[13303]
March 23, 2001
TO: PENSION COMMITTEE No. 18-01
PENSION OPERATIONS ADVISORY COMMITTEE No. 27-01
RE: REPRESENTATIVES PORTMAN AND CARDIN INTRODUCE H.R. 10, THE
“COMPREHENSIVE RETIREMENT SECURITY AND PENSION REFORM ACT OF
2001,” IN HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
On March 14, 2001, Representatives Rob Portman (R-OH) and Benjamin Cardin (D-MD)
introduced H.R. 10, the “Comprehensive Retirement Security and Pension Reform Act of 2001”
(the “Bill”). The Bill was introduced with 260 cosponsors. A similar bill is expected to be
introduced in the Senate later this term.
The Bill is substantially similar to the bill passed by the House of Representatives in July
of last year by a vote of 401 to 25. Significant provisions include those that would increase
contribution limits to 401(k), 403(b), 457, SIMPLE plans and IRAs, permit “catch-up”
contributions to employer-sponsored plans for individuals 50 and older, permit after-tax “Plus”
contributions to 401(k) and 403(b) plans, enhance portability, and modify current top-heavy
rules. In addition to these provisions, the Bill contains certain ERISA provisions that were not
included in last year’s bill, many of which had appeared in prior versions of the “Portman-
Cardin” legislation.1
Effective dates are discussed below. Notably, as currently proposed, the increase in
contribution limits to IRAs, qualified plans, 457 plans and SIMPLE plans would be effective
retroactive to January 1, 2001. Additionally, the “portability” provisions would be effective for
distributions made after the date of enactment.
The text of the Bill is attached.
1 These provisions include proposals relating to (1) investment of employee contributions in 401(k) plans in employer
securities or real property; (2) periodic pension benefits statements; (3) annual report dissemination; (4) technical
corrections to the SAVER Act; (5) missing participants; (6) reduced PBGC premium for new plans of small employers;
(7) reduction of additional PBGC premium for new and small plans; (8) authorization for PBGC to pay interest on
premium overpayment refunds; (9) substantial owner benefits in terminated plans; (10) civil penalties for breach of
fiduciary responsibility; and (11) benefit suspension notices.
2I. Individual Retirement Accounts (Title I)
A. Increase in Annual Contribution Limit. The Bill would increase the current
$2,000 annual contribution limit to IRAs and Roth IRAs as follows: $3,000 in 2001; $4,000 in
2002; $5,000 in 2003 and thereafter. Beginning in 2004, the limit would be indexed for inflation
in $500 increments. Bill Section 101.
B. Catch-Up Contributions to IRAs by Individuals Age 50 or Over. Effective 2001,
the Bill would permit individuals who have attained age 50 to make IRA contributions up to
$5,000. In effect, while the general contribution limit of $5,000 would be phased-in over several
years, the limit for individuals 50 and over would be increased immediately to $5,000 in 2001.
Beginning in 2004, the maximum contribution amount for individuals age 50 or over would
conform to the general IRA contribution limit. (See also Bill Section 301 for catch-up
contributions to employer-sponsored retirement plans). Bill Section 101.
II. Expanding Pension Coverage (Title II)
A. Increased Contribution and Benefit Limits.
Code Section 415(c) Limit. The Bill would increase Code section 415’s limitation on
annual additions to defined contribution plans from $30,000 to $40,000. This amount would be
indexed for inflation in $1,000 increments (see also Bill Section 302, which would increase the
“25 percent of compensation” rule to 100 percent of compensation).
Code Section 401(a)(17) Limit. The Bill would increase section 401(a)(17)’s limit on the
amount of compensation that may be taken into account under a plan for determining benefits
to $200,000, indexed in $5,000 increments.
Code Section 402(g) Limit. The Bill would increase the elective deferral limitation under
section 402(g), beginning in 2001, in annual increments of $1,000 until the limit reaches $15,000
in 2005. Thus, the limit would be $11,000 in 2001, $12,000 in 2002, etc., until it reaches $15,000 in
2005. The contribution limit for section 457 plans would conform to the 402(g) limit (i.e., the
limit would be $11,000 in 2001, $12,000 in 2002, etc., until it reaches $15,000 in 2005). The limit
for 457s would be twice the otherwise applicable dollar limit in the three years prior to
retirement. Finally, the Bill would increase the SIMPLE plan contribution limit in $1,000
increments beginning in 2001 until it reaches $10,000 in 2004 (i.e., the SIMPLE plan contribution
limit would be $7,000 in 2001 and $8,000 in 2002, etc. until it reaches $10,000 in 2004). The
402(g), 457 plan and SIMPLE plan limits would be indexed in $500 increments.
