July 8, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – The companies of OneAmerica have launched OneCheck, a set of retirement plan health monitoring tools and reports for participants and sponsors.
“OneCheck tools and reports can help clients make
comprehensive and strategic decisions about their retirement plan,” says Marsha
Whitehead, vice president of retirement services for the companies of OneAmerica,
based in Indianapolis.
She adds, “Helping the work force achieve retirement goals
requires more than promoting participation. Plan sponsors must also be able to
collectively provide strategies for specific employee demographics, a variety
of investment options and financial education and planning tools. OneCheck
allows plan sponsors to deliver all of these services cohesively to assist
employees in preparing for retirement.”
One component of the new tool set is the OneCheck Plan
Report, which provides a plan-level analysis of an employee group’s average
income replacement ratio. The report uses assumptions provided by the plan
sponsor, such as static rate of return, inflation rate and participants’ average
retirement age. This can help indicate the overall success of the plan and
whether employees are on track for adequate retirement savings.
The content of the report can also be used to start
conversations among plan administrators about how plan design changes such as automatic
enrollment, automatic increases/escalation, targeted education
and portfolio diversification assistance can help both the plan and its participants.
The plan report provides forecasted replacement ratios for
employees, grouped by income and age. A separate retirement readiness report
provides retirement income replacement forecasts for individual employees, as
well as an employee’s retirement readiness status and suggestions for key
action steps to take. Plan sponsors and participants can use the reports and
compare their results to baseline data.
Retirement plan consultants can use the plan report to
complement other efforts such as providing participant communications, monitoring
participant interactions, identifying plan trends and mapping future plan
design initiatives. The plan report can also be used along with other OneCheck
tools and services, which cover participant-level reporting, fiduciary
consulting, advocate training, workshops, webinars and regulatory services.
OneAmerica Financial Partners Inc. (www.oneamerica.com) is a provider of retirement
plan products and services, individual life insurance, annuities, long-term
care solutions and employee benefit plan products.
July 8, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – Changes to rules for employer-sponsored retirement plans are established with regularity, and sometimes it is hard to determine what regulators have in mind for compliance.
At
the National Tax-deferred Savings Association (NTSA) 2014 403(b) Summit, M.
Kristi Cook, an attorney with her own practice in Horsham, Pennsylvania, and Ellie
Lowder of TSA Consulting and Training Services in Tucson, Arizona, shared
insights they’ve gained into compliance requirements for 403(b) plans.
The
Universal Availability rule for 403(b) plans requires that participants are
offered a “meaningful opportunity” to participate in the plan, but what exactly
does this mean? Lowder said that during an NTSA webcast in August 2013, Dan Gardner,
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) senior staff specialist indicated “year-round
activity is required.” Lowder explained that this means employees should not
only be given plan information in an enrollment kit, but through websites and
meetings throughout the year. All information provided to employees should
include examples and illustrations. “So, the IRS expects year-round and diverse
activities to satisfy its idea of meaningful opportunity,” she said.
She added that IRS
examiners are trained to check plans’ participation rates, and low rates may
trigger audits. “It will trigger IRS interest in how meaningful and effective
is the opportunity to participate.”
Plan
Document Provisions
The
IRS has established a pre-approved plan document program for 403(b)s and is
currently accepting submissions for pre-approved documents. The same day it
announced the program, it issued a listing of required modifications (LRM) for
403(b) plans, noting provisions that must be included in plan documents. However,
some of the language in the LRM raised questions.
For example, Lowder noted, the LRM defined severance of employment by a K-12
public school system employee on a statewide retirement system basis. Up to now, 403(b)s have been treating severance of employment as when an employee leaves
a school district within a state, regardless of whether he or she joined
another district within the same state, she said. However, according to the
LRM, if an individual leaves one district and joins another in the same state,
there has been no severance, because the IRS considers the state the same
employer.
This
makes a huge difference in terms of administration, Lowder said. Which plan
rules do you follow? What if school district A has a plan document and so does
school district B, but school district A’s plan allows for loans while school
district B’s plan doesn’t, and the employee who moved to school district B has
a loan? Lowder said some law firms and third-party administrators (TPAs) are
advising clients to follow the LRM language, but hopefully, the IRS will
clarify it soon. According to Lowder, in a phone forum, an IRS staff member indicated
the IRS has considered comments about the severance of employment language and other language in the LRM and will
be issuing guidance about the changes shortly.
Rollovers
Cook
noted that the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) set out new
standards for rollovers from employer plans to individual retirement accounts
(IRAs) in Regulatory Notice 13-45.
“FINRA claims these are not new standards; they are old standards people seem
to have forgotten,” she noted.
The
notice reminds financial advisers and broker/dealers that they must include in
their “advice” to employees all the options employees have for dealing with
their retirement plan accounts upon severance of employment—leave the assets in
the plan, roll over to another plan, roll over to an IRA, take a taxable
distribution. Advice to roll plan assets into an IRA must consider all these
options and whether the rollover is the “suitable” choice for the employee. For
example, Cook explained, the financial representative must consider all the
investment options available under the plan compared to investment options with
the IRA and prove that it is in the employee’s best interest to not keep his or
her money in the plan.
For
plan advisers and broker/dealers, Cook provided a checklist for documenting their
recommendations:
Type
of plan and distribution restrictions;
Age
considerations – options for employees between 55 and 59 1/2, whether they are
older than 70 1/2 and still working, timing issues with divorce transactions;
Any
unique investment options available under employer’s plan;
Fees
and expenses - including transaction costs;
Level
of personal advice available;
Tax
issues; and
Creditor protections.
ERISA
Exemption
Cook
noted that maintaining non-Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
status has become harder under IRS regulations, but the Department of Labor
(DOL) has issued guidance listing specific activities plan sponsors may or may
not do and still maintain non-ERISA status (see “Maintaining Non-ERISA 403(b) Status”).
The
DOL says 403(b) plan sponsors cannot hire a TPA to do what they are not allowed
to do on their own, but Cook said plan sponsors may be able to use a “data
aggregator” or “information coordinator,” which shares information and
coordinates transactions for vendors and the plan sponsor, but does not approve
or authorize transactions. She noted that some vendors will not work within
this framework because they will still require signatures on forms.
Church
Plans
Cook
addressed the recent court decisions affecting certain 403(b) plan sponsor’s “church
plan” status. Currently there are six lawsuits questioning organizations’ “church
plan” status. Two courts have rejected legal and regulatory precedent allowing a church-affiliated organization to establish a “church plan,” and
have ruled only a church may establish a “church plan.” However, there is now a
split in the courts as, in May, a federal district judge in Michigan held a
plan need not be established by a church in order to qualify as a church plan
(see “Defendants in One Church Plan Case Get a Victory”).
Auto
Enrollment
Cook and Lowder
finished up their session at the summit by noting automatic enrollment is
becoming more popular with ERISA plans, including ERISA 403(b)s. But, is it
permissible for non-ERISA 403(b)s, especially public sector plans? According to
Cook, some states are asking whether they can auto enroll employee into a
defined contribution retirement plan in lieu of offering a defined benefit
pension plan. Lowder
warned that state law may prohibit it; in almost all states, the law prohibits the
taking of employees’ money without express written authorization (see “Public Plans Slower to Adopt Automatic Enrollment”). Cook said some states are
arguing that if automatic enrollment into a new defined contribution plan is
collectively bargained with a union, that can be deemed as consent.