Experts Stress Benefits of Information Sharing Best Practices for 403(b)s

December 19, 2008 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Due to new 403(b) regulations requiring plan monitoring for compliance with distribution and loan rules and withdrawal and contribution limits, plan sponsors have faced the task of deciding on procedures for information sharing to and from plan vendors.

In the 401(k) world, since typically plans have a third party administrator or recordkeeper responsible for making sure funds are invested properly and recorded, the TPA or recordkeeper may have required formats for sponsors to send participant contribution, loan repayment, and census data. However, in the 403(b) world, this “aggregator” role is new, so sponsors may consider enlisting the help of a provider of common remitter services.

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In a Webinar sponsored by The SPARK Institute, Jim Racine, Assistant Vice President, Lincoln Financial Group said, “A standard format [for information sharing] is a need specific to the 403(b) market due to the multiple-vendor environment.” Ralph Sanna, Director-Strategic Initiatives, TIAA-CREF, added that it is hard for vendors to have hundreds of different formats coming in from sponsors and to customize their systems for these different formats.

Paul Jackson, Vice President-Institutional Services, AIG Retirement said a best practices format for information sharing not only simplifies things for common remitters, but also for employers who will continue sending data to each vendor and want to use a standard file format.

Jackson added that TPAs and vendors should encourage the use of information sharing best practices by sponsors since it will not help with common remitter, but can help facilitate information sharing among plan providers.

The SPARK Institute has developed a Best Practices guide for information sharing that includes data formats for transmitting transaction data (See SPARK Updates 403(b) Info Sharing Best Practices for Roth Values ). Sanna noted that the SPARK data format not only can be used for common remitter data such as contribution amounts and loan repayments, but can facilitate 10-b-10 reporting (for contribution timing), plan limits monitoring, and providing census data for other plan administrative duties.

Racine added that the SPARK format facilitates auto enrollment, and sharing of data for FINRA monitoring requirements such as anti-money laundering rules, and providing contact information for participants.

Larry Goldbrum, SPARK General Counsel, said in the Webinar that the SPARK has two parts for the common remitter function, one for sending data to vendors only for participants who selected them, and one for sending all data, including census data, to a plan "aggregator." He suggests that adopting the best practice format even benefits sponsors in an exclusive-vendor environment because it consolidates all plan data.

Jackson noted that the SPARK task force that developed the best practices is encouraging questions to SPARK regarding the format. The questions will help in refining the best practices, but he assured Webinar attendees that the task force will try to make adjustments with minimum format changes.

The "Best Practices for 403(b) Plans Information Sharing -- Minimum and Comprehensive Data Elements Version 1.03," as well as Q&As on the best practices can be found at www.sparkinstitute.org/comments-and-materials.php .

In the SPARK Institute Webinar, Paul Jackson, Vice President-Institutional Services, AIG Retirement, pointed out to attendees that the relief provided by the Internal Revenue Service in Notice 2009-3 (See IRS Offers Relief on 403(b) Written Plan Requirement ) from the 403(b) written plan document requirement as of January 1`, 2009 only delays the time for getting the document in place; it does not delay the effective date of new regulations pertaining to operational procedures.

"This is key because plans will be required to correct any pre-adoption deviations to the plan from document that is finally adopted," Jackson said. He warned sponsors that providers that receive contributions after January 1`, 2009 are in the plan, so sponsors should operate the plan in accordance with intent to minimize any operational errors. Therefore, it is prudent to work toward information sharing compliance by January 1`, 2009.

SURVEY SAYS: What's Your Favorite Holiday Movie?

December 18, 2008 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Many of you have been asking, and this week I'm happy to honor those reader requests - and a long-standing NewsDash holiday tradition.

By asking, What’s your favorite holiday movie?  

Will this be the year that we have a new winner?

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This week’s results are HERE

Many of you have been asking, and this week I'm happy to honor those reader requests - and a long-standing NewsDash holiday tradition - by asking readers to name their favorite holiday movie.

