Company A has an unfunded severance pay plan which takes effect January 1, 2000. In order to be covered by the severance pay plan, an individual must a) be terminated on or after the effective date as the result of a just-completed corporate merger, b) sign certain agreements including a nondisclosure/limited noncompete, and c) not have a separate employment agreement.
The severance pay plan offers a choice between two types of severance pay, installment and lump sum.
The first individuals who could have been eligible for the plan were those terminated on January 1, 2000. Technically they worked on January 1. First question: are the members of this group eligible participants at the beginning of the plan year?
Over the course of the year, hundreds of people were terminated and became covered by the plan. However, all but a handful elected the lump sum option, so their participation ceased as of the date they received their lump sum payment. Only about 15 people took the installment method. Consequently, at the end of the year, only these 15 people were participants.
My boss is having trouble with the fact that, because we potentially have a beginning count of 0 and an ending count of 15, but processed hundreds (if not thousands) of people inbetween, we might be exempt from filing a 5500. That just does not seem right to him, even though it's fine by me (since I'm the one who has to prepare it!).
Does anyone have experience with the finer points of participant counting and welfare plan exemptions?