NQ Plans Prevalent at Tax-Exempt Health Care Organizations

Executive benefits continue to be a strategic component of total rewards programs for health care executives, Mercer finds.

Nearly two-thirds (63%) of tax-exempt organizations offer top executives an employer-paid nonqualified retirement plan, according to Mercer’s 2014/2015 Health Care Executive and Physician Benefits and Perquisites Report.

For large health care organizations (more than $500M of revenue), prevalence jumps to more than 75%. The value of these plans can be significant, providing as much as 15% to 20% of annual base salary.

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Among all organizations, 45% offer a supplemental executive retirement plan (SERP) to top officers, 39% offer a SERP to direct reports to top officers (Tier 1 executives), and 22% offer one to direct reports to Tier 1 executives (Tier 2). Ten percent provide a restoration plan (offering the same contribution formula as an underlying qualified plan without Internal Revenue Service (IRS) limits) to top executives, 10% to Tier 1 and 8% to Tier 2. Eight percent, 7% and 4% offer both SERPs and restoration plans to the different executive groups, respectively.

“When properly designed, executive benefit programs provide a vehicle to make up for equity pay often available to executives at public companies,” says LaCinda Glover, Principal with Mercer’s Executive Benefits Group.

NEXT: Non-retirement benefits.

The study of more than 200 health care organizations across the U.S. also finds non-retirement benefits, such as employer-paid executive life insurance and long-term disability (LTD) coverage, continue to be popular among health care organizations. Approximately 50% of organizations offer supplemental employer-paid life insurance to executives with median total coverage of 300% of base salary. Furthermore, more than half (53%) of organizations provide additional employer-paid LTD coverage through a supplemental group plan or an individual policy. Coverage is typically 60% to 70% of base salary with a total median maximum monthly benefit of $20,000.

While executive perquisites are becoming less prevalent in general because of transparent Form 990 reporting and scrutiny from the media, those perquisites treated as a business expense continue to remain popular. Mercer’s study finds the most common perquisite for executives to be a car or car allowance, provided by 35% of organizations. Financial counseling/tax advice and country club memberships, offered by 10% of organizations, are the second most popular followed by a perquisite allowances and in-depth executive physicals (8%).

“Perquisites without a valid business purpose are a thing of the past,” says Glover. “Whereas perquisites used to be a sweetener added on to executive compensation packages, only those pertaining to the efficiency and well-being of executives are becoming acceptable.”

Physicians typically receive the same benefits as all other employees with limited additional employer-paid retirement benefits, health and welfare benefits, and perquisites. Of the organizations that provided information about their physicians, approximately half (49%) of physicians are eligible for additional voluntary employee deferrals through a 457(b) plan. Nonqualified employer-paid plans are much less prevalent; of the 20% of organizations providing them, most restore contributions lost in the qualified plan due to IRS limits on compensation and benefits.

A Little Friday File Fun

In Banton, Scotland, a farmer was fed-up with wild deer coming into his farm and destroying the crops. Traditional scare crows did not help, so the man wanted something that looked like a real person. He ordered a blow-up doll from Amazon and put it in the back of his field. “She has made a much better job of it than my last scarecrow, which was made from a carrier bag on the end of a stick,” he said, according to the UK’s Mirror.

In Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, after spending four hours at a seafood buffet, a woman refused to pay her bill. Police were called. They asked her if she had any money on her. She said no. According to The Sun News, they then asked who she thought would pay her tab. She said Jesus would pay it.

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In Fort Morgan, Colorado, a man called police to say he was in a Walmart parking lot and a woman he didn’t know wouldn’t get out of his car. When police arrived on the scene, they found the man confused, and the woman said she was his cousin, and the main was on drugs. The two admitted they had drugs in the car. According to the local ABC News station, the police found 16 pounds of meth.amph.etamine in the car.

In Bethesda, Maryland, a woman dropped off her children at her ex-husband’s house and later realized his fiancé was in the house. She started ringing the doorbell and banging on the door. He asked her to leave and used a cell phone camera to record the incident. The cell phone video footage showed her exposing her brea.sts and shaking them towards the camera. A police officer responded to the scene, told the woman she could be arrested for indec.ent expos.ure and asked her to leave. She held out her hands and said, “Arrest me then.” According to the Washington Post, the woman is a member of the Maryland House of Delegates.

In Omaha, Nebraska, a would-be carjacker was thwarted by his height. A man pulled a gu.n and told a woman to get out of her car. According to the local NBC News station, the woman was very short, so when the suspect tried to get in the car he could fit. And, he couldn’t figure out how to adjust the seat. So, he ran away.

In Riverside, California, a man dropped off his Nissan 350Z to have it serviced. He returned to the Taco Bell, where he is a manager. Four hours later, one of his employees spotted what looked like the manager’s car in the drive thru. It was discovered that two mechanics were joy-riding in his car when they were supposed to be driving a specified route used for diagnostics. Both mechanics have been fired. And the dealership offered the manager 20% off services and an additional amount of free parts and upgrades.

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