Once again, it was "nip and tuck" throughout the day - and once again, it was "It's a Wonderful Life" vying with "A Christmas Story" for top spot.  

And this year the winner is….(drum roll, please)….

" A Christmas Story "!    That's right, the 1983 "classic" managed to supplant the Frank Capra classic at the top of this year's list, but by the narrowest of margins; 17.9% versus 17.3% !   In fact, " It's A Wonderful Life " has topped our annual reader favorite list for the past seven years every year except for this one - and 2006 - when "A Christmas Story" also topped the list (see  SURVEY SAYS: What's Your Favorite Holiday Movie? ).

Coming in third (for the third year in a row, as it turns out) was " Christmas Vacation ", with 13.1% , but it managed to put some distance between itself and the #4 finisher; " White Christmas ", which drew 6.5% of the responses.   That was, however, an improvement from its fifth place finish in 2007…not to mention the previous three years, when it also came in fifth).

" Miracle on 34 th Street " (the 1947 version) came in fifth this year, with 5.4% of the vote, slipping back from its 4 th place finish (and 8.4%) in 2007, while " How the Grinch Stole Christmas " (the cartoon version) pulled in 4.8% as it vaulted to sixth from an eighth place tie last year.   " A Christmas Carol " (the Alistair Sim version - it was actually called "Scrooge") received 3.6% of the vote, and came in 7 th .  

Tied for eighth with 2.4% each were " A Charlie Brown Christmas ", " Elf ," " A Muppet's Christmas Carol ", and " The Polar Express ," while the next grouping - "Die Hard", " Holiday Inn ", and " Love, Actually " each garnered the support of 1.8% .   " Bad Santa " and the George C. Scott version of " A Christmas Caro l" each got the support of 1.2% , while the following got the vote of at least one respondent this week:

  • Bells of St. Mary's
  • A Christmas Carol (Mr. Magoo version)
  • Christmas in Connecticut
  • The Christmas Shoes
  • Jingle All the Way
  • The Ref
  • Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
  • The Santa Clause
  • Santa Claus Conquers the Martians ( "Ah yes, it is that time of year again where we asked the bearded one to reign terror upon our hostile green interplanetary neighbors. Does anything say Christmas quite like a Martian conquering Santa? I think not," said the submitter).
  • Scrooged
  • Three Godfathers
  • The Toy That Saved Christmas
  • The Year Without a Santa Claus

Beyond those, there WERE the write-ins:

  • On the 2nd Day of Christmas
  • The Holiday (Kate Winslet, Cameron Diaz, Jack Black, Jude Law)
  • Bernard & the Genie (now, FINALLY, available on DVD this year)
  • A Christmas Carol (Reginald Owen version)  
  • Home Alone   (how did I miss that one??)
  • Shrek the Halls - ("Mama always said, 'Christmas ain't Christmas until somebody cries!'")
  • The Miser Brothers Christmas - new on ABC Family/Sequel to The Year Without A Santa Claus   Dodgeball ("My sons and I saw it on Christmas the year it came out, and now it's an annual tradition to rent Dodgeball," said the submitter).
  • The Family Stone

I did appreciate how everyone really played by "the rules" this year, by the way - and, while that may have cut down on the volume of comments, we still got some fun verbatrims:

"How can you make me choose just ONE movie? There are so many wonderful movies. It all depends on what I want when I start watching; to be moved, to be amused, to be entertained. Whatever the genre, I like my Christmas movies to celebrate the power of family and relationship and giving."

"It's not enough for me to say I like 'A Christmas Story' best, because what I really like is the '24 Hours of A Christmas Story'."

"Die Hard as a Christmas movie is one of your funnier moments of the year. (There have been many. Thank you!;)"

But this week's Editor's Choice goes to the reader who said, "If you watch any movie other than "A Christmas story", you'll put your eye out!!"

Thanks to everyone who participated in our survey!

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