ERISA Flashcards
(22 cards)
Basic Coverage § 1003
Any employee benefit plan established/maintained by (1) an employer in commerce/industry/activity affecting commerce; (2) employee organization representing employees in commerce; (3) or by both
Exceptions to ERISA
- governmental plan
- church plan
- plan solely to comply with WC/unemployment/disability insurance laws
- plan maintained outside the US for benefit of nonresident aliens
- excess benefit plans: better benefits paid to higher execs
Does ERISA pre-empt all state regulation of benefits?
No, ERISA doesn’t apply to state laws relating to employee benefits, but to state laws referring to employee benefit plans specifically. It was meant to regulate benefit plans, not all benefits.
ERISA Reporting Requirements
- annual reports to DOL
- benefit statements to pariticpants/beneficiaries
- summary plan description
- summary of material modifications to participants
If an employer is making a change to the plan, what are their obligations?
They can’t mislead employees about the changes, but they have no duty to give notice of them until they happen.
SPD Requirements
- include all required information
- written so average person can understand it
- accurate/comprehensive enough to convey rights/obligations of participants
- contains name and type of plan; name/address of plan administrator; relevant provisions; eligibility
Is it an SPD? Test
To determine whether something is an SPD under ERISA, look to see whether it satisfies all of the categories of information required for SPDs under the act
Three Types of Pension Plans
Defined Benefit (traditional)
Defined Contribution
Hybrid (cash balance plans)
Defined Benefit Plan
- the traditional plan
- not portable unless multi-employer plan
- employee promises benefit upon retirement based on salary/years worked
- employer responsible for funding plan upon retirement
- statement required every 3 years to individuals with non-forfeitable benefits & current employees telling them how much they have accrued and how much is left
Defined Contribution Pan
- 401ks, etc.
- portable
- employer makes defined contribution to an individual account for each employee every paycheck
- employees can also contribute
- employee gets certain amount at retirement too
- statement every year to beneficiaries/participants
Hybrid Plans
Employer promises to make a defined contribution to each employee’s individual account, based on compensation, which is professionally invested and guaranteed to grow at some fixed rate.
When the SPD and plan doc differ, which controls?
The plan doc. The SPD can be reformed in equity, the plan doc can’t and is binding.
ERISA Anti-Cutback Clause
Applies to pensions but not welfare plans (like SSN). Only benefits that are not yet accrued or vested can be changed.
Can ERISA benefits be withdrawn early?
They can be borrowed against (less than $50k or half the fund) for 5 years. Early withdrawal is also permitted in certain hardship cases (burial/funeral, tuition, etc.).
What is the appropriate standard of review for benefits determinations?
When the plan specifically gives discretion to the administrator, it’s abuse of discretion.
If no discretion is given, it’s de novo.
How should plan determiantions be made when the plan does not have a provision that addresses the issue?
Apply equitable principles.
ERISA SOL
There isn’t one, but administrative remedies must be exhausted first.
Standard applied to Plan Administrator
Prudent Man Standard of Care (§ 404)
How are conflicts of interest evaluated?
If the fiduciary has discretion, the the standard of review is abuse of discretion, and the conflict is a factor in that analysis.
Who has a fiduciary duty under ERISA?
- named fiduciary in plan docs, or
2. someone who assumed fiduciary responsibilities (execs, but not those advising them)
Fiduciary Duties Under ERISA § 409
- complete loyalty to beneficiaries
- perform duties as prudent man would (but no presumption of prudence)
- diversity plan investment to minimize risk
- follow plan docs consistent with ERISA
- duty of disclosure to participants/beneficiaries
How can a plan be termianted under ERISA?
- voluntary (standard: benefits accrued are dispersed with notice/distress: insurance applies because employer anticipates it won’t be able to meet its duties)
- involuntary (PBGC takes over the plan due to insufficient management or funding and provides insurance)