As proposed, these modifications would be effective retroactively for years beginning
after December 31, 2000. Bill Section 201.
B. Plan Loans Available to Subchapter S Shareholders, Partners and Sole
Proprietors. The Bill would modify the prohibited transaction rules to permit plan loans to sole
proprietors, partners, and Subchapter S corporation shareholders, effective after December 31,
2001. Bill Section 202.
3C. Top-Heavy Rule Modification. The Bill would provide that a plan that satisfies
the design-based safe harbor under section 401(k)(12) and section 401(m)(11) would not be
deemed top-heavy. The Bill also would provide that matching or nonelective contributions
could be taken into account for purposes of making the minimum contributions required under
the top-heavy rules. Further, distributions made during the year ending on the date the top-
heavy determination is made would be taken into account for purposes of satisfying the rule.
The Bill would apply the current 5-year rule to in-service distributions, define “key employee”
as an employee earning more than $150,000, and repeal the top-10 owner category under the
key employee definition. In addition, the Bill would repeal the 4-year look-back rule for
determining key employee status and provide that an employee is deemed a key employee only
if he or she is a key employee during the current plan year. Finally, the family ownership
attribution rule would no longer apply in determining whether an individual is a 5 percent
owner of the employer. These modifications would be effective for years beginning after
December 31, 2001. Bill Section 203.
D. Elective Deferrals Not Taken into Account for Deduction Limit. Effective
January 1, 2002, elective deferrals would no longer be considered employer contributions
subject to Code section 404 deduction limits. Bill Section 204.
E. Modification of Definition of Compensation for Purposes of Deduction Limits.
The Bill would modify Code section 404's definition of compensation to include elective deferral
contributions, effective January 1, 2002. In addition, the Bill would increase the annual
limitation on the amount of deductible contributions to a profit-sharing or stock bonus plan
from 15 percent to 20 percent of compensation of the employees covered by the plan for the
year. Bill Section 207.
F. Repeal of Coordination Requirements for 457 Plans. Effective January 1, 2002,
the Bill would repeal the rules requiring coordination of contributions to other types of plans
with contributions to 457 plans for purposes of applying the 457 plan contribution limit. Bill
Section 205.
G. Elimination of User Fees for Determination Letter Requests for Small Employers.
Effective for letter requests made after December 31, 2001, the Bill would eliminate the user fee
charged by the IRS for any determination letter regarding the qualified status of a plan for small
employers (employers with 100 or fewer employees) until the later of (i) the fifth plan year the
pension plan is in existence, or (ii) the end of any remedial amendment period with respect to
the plan beginning within the first 5 plan years. The provision would apply only to requests by
employers for determination letters concerning the qualified plans they maintain; sponsors of
prototype or similar plans marketed to participating employers would not be eligible for this
user fee reduction. Bill Section 206.
H. Optional Treatment of Elective Deferrals as After-Tax “Plus” Contributions to
401(k) Plans and 403(b) Annuities. The Bill would permit a 401(k) plan or 403(b) annuity to
include a “qualified plus contribution program” under which an individual could elect to have
all or a portion of his or her elective deferrals under the plan treated as after-tax contributions.
Qualified distributions from the Plus program would be tax free, following rules described
below. The proposal would be effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2001.
4Under the program, the annual contribution limit for Plus contributions would be the
Code section 402(g) limit reduced by other elective deferrals. Plus contributions to 401(k) plans
would be treated the same as other elective deferrals for purposes of the nondiscrimination
requirements. A plan offering a Plus program would be required to maintain separate
recordkeeping for Plus contributions and related earnings.
Qualified distributions from the Plus program would not be includible in income. A
qualified distribution would be one made after the five-taxable year period beginning with the
first taxable year in which a participant made a Plus contribution and (i) made on or after the
participant attains age 59 ½, (ii) made to a beneficiary or a participant’s estate upon the death of
the participant, or (iii) made upon disability of the participant. Bill Section 208.
