eastern region, and Kate Whitmore as vice president of business development for pooled plans.

Sabol joins Ascensus from OneAmerica Financial Partners Inc., where he was regional sales director in eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware. In his new role, he will also cover New Jersey and Delaware, and report to Anthony Bologna, divisional vice president of retirement distribution in the eastern region.

Business development leader Whitmore joins Ascensus from Transamerica Retirement Solutions, where she was director of pooled plan sales.

In the new role, she will focus on expanding Ascensus’ pooled retirement plan offerings, working specifically with advisers to drive existing programs and find new ones, according to the announcement. She will report to Mindy O’Connor, head of business development, retirement.

EBRI Names Tami Simon to Board of Directors

The Employee Benefit Research Institute has named a senior executive at benefits and human resources consultancy Segal to its Board of Directors Executive Committee.

Tami Simon

Tami Simon, global corporate consulting business leader at the consulting firm, will join the board after serving as a member of EBRI’s Board of Trustees, according to an announcement from the Institute.

At Segal, Simon works with businesses, nonprofits, associations and higher education institutions on organizational and workforce needs, according to her company biography.

Segal was a founding member of the nonprofit EBRI, which was formed in 1978.


Michigan retirement and financial consultant recruits adviser Rivett

Adam Rivett

Consultant Integrated Fiduciary Advisory Services has named Adam Rivett to the role director of retirement plan services, providing retirement plan fiduciary consulting for private, non-profit and institutional clients.

Rivett is responsible for working with retirement plan fiduciaries to strengthen their retirement benefits, overseeing the expansion of Integrated’s retirement plan services, providing fiduciary plan consulting, fiduciary education, investment management, plan design, employee education and overall strategy to qualified and non-qualified retirement plans, according to Integrated’s LinkedIn posting.

Prior to Rivett’s current role he was a retirement plan consultant, at OneDigital. 

 

SEI Asset Management Head Stepping Down

Wayne Withrow

The head of SEI Investments Company’s asset management division will be stepping down effective February 28, 2024, with a company search to replace him begun both internally and externally, according to an announcement.

Wayne Withrow will be departing from the role of executive vice president and head of global asset management, in which he focused on strengthening SEI’s asset management offerings, capitalized on market opportunities, and worked to grow the division, according to the announcement.

He joined SEI in 1990 as a vice president in the company’s legal department and later held roles as Chief Information Officer, head of SEI’s investment managers’ business and head of its adviser division.

Lee Tenney

InVesti Adds National Sales Manager

InVesti has hired a new national sales manager for its retirement plan recordkeeping and services business from IPX Retirement.  

Lee Tenney is also now part of InVesti’s senior management team and will be focused on creating sales strategy and growing the business, a spokesperson confirmed.

Tenney joins after holding a role as head of sales and distribution for IPX Retirement, and before that as director, external retirement consultant with Allianz Global Investors.

“We are confident that Lee is the perfect fit for a company that is offering a unique suite of products and services that can transform the financial experience of both participants and financial service providers,” co-founder and CEO Thomas Hansen wrote in a LinkedIn post.

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