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Everything posted by david rigby
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Controlled group- attribution question
david rigby replied to a topic in Retirement Plans in General
Actually, Derrin Watson has already answered that question: http://www.benefitslink.com/cgi-bin/qa.cgi...d=234&mode=read -
This just posted on BenefitsLink: http://www.dor.state.nc.us/practitioner/EG...RA_pension.html To this NC observer, it is quite a surprise due to the impact on revenues, probably not noticed by most legislators.
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Greetings from Jury Duty
david rigby replied to Dave Baker's topic in Humor, Inspiration, Miscellaneous
You attorneys sure are a fun bunch. -
social security calc
david rigby replied to Gary's topic in Defined Benefit Plans, Including Cash Balance
The offset should be determined based on factors, definitions, and administrative practices in effect at date of plan freeze. -
Places in the Bible where automobiles are mentioned. a. During the Exodus from Egypt, all the children of Israel were in one Caravan. b. In the book of Acts, we are told that the disciples were all in one Accord. c. In the book of Genesis 3, we read that God drove Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. We can only guess that it must have been in a (Plymouth) Fury. d. In Isaiah 40:31 we are told to "mount up with wings as Eagles".
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Does the plan have a checking account, or cash account? If so, the ER can make a payment to that account, which is part of its $100K contribution. Then the participant can be paid from that account. Much better audit trail. P.S. If the plan does not currently have such an account, this would be a good time to create one.
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Contribution exceeds Sched C income
david rigby replied to Earl's topic in Defined Benefit Plans, Including Cash Balance
If "Guy" refers to a plan covering only one person (or husband and wife), don't think about a waiver. Think about amending the plan, such as a plan freeze. -
Frozen Benefits/Froxen Participation
david rigby replied to a topic in Defined Benefit Plans, Including Cash Balance
That is the usual meaning of "freeze". I suggest a freeze amendment be explicit about freezing benefits, service, and participation. Also, look to see if there are ancillary benefits that you might want to eliminate or "tighten"; for example, a disability benefit is not 411(d)(6) protected. -
employee contributions in a DB plan
david rigby replied to a topic in Defined Benefit Plans, Including Cash Balance
The first thing to do is refuse to work on this plan!!! Then, triple your fee quote (it won't be enough). -
Several issues. For example, - Has the plan been amended? If so, then an amendment in the opposite direction could be a problem. - From your description, there appears to be a problem with the agreement between buyer and seller. This does not necessarily involve the plan. Plan and plan sponsor need legal advice.
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Controlled group- attribution question
david rigby replied to a topic in Retirement Plans in General
The resident expert on this topic is Derrin Watson. He has column of Q&A's here. -
Take? Pension and profit-sharing plans are (with a few specific exceptions) regulated by federal law. Internal Revenue Code section 401(a)(13) provides that no plan shall permit a benefit to be "assigned or alienated." For example, this means that a creditor cannot get at the money, and the participant cannot do anything to give the money to a creditor; however, once a benefit is paid to a participant, then it is merely part of the participant's assets, no longer in the plan. Does this help?
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Several prior discussions related to this topic. You might try the Search feature. Here is one of them: http://benefitslink.com/boards/index.php?showtopic=15887
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Interesting discussion. However, Kirk I'm confused by your statement: To this actuary, that seems backwards. The investment policy should come first, then the choice of an assumed rate of return.
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Yes. the valuation can reflect any amendment that becomes effective during the plan year, as long as it is adopted prior to 2-1/2 months after the end of the plan year. But be careful to recognize the correct benefits. If the valuation does not include any normal cost, that is essentially assuming that no one will have 1000+ hours prior to the freeze. Is that a realistic assumption? Another caution: the effective date of the freeze will be the later of the effective date in the amendment or 45 days after the distribution of the 204(h) notice. Final caution: the IRS has stated informally that the use of the Aggregate Method is not appropriate for a frozen plan. Gray Book. Let me know if you need the specific cites.
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...and page 7 of the instructions also describe this. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i5500.pdf