III. Enhancing Fairness for Women (Title III)
A. Catch-Up Contributions for Individuals Age 50 or Over. The Bill would permit
individuals who have attained age 50 before the end of the plan year to make additional elective
contributions of up to $5,000 to 401(k), 403(b), SIMPLE and 457 plans. This amount would be
indexed for inflation in $500 increments in 2006 and thereafter. A plan would not be treated as
failing to meet the nondiscrimination requirements under Code section 401(a)(4) with respect to
benefits, rights and features, if the plan allows all eligible participants to make the same election
with respect to the catch-up contributions.2 The provision would be retroactively effective for
years beginning after December 31, 2000. Bill Section 301. (See also Bill Section 101, which
permits a more limited catch-up opportunity for IRA owners).
B. Equitable Treatment for Contributions of Employees to Defined Contribution
Plans. Retroactively effective as of January 1, 2001, the section 415(c) limit on annual additions
would be amended to increase the 25 percent of compensation limitation to 100 percent.
Similarly, the 33 1/3 percent of compensation limitation on deferrals under 457 plans would be
changed to 100 percent. The exclusion allowance applicable to contributions to section 403(b)
annuities would be repealed. The Bill also would direct Treasury to revise the regulations
relating to the exclusion allowance under section 403(b)(2) to render void the requirement that
contributions to a defined benefit plan be treated as previously excluded amounts for purposes
of the exclusion allowance. Bill Section 302.
C. Faster Vesting of Certain Employer Matching Contributions. The Bill would
require employer matching contributions (as defined in Code section 401(m)(4)(A)) to be vested
on a 3-year cliff or 6-year graded vesting schedule, generally effective for contributions made
for plan years beginning after December 31, 2001. Bill Section 303.
D. Simplification and Modification of the Minimum Required Distribution Rules.
The Bill would modify the current minimum required distribution (“MRD”) rules. First, the Bill
would direct the Treasury Department to simplify and finalize the MRD regulations to reflect
current life expectancies and revise the MRD methods so that under reasonable assumptions,
the amount of the required distribution does not decrease over a participant’s life expectancy.
Treasury would be required to issue final regulations no later than December 31, 2002. For
2 Although not explicitly addressed, it appears that the catch-up contributions would be subject to the other
“nondiscrimination” requirements.
5individuals already receiving MRDs, the regulations would apply prospectively to future
distributions and would permit the selection of a new beneficiary and election of a new method
of calculating life expectancy.
Second, the proposal would apply the MRD rules currently applicable to distributions
where the participant has died before minimum distributions have begun to all post-death
distributions. Specifically, if a participant dies before his or her entire interest has been
distributed, the remaining interest must be distributed within 5 years of the date of death or
begin within one year of the date of death and be paid over the life or life expectancy of a
designated beneficiary. The Bill, however, would permit surviving spouses to begin
distributions when the spouse turns 70 ½. This provision would be effective for years
beginning after December 31, 2001. However, for individuals that die prior to the Bill’s date of
enactment and the “required beginning date” of the individual, distributions to the surviving
spouse of the employee would not be required to commence prior to the date on which the
distributions would have been required to begin under Code section 401(a)(9)(B) (as in effect on
the day before the Bill’s date of enactment.) (N.B., these provisions may require revision in light
of recently proposed IRS regulations on MRDs.3)
Third, the Bill would reduce the excise tax on failures to satisfy the MRD rules from 50
percent to 10 percent for years beginning after December 31, 2001. Finally, effective on the Bill’s
date of enactment, section 409 of the Bill would apply the MRD rules to 457 plans, thereby
repealing the special MRD rules currently applicable to 457 plans. Bill Sections 304 and 409.
E. Clarification of Division of 457 Plan Assets in Divorce. The Bill would apply the
tax rules for qualified plan distributions pursuant to a qualified domestic relations order
(“QDRO”) (Code section 402(e)(1)(A)) to distributions made pursuant to a QDRO for a 457 plan.
In addition, the Bill would provide that a 457 plan would not be treated as violating the
restrictions on distributions from such plans due to payments to an alternate payee under a
QDRO. This provision would apply to transfers, distributions, and payments made after
December 31, 2001. Bill Section 305.
F. Modification of 401(k) Hardship Withdrawal Safe Harbor. The Bill would direct
the Secretary of the Treasury to revise regulations addressing 401(k) hardship distributions to
reduce from 12 to 6 months the period during which an employee must be prohibited from
making contributions after taking a distribution on account of hardship. The revised
regulations would apply to years beginning after December 31, 2001. Bill Section 306.
