AlbanyConsultant Posted April 27, 2021 Posted April 27, 2021 I've got a hardship request for a casualty issue where the participant says that he and his buddies have the skills required to do the work themselves, but they need the hardship to cover the costs of the materials, and, hey, why shouldn't he be able to compensate his buddies for their time, too? OK, the materials I can see, but the rest of this is sounding alarm bells... Assuming that the Plan Administrator wants to approve this as a true casualty situation hardship, is a fair recommendation to suggest that the participant get an estimate from a licensed contractor and use that for the hardship distribution amount? Technically, once the amount is paid to the participant, it's not on the Plan Administrator to ensure that the money is used for that purpose, anyway, but if the participant wants to do the job with his friends and pay them instead, as long as the amount isn't unreasonable (which is what the bona fide estimate is going to be used to substantiate), isn't the plan on solid ground?
CuseFan Posted April 27, 2021 Posted April 27, 2021 agree, that would be the best way to handle. Kenneth M. Prell, CEBS, ERPA Vice President, BPAS Actuarial & Pension Services kprell@bpas.com
JOH Posted April 28, 2021 Posted April 28, 2021 Agree that would be the best way to handle it but I don't think you should push it either. if another participant did a hardship request and the cost seems higher than what you think or their contractor charges 20% more, would you have the participant get another estimate? I say just have him provide the backup that you would normally ask and just follow your procedures. Mike Preston 1
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