Featured Jobs
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Retirement Relationship Manager MAP Retirement
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ESOP Administration Consultant Blue Ridge Associates
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Anchor 3(16) Fiduciary Solutions
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BPAS
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MAP Retirement
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Regional Vice President, Sales MAP Retirement USA LLC
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Retirement Plan Administration Consultant Blue Ridge Associates
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Retirement Plan Consultants
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BPAS
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Pentegra
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Cash Balance/ Defined Benefit Plan Administrator Steidle Pension Solutions, LLC
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Managing Director - Operations, Benefits Daybright Financial
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Relationship Manager for Defined Benefit/Cash Balance Plans Daybright Financial
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Southern Pension Services
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July Business Services
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BPAS
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Free Newsletters
“BenefitsLink continues to be the most valuable resource we have at the firm.”
-- An attorney subscriber
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1588 Matching News Items |
| 1. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Oct. 19, 2005
Excerpt: The Post exaggerates problems with defined-benefit pension plans that employers provide voluntarily for 44 million American retirees and workers ['Government's Disgrace,' editorial, Oct.17]. Of the more than 31,000 such plans, 42 percent are better than 100 percent-funded and only 15 percent are funded at less than 70 percent.
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| 2. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Nov. 23, 2004
Excerpt: Why is it that when a doctor weighs in on the medical malpractice crisis ['Dispelling Malpractice Myths,' op-ed, Nov. 14], the solution never includes giving the public access to the National Practitioner Data Bank, with its record of malpractice claims payments and out-of-court settlements made on behalf of individual doctors? By blocking public access to these records, physicians perpetuate the malpractice crisis.
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| 3. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Dec. 13, 2006
Excerpt: In his Nov. 27 op-ed ['A Fix for Social Security?'], about a possible bipartisan compromise that would lift the current $90,000 cap on taxable Social Security earnings, Sebastian Mallaby made a factual error and ignored important questions of fairness.
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| 4. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Apr. 21, 2005
Excerpt: An April 11 Business story said that President Bush's Social Security proposal 'closely echoes' Britain's individual account system. However, Britain created a decentralized system in which individuals can choose from an almost limitless number of options in which to invest their state pension funds. This program is referred to as 'contracting out' and is made up of private accounts in the private sector with private investment firms. [John Shadegg, U.S. Representative (R-Ariz.)]
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| 5. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Sept. 24, 2014
"The Washington Post announced large cuts in retirement benefits on Tuesday, declaring that it would eliminate future retirement medical benefits and freeze defined-benefit pensions for nonunion employees.... The changes will hit hardest at employees hired before 2009 who could plan on receiving pension payments based on their income and years of service. Each of those employees could see scores -- or hundreds -- of thousands of dollars less over the course of a retirement. More recent hires do not have traditional pension plans. The Post will create a new cash balance plan to replace the pensions for nonunion employees and a separate but similar plan for those covered by the union."
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| 6. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Feb. 25, 2011
Ellen Anne Hennessy (Nell) ... was a nationally recognized expert on the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and a tireless champion for the rights of plan participants and pension plans. She was a model and mentor to many in the field of employee benefits and worked to educate both lawyers and other benefits professionals in the intricacies of employee benefits law and practice.... Donations in her honor may be made to The Nell Hennessy Employee Benefits Scholar Award at the Columbus School of Law at The Catholic University of America, Office of Development and Alumni Relations [which has an online donation form at https://secure.cua.edu/donate/placeOrder.cfm?productType=1&productID=50&submit=Donate+Now ]
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| 7. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
June 29, 2005
Excerpt: Post reporters David Hilzenrath and Terence O'Hara were online to discuss The Post's survey of executive compensation at Washington-area companies.
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| 8. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Nov. 10, 2023
"In 2009, The Post closed its pension plan to new employees -- and those who remained in the plan had their benefits frozen after Amazon founder Jeff Bezos acquired the newspaper. The pension fund itself, however, didn't freeze. As federal filings show, it has fattened to the point that it can finance 240 exit packages without breaking an actuarial sweat."
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| 9. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
Oct. 24, 2005
Excerpt: Accusing me of being one of the 'enemies of reform' is as flawed as the editorial on pensions that applied the label ['Government's Disgrace,' Oct. 17].
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| 10. |
The Washington Post; subscription may be required
June 26, 2006
Excerpt: At issue was whether the state legislation is preempted by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, which sets minimum standards for private companies' voluntary pension and health plans. The state law was enacted earlier this year despite a veto attempt by Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.
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