IV. Increasing Portability for Participants (Title IV)
A. Rollovers of Retirement Plan and IRA Distributions. Effective immediately after
the Bill’s date of enactment, eligible rollover distributions from qualified retirement plans,
section 403(b) annuities and governmental section 457 plans generally could be rolled over to
any of such plans or arrangements. Similarly, taxable amounts in a traditional IRA (i.e., all but
account basis) could be rolled over into a qualified plan, section 403(b) annuity or governmental
3 See Institute Memorandum to Pension Members No. 2-01, Pension Operations Advisory Committee No. 3-01 and
Transfer Agent Advisory Committee No. 4-01, dated January 17, 2001.
6section 457 plan. Direct rollover and withholding rules would be extended to section 457 plans.
No plan, however, would be required to accept rollovers.
Distributions from a qualified plan would not be eligible for capital gains or income
averaging treatment if there was a rollover to the plan that would not have been permitted
under current law. Amounts distributed from a section 457 plan would be subject to the early
withdrawal tax to the extent the distribution consists of amounts attributable to rollovers from
another type of plan; section 457 plans accepting such rollovers would be required to separately
account for such amounts.
The section 402(f) rollover notice, which would be required of all plans, would be
required to describe the extent to which distribution rules and tax consequences may differ
from plan to plan. Bill Sections 401 and 402.
B. Rollover of After-Tax Contributions. The Bill would permit the rollover of after-
tax contributions from a qualified plan to another qualified plan or a traditional IRA. Plan-to-
plan rollovers of after-tax monies would be required to be direct rollovers. Plans accepting such
rollovers would be required to separately account for them. As currently proposed, this
provision would apply to distributions made after the Bill’s date of enactment.4
After-tax contributions in an IRA (including those rolled from a qualified plan and
nondeductible contributions to an IRA) would not be permitted to be rolled over from the IRA
to a qualified plan, 403(b) annuity or 457 plan. In the case of a distribution from an IRA that is
rolled over into those plan types, the distribution is attributed first to taxable amounts (i.e., all
amounts other than after-tax contributions). Bill Section 403.
C. Hardship Exception to 60-Day Rollover Rule. The Bill would authorize Treasury
to waive the 60-day rollover requirement if the failure to waive such requirement would be
against “equity or good conscience,” including cases of casualty, disaster or other events
beyond the reasonable control of the individual. The provision would apply to distributions
after the Bill’s date of enactment. Bill Section 404.
D. Anticutback Rule Relief with Respect to Forms of Distribution. The Bill would
permit the transfer of a participant’s accrued benefit from one defined contribution plan to
another even though the transferee plan does not provide all of the forms of distribution
available under the transferor plan. Such transfers would be permitted if (i) the transfer is
either the result of a merger or consolidation of plans or is in the form of a direct transfer, (ii) the
terms of each plan permit the transfer, (iii) the transferee plan permits distributions in the form
of a single lump sum distribution, and (iv) the transfer is by voluntary election of the plan
participant.
4 Reports prepared by the Joint Committee on Taxation that accompanied prior versions of the Bill provided that the
IRS would be directed to issue rules with respect to reporting and mechanisms to address mistakes relating to
rollovers and to develop forms (for example, by expanding the Form 8606) to assist individuals in tracking after-tax
contributions rolled over to an IRA. As of the time the Bill was introduced in the House, the Joint Committee on
Taxation had not published an accompanying report for H.R. 10.
7The Bill also provides that a defined contribution plan would not be treated as violating
the anticutback rule (Code section 411(d)(6)) if the plan is amended to eliminate a form of
distribution previously available as long as a lump sum distribution is available (for those
benefit accruals that would have been protected under section 411(d)(6)). The proposal would
be effective for years beginning after December 31, 2001.
Furthermore, Treasury would be directed to issue regulations that would allow a plan
amendment which reduces or eliminates benefits or subsidies which create significant burdens
or complexities for plans and participants, provided that the rights of any participant is not
adversely affected in a more than de minimis manner. Such regulations would be required to
be issued by December 31, 2003. Bill Section 405.
E. Repeal of Same Desk Rule. Effective for distributions after the date of enactment,
the Bill would modify the distribution restrictions applicable to 401(k) plans, 403(b)
arrangements and 457 plans to permit distribution upon “severance from employment,” rather
than from “separation from service.” Bill Section 406.
F. Purchase of Service Credit in Governmental Defined Benefit Plans. The Bill
would permit state and local government employees to transfer assets (in a trustee-to-trustee
transfer) from their 403(b) arrangement or 457 plan to purchase service credits under their
defined benefit plan, effective for trustee to trustee transfers after the Bill’s date of enactment.
