Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Shouldn't it be the Trustees instead?

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted

I apologize if I confused you. I did not mean the trustees only. My question meant to include all fiduciaries associated with the VEBA. I would assume the same rules apply to VEBAs as they do 401(a) plans but I do not know for sure.

Posted

Fidelity bonds are more geared towards covering employee dishonesty so Fiduciary Liability insurance might be more appropriate for fiduciaries and D&O (I think there is also Trustee Liability coverage) for Trustees.

So the VEBA buys Fiduciary Liability to ptotect itself from the Trustees and others, but it makes the Trustees buy Trustee Liability and the Administrators buy Fiduciary Liability.

I do not think anything is required unless the by laws say so, but prudence dictates that you get insurance.

You might want to get the differences from a good agent. Maybe 1 of our members with exposure to this issue will post.

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted

Since I am very unfamiliar with VEBAs, let me ask this question in a different manner since I cannot get a straight answer. Is a VEBA a qualified plan under ERISA?

Posted

The VEBA is not a qualified plan, it is the plan that provides the underlying benefits that qualifies as either an "employee welfare benefit plan", a "welfare plan" or a "pension plan" etc.

The VEBA ( a Trust) is generally just the medium used to secure the payments and continuity of the underlying benefits.

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted

Fiduciaries of all ERISA trusts are required to be bonded. This is not related to whether or not the plan or the trust is "qualified" under a section of the Internal Revenue Code.

Posted

In general, Title I of ERISA applies to VEBAs. A VEBA is an employee welfare benefit plan that meets all of the statutory and regulatory requirements of I.R.C. Sec. 501©(9). ERISA's reporting and disclosure requirements, participation and vesting rules, minimum funding standards, and enforcement provisions affect VEBAs to varying degrees.

Lori Friedman

Posted

From what vebaguru says, it does not matter whether it is an ERISA trust or not, See his posts.

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted

Kirk, your clarification is noted.

A VEBA is an I.R.C. Sec. 501©(9) exempt organization that accumulates resources for the payment of certain welfare benefits. As a tax-exempt organization, a VEBA is subject to the Form 990 filing rules.

A VEBA isn't necessarily a trust. VEBAs are often formed as corporations or unincorporated associations. Because a VEBA may be subject to unrelated business income taxation on its non-exempt function income, it can be advantageous to use a form of entity other than a trust. Income is taxed at the corporate rates if the VEBA exists as a corporation or association, but at the higher trust rates in the case of a trust.

Lori Friedman

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 account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use