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Final 403(b) Regulations

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Provide summary of relevant features of final 403(b) regulations ... Issue to address with TPA or common remitter. Consider electronic remitting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Final 403(b) Regulations


1
Final 403(b) Regulations
  • Focus on Impact for K-12
  • Public Schools

Presented by Dar Hansen, CFP, EA WEA Trust
Member Benefits
2
Overview of presentation
  • Provide summary of relevant features of final
    403(b) regulations
  • Discuss impact on public education employers and
    employees
  • Planning strategies and action steps

3
A little background
  • In November 2004, the IRS issued proposed 403(b)
    regulations
  • Hinted at shift away from payroll accommodation
    programs
  • Focus on employer as sponsor of retirement plan
    (many new responsibilities for employers)
  • IRS received many comments from the public

4
Final regulations issued
  • On July 23, 2007
  • Published on July 26, 2007
  • General effective date for most provisions is
    January 1, 2009
  • Different effective dates for specific provisions
    (more specifics later)

5
Overall impressions
  • Committed to treating 403(b) programs as employer
    plans
  • IRS referred to a change in culture, recognizing
    the 403(b) as an employer plan
  • As often as possible, implemented rules to make
    403(b) plans as similar as possible to other
    elective deferral plans
  • Incorporated many 401(k) requirements and
    interpretations into regulations

6
Biggest changes under the regs
  • Written plan documentation requirement
  • Restrictions on employee changes in investments
  • Changes were based on the products used to fund
    the 403(b) accounts
  • Based on Rev. Rul. 90-24 which established
    criteria for transferring 403(b) accounts
  • Employers and product providers will have
    different relationships
  • Clarifications on certain issues will require
    changes
  • Consequences of defects or errors

7
Changes for employers
  • More contact with product providers to coordinate
    responsibilities
  • Plan maintenance
  • Annual notice requirements
  • Communicating the plan to employees
  • Evaluating product provider performance under the
    plan
  • Determine partner relationships for compliance
    purposes

8
Now, about the regulations
  • General effective date for most provisions is tax
    year beginning after December 31, 2008
  • Delayed effective date
  • For 403(b) plans maintained pursuant to a
    collective bargaining agreement in place on July
    26, 2007, effective date is earlier of
  • expiration of contract, or
  • July 26, 2010.

9
Different effective dates
  • 90-24 transfers permitted under current rules
    until September 24, 2007
  • Significant changes thereafter
  • Will cover on later slides
  • Prohibition on life insurance contracts in 403(b)
    plans effective for contracts issued after
    September 24, 2007
  • Restrictions on in-service withdrawals of
    employer contributions to annuity contracts not
    effective for any contract entered into prior to
    January 1, 2009

10
New plan requirements
  • The 403(b) plan must satisfy a list of specific
    qualifications
  • Requirements for written plan documentation
  • Separate requirements for underlying custodial
    accounts and annuity contracts
  • Operational requirements (new)
  • Failure of any of these elements causes the
    employee to lose the exclusion from income
    otherwise provided under 403(b)

11
What happens if there is a defect under the plan?
  • General Rule
  • No exclusion from income
  • How much is lost depends on type of error
  • Entire plan (all accounts under the plan) is
    disqualified if the employer
  • Fails to maintain the written plan document, or
  • Fails to satisfy the universal availability
    requirements, or
  • If the problem is not an operational problem.
  • An operational problem occurs if the plan does
    not follow the terms of the plan document
  • Employees contracts fail individually due to
    operational errors

12
What happens for operational errors?
  • Employees contracts fail individually due to
    operational errors
  • An operational failure by one product provider
    can affect ALL contracts held for that employee
    under the plan
  • Regs state that all contracts held by a
    participant under the plan are considered one
    account contract
  • Exception to this aggregation rule
  • Where contract requirements for unvested amounts
    and excess 415(c) contributions (over the 45,000
    limit in 2007) are not satisfied

13
An overview of the plan document requirements
  • Two requirements
  • Written plan documentation required which
    includes all material terms and conditions for
  • Eligibility
  • Applicable limitations (contributions)
  • Benefits
  • Distributions
  • Contracts available under the plan
  • The plan must adhere to the 403(b) requirements
    in both form and operation