Bill Section 407.
G. Disregard of Rollovers When Applying Cash-Out Rules. Effective January 1,
2002, the Bill would permit plans to disregard amounts that had been rolled over into the plan
when determining the present value of an individual participant’s accrued benefit for purposes
of making involuntary distributions from the plan. (Under current law, involuntary
distributions are permitted if the accrued benefit does not exceed $5,000.) Bill Section 408.
V. Strengthening Pension Security and Enforcement (Title V)
A. Investment of Employee Contributions in 401(k) Plans in Employer Securities or
Real Property. The Bill would modify the effective date of the provision in the Taxpayer Relief
Act of 1997 that excludes certain elective deferrals from limitations on plan investment in
employer securities or real property. Bill Section 506.
B. Periodic Pension Benefits Statements. The Bill would require the plan
administrator of a defined contribution plan to furnish a benefit statement to each participant at
least once annually and to a beneficiary upon written request. Defined benefit plan
administrators would be required to furnish benefit statements annually upon request, as under
current law, and additionally, at least once every 3 years to each participant who is currently
employed by the employer. Alternatively, in the case of a defined benefit plan, the plan
administrator may annually furnish written or electronic notice to each participant of the
availability of such statements. In either case, the statement must indicate total benefits
accrued, the amount vested, the earliest date on which benefits will become vested, and must be
written in a manner calculated to be understood by participants. The statement may be
furnished in written, electronic, telephonic or other appropriate form. In addition, the Bill
provides that the Treasury Secretary may provide that years in which no employee or former
8employee benefits (under Code section 410(b)) under the plan need not be taken into account in
determining the “3-year period.” The provision would be effective for plan years beginning
after December 31, 2002. Bill Section 507.
C. Miscellaneous Defined Benefit Plan Provisions. Titles V, VI and VII of the Bill
contain various provisions relating primarily to defined benefit plans. These include provisions
that would (1) direct Treasury to prepare a report on the effects of conversions of traditional
defined benefit plans to cash balance or hybrid formula plans (Bill Section 504); (2) repeal the
150 percent of current liability funding limit over a phase-in period (Bill Section 501); (3)
provide relief from excise tax for sound pension funding (Bill Section 503); (4) impose an excise
tax for failure to provide notice regarding significant reductions of future benefit accruals (Bill
Section 504); (5) exempt multiemployer plans from the 100 percent of compensation limitation
in Code section 415(b)(1) and modify other rules governing multiemployer plans (Bill Section
505); (6) modify plan valuation timing requirements (Bill Section 601); (7) modify the notice and
consent period regarding the qualified joint and survivor form of benefit (Bill Section 611); (8)
reduce PBGC premiums for new plans of small employers (Bill Section 702); (9) reduce
additional PBGC premiums for new and small plans (Bill Section 703); (10) authorize PBGC to
pay interest on premium overpayment refunds (Bill Section 704); and (11) modify PBGC
guaranteed benefits for substantial owners in terminated plans (Bill Section 705).
D. Miscellaneous ESOP Provisions. Titles V and VI of the Bill contain provisions
relating to prohibitions of allocations of stock in S Corporation ESOPs, and ESOP dividend
reinvestments. Bill Sections 506, 602.
VI. Reducing Regulatory Burdens (Title VI)
A. Employees of Tax-Exempt Organizations and 401(k) Plan Formation. The Bill
would rectify problems created by an IRS rule implemented before Congress permitted tax-
exempt entities to form 401(k) plans. Specifically, Congress permitted tax-exempt entities to
establish 401(k) plans through the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996. Previously
implemented IRS rules provide that employees of tax-exempt entities could be excluded from
the 401(k) coverage rules, if an affiliated entity established a 401(k) plan, because employees of
the tax-exempt entity could not participate in the plan.
The Bill directs Treasury to modify its rule to accommodate the SBJPA change as
follows: employees who are eligible to make elective deferrals under 403(b) arrangements may
be treated as excludable for purposes of the 401(k) plan if no employee of that relevant
organization is eligible to participate in the 401(k) plan and 95 percent of the employees who are
not employees of that organization are eligible to participate in the 401(k) plan. Bill Section 604.
