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Staying abreast of current legislation is the best way to
be informed about the value of your pension plan. Therefore, we have
included the latest information for your convenience.
Resources:
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The
Pension Protection Act & the National Employee Savings and Trust
Equity Act (NESTEG) September 2005
Legislation currently being considered by Congress would make
some substantial changes to how pensions are governed and protected.
The plan in the House of Representatives is H.R. 2830, "The Pension
Protection Act." The Senate plan is S. 219, "The National Employee
Savings and Trust Equity Act" (or "NESTEG.")
The changes will undoubtedly make a difference. They should keep
all employees better informed about the health of their pension, and
also improve financial disclosure.
But other intended effects of these changes will be unevenly
felt, much more so in some industries (those with Single Employer
Plans) than in others (those with Multi Employer Plans).
For Single Employer Plans (sometimes called "Company Plans" - a
reference to the fact that employing companies typically have
control of most plan decisions), the proposed changes introduce new
funding requirements designed to give employers incentives to
adequately fund pensions, and to speed up contributions to
underfunded plans.
Both plans include measures that seek to restore financial health to
the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation by increasing annual
insurance premiums paid by pension plans.
The House plan includes a structure for identifying Multi
Employer Plans that are in trouble, using a "Red, Yellow and Green"
rating system. But some critics have suggested that the leading
Congressional proposals fall short when it comes to the important
question of "orphans" in Multi Employer Plans - workers in plans
where companies have either gone bankrupt or made promises to
employees they are in no position to keep. Multi Employer Plans are
sometimes referred to as "Union Plans" because they are more often
than not controlled by union leaders.
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The
Pension Funding Equity Act April 2004
President Bush signed into law the Pension Funding Equity Act of
2004, which is expected to save American companies around $80
billion in pension contributions through the end of 2005. The bill
was designed to help companies struggling to pay pensions following
the weak stock market over the past several years.
The law will relieve 31,000 companies covering 35 million
workers who have traditional "defined benefit" pension plans. It
does not provide relief through government payments. Rather, it
allows companies to use a different formula to their calculate
pension contributions.
The bill provides an additional $1.6 billion in extra relief for
some steel companies and major airlines. But the legislation
contains less help for companies with multi-employer plans, such as
those covering union workers in the construction and trucking
industries. Less than 4 percent of the 16,000 multi-employer plans
qualify for the pension relief, according to Sen. Edward Kennedy
(D-Mass.).
However, for workers with defined benefit multiemployer plans, the
new law requires plan administrators to communicate more directly
with employees about the state of their pension funds. If workers'
pensions are at risk of being underfunded, plan administrators must
now inform the plan participants.
Administrators must send yearly notices to all members of the
pension plan. These annual updates must be written in language that
the average person can understand. They must also be easily
accessible - whether in electronic or hard copy format.
The annual notices must include the following information:
· A phone number for the plan's administrator, its main
administrative officer, the employee's plan number and the
employer's identification number.
· A statement as to whether the plan's funded current liability
percentage for the plan year to which the notice relates is at least
100 percent (and, if not, the actual percentage).
· A statement of the value of the plan's assets, the amount of
benefit payments, and the ratio of the assets to the payments for
the plan year to which the notice relates.
A
summary of the rules governing insolvent multiemployer plans,
including the limitations on benefit payments and any potential
benefit reductions and suspensions (and the potential effects of
such limitations, reductions, and suspensions on the plan).
A
general description of the benefits under the plan which are
eligible to be guaranteed by the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation, along with an explanation of the limitations on the
guarantee and the circumstances under which such limitations apply.
If
plan administrators fail to provide plan members with these updates,
they will be held accountable by the Department of Labor.
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