14
Plan documents may
  • Allocate administrative duties to responsible
    parties
  • BUT, no provision for shifting liabilities
  • Still need a hold harmless agreement that
    protects the school district
  • Use multiple documents, but regs recommend a
    single document for multiple vendor plans
  • Incorporate by reference the underlying contracts
    and custodial accounts
  • Must include procedure for resolving conflicting
    provisions

15
Plan documents may
  • Include optional features, such as
  • Employer contributions
  • Roth contributions
  • Hardship withdrawals
  • Loans
  • In-service withdrawals
  • Acceptance of rollovers
  • Exchanges to 403(b) products approved within the
    plan
  • Plan to plan transfers (in or out)

16
Plan documents may
  • Exclude features to limit, simplify compliance or
    reduce liabilities, such as
  • Prohibiting loans
  • Prohibiting financial hardships
  • Excluding 15-years-of-service catch-up limit
  • Allowing every employee to participate in the
    plan
  • Restricting the number of product providers and
    require providers to take on certain
    administrative responsibilities

17
Where to get a plan document?
  • IRS will release model language that school
    districts can use to create a plan document that
    meets the regulations requirements (if used and
    followed, will comply)
  • Vendors will offer their documents
  • Third party administrators (TPAs) will offer
    their documents
  • Issue Following the terms of the document
  • The employer must read it to identify the terms
    and responsibilities

18
Key concepts to understand
  • Terms of plan document must be followed
  • Operational error consequence (just the affected
    participant)
  • Employers, employees, and vendors must know terms
    of the plan document
  • Employers will have to choose strategy to satisfy
    administrative requirements
  • Self administration
  • Work with vendors directly
  • Work with TPA

19
How will this requirement affect 403(b) plans of
K-12 employers?
  • Puts focus clearly on the employer
  • Employer will be responsible for document
  • Including maintenance and updates
  • Selecting document provider consideration
  • Amend or change plan document at any time and as
    often as desired
  • IRS has hinted that there may be problems with
    eliminating certain rights, benefits, and
    features retroactively

20
Vendor related issues with document requirements
  • Issues to consider relating to product providers
  • Will they be able to follow the terms of each
    employers plan?
  • Can products be timely amended and reregistered
    to satisfy requirements?
  • Customer service and administrative support must
    shift to plan level
  • Vendors will have to
  • Take responsibility for optional features such as
    monitoring distributions and loans, or
  • Be able to work with TPAs.

21
Next big issue
  • The regulations impose severe restrictions on
    employees rights to change investment products
    during employment
  • Transfers and exchanges
  • Rollover rights NOT affected
  • Include transition period for changes
  • First transition period ended September 24, 2007
  • Immediate need to consider options quickly to
    communicate changes to employees

22
Transfers and exchanges
  • Lesson on new terminology after 9/24/2007
  • Transfer is moving a 403(b) account under one
    employers plan into investment products
    permitted under another employers 403(b) plan
    (generally requires a severance from service with
    one employer)
  • Exchange is change of investment products among
    investment options under the current employers
    403(b) plan
  • Rollover is removal of account from employers
    403(b) plan into any other eligible retirement
    plan (only available after the employee
    experiences a distributable event such as
    severance from service or age 59½.)

23
Transfers completed by September 24, 2007
  • Transfers under Rev. Rul. 90-24 were permitted
    until September 24, 2007
  • Prior rules applied for 60 day period from
    publication date
  • Employers were generally not involved in these
    transactions
  • Regs state that Rev. Rul. 90-24 will be repealed
    by future guidance

24
Transfers and exchanges between 9/25/2007 and
1/1/2009
  • Permitted only if employer and vendor receiving
    the proceeds from another vendor enter into an
    information sharing agreement (or, if electing
    to comply early, a hold harmless/service provider
    agreement) and
  • The written plan document must ratify the
    exchanges that occurred during the interim and
    permit exchanges and/or transfers
  • Both actions must be completed by
    January 1, 2009

