Guest quinn the car fixer Posted September 9, 2004 Posted September 9, 2004 if the doc uses the safe harbor definition of what is a hardship and the ee has flood damage (current example -- hurricane if in florida) to their home will this qualify? is there an exception for natural disasters?
QDROphile Posted September 9, 2004 Posted September 9, 2004 So you think the hurricane is evicting the homeowners?
R. Butler Posted September 10, 2004 Posted September 10, 2004 So you think the hurricane is evicting the homeowners? Mother Nature evicted them?
Guest quinn the car fixer Posted September 10, 2004 Posted September 10, 2004 pretty sure neither of the above(the question was asking if there was an exception for a natural disaster in rev ruling, plr, etc....)
RCK Posted September 10, 2004 Posted September 10, 2004 I would think that you could add natural disaster wording to the definitions in the plan. That would of course take you out of the safe harbor definition, but that does not strike me as a big problem. RCK
four01kman Posted September 10, 2004 Posted September 10, 2004 Natural disasters are not part of the "safe harbor" exceptions to plan distributions. Of course, plan sponsors always can add additional exceptions. Jim Geld
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now