Susan L
Registered-
Posts
3 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
HRA - Mistaken Contributions
Susan L replied to luissaha's topic in Other Kinds of Welfare Benefit Plans
Luissha, any chance this is a governmental employer and a government affiliated trust? If so, I have a few follow-up questions, but little advice. These look like the wild west to me. -
fmsinc, not to hijack this exchange (your response is excellent), but have you heard anything about whether OPM will process COAPs in view of the massive federal government downsizing underway? I'm guessing helping ex-spouses of military is not high on anybody's list and, given an opportunity, which I would imagine they'll find, OPM may decide to file all pending COAPs in the trash bin?
-
Governmental public safety employee pension plan--early withdrawals
Susan L replied to Susan L's topic in Governmental Plans
Peter Gulia, I've been so immersed in governmental pension plans, I sort of forget about that other world of non-governmental non-pension plans. My question arises in the context of a traditional defined benefit, non-ERISA, governmental plan that is set forth in state statute and is intended to be qualified under IRC 401(a) et seq. Specifically, I can't seem to nail down whether the plan could pay out an annuity for life (or joint lives of spouse and member) starting at, say, age 54, when the member is still employed, so there's been no separation from service. Assume for this purpose that the plan's NRA is age 50 and we can show that that age is reasonably representative of the typical retirement age for this industry (firefighters). On these facts, would the member avoid having to pay the 10% excise tax for early distribution and, generally, is this permitted? I think so, but would love a second opinion. -
Voluntary Employee Contributions - Governmental DB Plan
Susan L replied to luissaha's topic in Governmental Plans
It's the CODA part that's the problem. -
Voluntary Employee Contributions - Governmental DB Plan
Susan L replied to luissaha's topic in Governmental Plans
Isn't that a CODA (it's voluntary and will reduce pay) and not permitted under the IRS guidance related to the pick-up requirements of 414(h)? -
Must a COAP be a stand-alone court order like a QDRO? Or could the provisions be incorporated as a section in the divorce judgment and decree?
-
How to enforce RMD requirements?
Susan L replied to Carol V. Calhoun's topic in Distributions and Loans, Other than QDROs
Carol and Peter, as an attorney who has worked on pension statutes for the past seven years, I wholeheartedly agree with your responses (and the others, for that matter). I have heard that one law firm that has made a name for itself in the public pension plans arena has advised a governmental pension plan that it does not have to pay out an RMD if the member does not elect to receive it for the reason that the plan does not have a normal benefit form. I much prefer Carol's approach of picking a normal benefit form and paying out the RMD. If the IRS were to audit the member who did not receive the RMD and assessed an excise tax, I'm not sure how this would play out vis a vis the pension plan that did not pay out the RMD. -
Can the assets of a qualified governmental retirement plan (defined benefit or defined contribution) be used to pay premiums for insurance to provide welfare benefits for active public employees? I am aware of 401(h) for retiree medical and 402(l) for retired public safety officers, but can this be done for actives? If your answer is "up to the amount allowed under the incidental benefit rule," do you know where I can find an understandable summary of that rule? Thanks!
-
Participant terminating... RMD first?
Susan L replied to Basically's topic in Distributions and Loans, Other than QDROs
One follow-up question: if the participant terminated employment this year, 2021, can his first RMD be paid in 2022, no later than April 1, 2022? -
Do the same rules re full vesting upon plan termination or partial termination and 5 years until forfeiture apply to a defined benefit plan?
-
Also, I would think that the plan sponsor would still need to make sure that its contributions are not discriminatory in the non-tax code sense of the word, such as discrimination on the basis of protected status. Age, marital status, race, so many other categories under both state and federal law would need to be taken into account. What a set up for disaster.
- 6 replies
-
- controlled group
- discretionary match
- (and 1 more)
-
Thank you all for this thoughtful and helpful exchange of responses. My apologies for not mentioning that this is a governmental plan. We have about 500 governmental retirement plans run by firefighters. For most of the plans, the assets are invested as one single pooled account. Some plans, however, split the assets into two separate accounts, the actives are more aggressively invested and the deferred are invested in safer investments. Participant-direction of investments is not permitted. (Mr. Hatlee, you have inferred correctly.) The real concern is that a few plans don't allocate investment earnings at all to the accounts of deferred vested members or pay interest on the deferred accounts at a fixed rate (such as 3%)--really weird outcome there when the overall earnings on the assets are less than the fixed rate. The plans don't allow distributions until age 50. EBECatty's response about a pre-approved governmental plan allowing different methods for allocating earnings is very interesting. It does make me think there must be some sort of IRS guidance on that. I will check the pre-ERISA requirements, which is also a great suggestion, Mr. Rigby. If anybody has any other comments on the IRS' position on this, I would greatly appreciate hearing from you.