25
If the plan permits exchanges
  • Employers plan document would have to permit
    exchanges
  • Three requirements to qualify as a tax free
    exchange
  • The value of the accumulated benefit is not less
    after the transfer
  • Normal contract charges are permitted.
  • Special transfer fees are not.
  • The receiving contract has distribution
    restrictions at least as restrictive as the
    sending contract (same as old rules)
  • Employer and receiving vendor have an information
    sharing agreement for compliance purposes

26
After December 31, 2008
  • No transfers or exchanges unless permitted by the
    plan document
  • Exchanges restricted to only those products
    authorized in employers plan document
  • No exchanges/transfers outside of authorized
    products during employment
  • Plan could authorize different vendors for
    exchanges than for payroll access
  • After employment, employees could transfer to
    another employers 403(b) plan if both plans
    permit

27
Informal clarification
  • According to Bob Architect (IRS spokesperson)
  • After 9/24/2007 and before 1/1/2009 (or
    compliance date)
  • Employees can make 90-24 transfers so long as the
    plan, as adopted by January 1, 2009,
    retroactively permits the exchange by allowing it
    in the plan document and executing an information
    sharing agreement with the recipient product
    provider
  • Risk of compliance lies with the employee for
    interim transfers
  • They have to be confident that their employer
    will permit exchanges and will enter into an
    agreement with that vendor.
  • After compliance or 12/31/2008, only new rules
    apply

28
Implications?
  • Severely restricts employee investment changes
    after September 24, 2007
  • Employee would have to acknowledge risk that
    employer may not approve exchange later, or
  • Employer would have to permit exchange by
    entering into an agreement with the recipient
    before the exchange
  • Absolutely unclear what happens to 403(b)
    accounts that are not named under an employers
    plan on January 1, 2009

29
Other changes under the regulations
  • Catch-up contribution ordering ratified
  • Anything over annual deferral limit
  • First, looked at as part of 15-years-of-service
    catch-up if employee is eligible.
  • Then, age 50 catch-up considered.
  • Investment restrictions on 403(b)s
  • Limited to annuity contracts and 403(b)(7)
    custodial accounts (no stocks, bonds, CDs,
    T-Bills, etc.)
  • Life insurance contracts issued after
    September 24, 2007, are NOT permitted

30
Other changes under the regulations
Post-employment employer contributions
  • Employer contributions for former employees
    permitted for up to five years after year of
    severance from service
  • No post-employment employer contributions after
    the month of retirees death (monthly
    compensation to be determined based on 1/12 of
    annualized compensation)
  • IRS auditors are looking to see if there is
    constructive receipt (Is it really treated as an
    employee option rather than an employer
    contribution?)

31
Impact
  • Post-employment contribution agreements need to
    be reviewed prior to 1/1/2009
  • Determine if contracts require payments after
    death
  • To 403(b) account, or
  • To beneficiary.
  • If contract language requires post mortem
    payments, amendments will be required prior to
    applicable effective dates

32
Post-employment salary reduction contributions
  • Regulations permit employees to make elective
    deferrals from amounts received after severance
    from service, so long as
  • Proceeds are received by the later of the end of
    the year, or
  • 2½ months following severance date, and
  • Payments are for amounts employees would have
    received if they had not severed service
  • Accumulated leave payments okay
  • Retirement incentives or severance benefits may
    not be used for deferrals unless received as part
    of final paycheck

33
Universal availability
  • For salary reduction contributions, if employer
    offers plan to any employees, then all employees
    must be allowed to participate. Certain
    exceptions apply
  • Students
  • 20 hours per week
  • Regs clarify universal availability requirements.
    20-hour-per-week exclusion based on actual hours
    worked
  • If reasonable expectation that employee will not
    work 1,000 hours in year of hire, can exclude
    during 1st year.
  • Thereafter, have to look back to count hours to
    determine if employee actually worked at least
    1,000 hours.
  • Effectively requires schools to count actual
    hours of service for all employees if they want
    to exclude employees with fewer than 20 hours per
    week

34
Universal availability
  • Requires meaningful written notice to employees
    of eligibility to participate at least annually
  • