Barbara
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We have an overfunded DB plan that is being randomly audited by IRS. TPA fees to respond to the audit are pretty substantial, but are actually less than 0.1% of the total overfunding amount. This is a H&W plan but they also occasionally have 1 non-owner Employee. For the year being audited (2022), no rank and file employees accrued any benefits, but for 2025, the year in which the fees will be paid, there will be 1 or 2 eligible NHCEs. Do we think the client can pay the TPA fees as they relate to 2022 from the overfunded plan assets?
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The Roth was created as a conversion from a traditional IRA in 2010 so it was formed more than 5 years ago. Spouse is designated income beneficiary of the trust for the rest of her life, and then his children and grandchildren become the income beneficiary. The corpus of the trust will be distributed when the children/grandchildren attain a certain age. If he dies now, is the spouse required to fully distribute the Roth IRA by the end of the required 10 years period? If the spouse dies before the 10 year period will the children/grandchildren be required to distribute the remaining balance of the Roth IRA within 10 years of the Roth owners death?
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So sorry to hear this. He will definitely be missed. Condolences to the family.
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Thanks to both of you for the prompt responses.
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This question is not exactly on point, but here goes: An old SEP which was established incorrectly, into which an individual made contributions over many years totaling $66k improperly, but for which the accountant never took deductions (because he had advised his client NOT to make the contributions in the first place.) To clarify, the individual is a 1% partner in an LLC, and all of his income is from this LLC, which sponsors a 401(k) Plan for the partners and employees. Client now wants to withdraw the $$ from the SEP, but custodian is insisting that they must issue a 1099, since the money is theoretically in a SEP. Can anyone think of a way to convince the custodian not to issue the 1099?.
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This is a question related to California and the CalSavers rules, which say that you must offer employees an opportunity to defer. Does anyone know if the Cal Savers rules apply to employees who work under 1,000 hours?
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I have a client who sponsors a Defined Benefit plan only. He (the owner) is the only Participant, because the eligibility is 21&1 with 1,000 hours. He has a long term part time employee who usually works 500+ hours, but always under 1,000 hours, so therefore she is technically not "covered" by a qualified retirement plan. Does he have to set up an opportunity for her to defer, either under a qualified 401(k) plan (which then must have auto enrollment), or under our state's mandatory CalSavers Plan? He does not want to contribute to a 401(k) plan himself.
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Thanks for the quick responses!
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I have a cross-tested profit sharing plan where the client is considering adding a Safe Harbor 401(k) feature for 2024. Will auto enrollment features be required?
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Hi, I have a Plan that expected to terminate and pay out benefits prior to June 30, 2023. However, my document vendor (Ft William) doesn't yet have its Cycle 3 document ready, and says it won't have the doc until July sometime. All the benefits have been calculated for a June distribution. This is a small, non-PBGC-covered Plan and we are not submitting to IRS. Would you distribute anyway, and then update the document in July? Or? If we wait to distribute until after the docs are completed, we will have to recalculate everything. Thanks in advance.
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VCP Submission Backlog? 11 months and counting?
Barbara replied to Jaeded's topic in Retirement Plans in General
I've heard they are more than a year behind from an attorney friend who has submitted numerous VCP requests and is waiting to hear on all of them. -
Thanks, Lou - I have no idea why they didn't notice it before, but the issue is whether there is any way to find records going back that far. Is there any source that we haven't explored? To clarify, she believes she requested a taxable distribution, but it appears the funds were rolled into a pre=tax IRA.
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Participant terminated from company in 1985 and requested her distribution be rolled over into a taxable account. Funds appear to have erroneously been rolled into an IRA and no one has any records anymore; individual tax returns were shredded, brokerage company was sold to another, previous Employer no longer has records. IRS and FTB say they don't have 1099s going back that far. Participant is now required to take RMDs. Is there any way to avoid taking an RMD from the IRA into which the funds were erroneously rolled over? We can't find anything to support the claim that an error was made.