B. Clarification of Treatment of Employer-Provided Retirement Advice. Effective
for years beginning after December 31, 2001, the Bill would provide that qualified retirement
planning advice or information provided to an employee and his or her spouse are excludable
from income and wages as an excludable fringe benefit. Such services, however, must be made
available on a substantially equal basis to employees normally provided education and
information regarding the employer’s retirement plan. Bill Section 605.
9C. Simplified Annual Filing Requirement for Owners and Their Spouses. The Bill
would direct Treasury to eliminate the annual filing requirements for one-participant retirement
plans with $250,000 in assets or less. Similarly, retirement plans that cover less than 25
employees would need to file only a simplified form substantially similar to that presently
required of one-participant plans. The provision would be effective January 1, 2002. Bill
Section 606.
D. Improvement of Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS). The
Bill would direct the Secretary of Treasury to update and improve EPCRS by (i) increasing the
awareness and knowledge of small employers concerning the availability and use of the
program; (ii) taking into account special concerns and circumstances that small employers face
with respect to compliance and correction of compliance failures; (iii) extending the duration of
the self-correction period under the Administrative Policy Regarding Self-Correction for
significant compliance failures; (iv) expanding the availability to correct insignificant
compliance failures under the Administrative Policy Regarding Self-Correction during audit;
and (v) assuring that any tax, penalty or sanction that is imposed by reason of a compliance
failure is not excessive and bears a reasonable relationship to the nature, extent and severity of
the failure. Bill Section 607.
E. Repeal of the Multiple Use Test. The Bill would repeal the multiple use test
under Code section 401(m) for years beginning after December 31, 2001. Bill Section 608.
F. Flexibility in Nondiscrimination, Coverage, and Line of Business Rules. The Bill
would direct Treasury to modify its regulations to permit plans to satisfy the section 401(a)(4)
nondiscrimination and section 410(b) coverage requirements using “facts and circumstances”
tests in cases where the current mechanical tests are not satisfied. Under the regulations, a plan
would be submitted to the IRS for a determination whether the test has been met. The
regulations would apply in years beginning after December 31, 2003. Similarly, the Bill would
direct Treasury to modify existing line of business regulations to allow plans to meet a facts and
circumstances test. Bill Section 609.
G. Extension to All Governmental Plans of Moratorium of Certain
Nondiscrimination Rules Applicable to State and Local Government Plans. The Bill would
exempt all governmental plans (as defined in Code section 414(d)) from the nondiscrimination
and minimum participation rules. Currently, governmental plans that are not qualified plans
maintained by a state or local government are not exempt from these rules. The provision
would be effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2001. Bill Section 610.
H. Annual Report Dissemination. The Bill would amend ERISA section 104(b)(3) by
providing that the requirement to furnish annual report information to participants and
beneficiaries would be satisfied “if the administrator makes such information reasonably
available through electronic means or other new technology.” Bill Section 612.
I. Technical Corrections to SAVER Act. The Bill would amend the SAVER Act
regarding the administration of future National Summits on Retirement Savings and the
appointment of Summit delegates. Bill Section 613.
10
VII. Other ERISA Provisions (Title VII)
A. Missing Participants. The Bill would extend PBGC’s missing participants
program to defined contribution plans and multiemployer plans, effective after final regulations
have been prescribed. Bill Section 701.
B. Civil Penalties for Breach of Fiduciary Duty. The Bill would modify ERISA
section 502(l) to provide the Department of Labor discretionary authority with respect to the
imposition of civil penalty amounts. The provision generally would be effective for fiduciary
violations occurring after the Bill’s date of enactment. Bill Section 706.
C. Benefit Suspension Notice. The Bill would direct the Secretary of Labor to
modify the regulation under ERISA section 203(a)(3)(B) to provide that (i) the notification
required to suspend benefit payments, in the case of an employee who returns to work for a
former employer after commencement of benefit payments under the plan, shall be made
during the first calendar month or payroll period in which the plan withholds payments, and
(ii) the notice, in the case of any other employee, may be included in the summary plan
description, rather than in a separate notice. The modification made by the provision would
apply to plan years beginning after December 31, 2001. Bill Section 707.
VIII. Plan Amendments (Title VIII)
The Bill would provide that plan amendments required as a result of the Bill would not
be required to be made before the last day of the first plan year beginning on or after January 1,
2004. For government plans, the amendment dates would be extended to the first plan year
beginning on or after January 1, 2006. Bill Section 801.
Thomas T. Kim
Assistant Counsel
Attachment
Attachment (in .pdf format)
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