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QDROphile

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Everything posted by QDROphile

  1. Have you thought about rehabilitating the plan? What does "was never qualified" mean?
  2. I also can't spell or type very well.
  3. Do you know the defintion of cafeteria plan?
  4. What part of "irrevocable" is causing questions?
  5. Before December 31, 2007, in accordance with transition rule. Do you care if grandfathered amounts remain grandfathered?
  6. Was the opt out based on the one-time irrevocable election provisions under the 401(k) plan regulations?
  7. The IRS publications are availabe on line at http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/formspubs/lists...d=97819,00.html. The publications address your questions.
  8. The IRS position on the issue is that the cost of coverage does not matter. The value of employer provided coverage is taxable even if there is no marginal increase in premium for the coverage. Unless the employee covers the value with an after-tax premium payment, the employee wil have taxable income.
  9. Ask for another copy of the summary plan description and ask if it is up-to-date.
  10. What business do you have allowing or disallowing amendments? If you are in a position to be responsible for such matters and you deal with liability on a case by case basis, you have some inherent problems that you need to address.
  11. 1. That is up to you, but installments of a small amounts usually do not make much sense unless you are on the edge of a tax rate. Also, you should be able to leave the money in the plan until something happens to your former spouse, such as he takes a distribution or reaches retirement age. Many plans try to push out alternate payees. You need to understand the difference between a distribution (getting the money from the plan) and rollover (the money goes to your IRA) because of the different tax consequneces. Whether or not or not you elect to roll over money taken from the plan, you will have a distribution. You can have the money sent directly from the plan to your IRA. That is called a direct rollover, but it is still a distribution. A direct rollover has the best immediate tax consequences. All of your money goes to the IRA (no withholding) and you have no taxes until a later distribution. Before you take a distribution, the plan should give you written information about your distribution options and about rollovers and direct rollovers and the federal income tax consequences. 2. True. If you roll over to an IRA and then take a distribution before age 59 1/2, the penalty will apply unless another exception applies. 3. Check the tax and rollover information from the plan. If you do not elect a direct rollover, 20% will be withheld from your distribution for federal income taxes - lump sum or installment. Also check IRS publications about distributions from retirement plans, available on the IRS web site. The plan should also tell you about state tax withholding, but it may not do so automatically. You may have to ask if state taxes will be withheld. 4. Not as far as the retirement plan is concerned.
  12. No participant consent to a correction. The IRS does not need participant consent to disqualify the plan. Would you mind explaining how catch up contributions get matched? Under most match terms, it is mathematically impossible to match catch up contributions except when the ADP test is the limiting factor. And if the ADP test is the limiting factor, one would think that catch up contributions would be matched.
  13. Whether or not you can make the arrangements work legally, it is stupid, so just stop.
  14. If one can choose a "model" allocation by checking a box, it is an investment option and the adviser has constructed it, unless the investment form was done without the adviser knowledge or consent. The adviser has the responsibility of a fiduciary who has chosen an investment option for the menu, the same as if the plan administrator has chosen some "lifestyle" fund for the menu. Depending on the adviser's engagement, the adviser may or may not have the same duty to monitor as the plan administrator has for the chosen lifestlye fund. Anthing else that is disclosed on the for or otherwise might cause the adviser to have more fiduciary responsibility. It does not sound like the disclosure is adhering to the guidance about education. Among other things, the guidance does not anticipate that education will focus on the particular investment options of the plan.
  15. It is neither eduction of participants nor advice to participants. The particpants have investment choices and no one is telling them anything more, or at least not that you have revealed. However, the choice of investment options and portfolio structuring makes the adviser a fiduciary -- which is at the heart of what is going on here. The adviser is either ignorant or a bit of a scoundrel if the adviser is claiming no fiduciary role. So get the "F" word on the table and have the adviser declare rather than pussyfoot around the issue with indirect labels. However, the fiduciary duty stops at the choice of reasonable investment options unless more is going on, assuming compliance with 404©. The description of the funds could open a new can of worms.
  16. Not so sure about that. How do you get a distribution of the 403(b) amount for rollover to the qualified plan?
  17. Fiduciary. Several determinations have to be made for each loan.
  18. If payments stopped, how can they be automatic? Was there a fiduciary breach? Was there a bankruptcy? Apart from those curiousities, the loan stays in place and payments after the deemed distribution are after-tax amounts. Note that I am not saying anything about whether the participant can be forced to pay or be prevented from paying.
  19. You can do it wih a plan amendment that provides a special benefit to the participant, so you might not be able to do it for a highly compensated particpant
  20. Joel: At one time I decided not to respond to any of your posts because you take strange postions and then cling to them without regard to the responses that you are suppposedly soliciting, but I cannot resist joining the chorus against your proposition that is so clearly wrong. Not that it will matter.
  21. Record keeper should fix its mistake unless it contracted for no liability. The fiduciary who allowed a contract for no liability would then be responsible for fixing the mistake. It is not a problem to restore the account because of the mistake. You cannot rely on what you see on the board.
  22. How is the option to elect between health benefits and receipt of $1000 not a cafeteria plan?
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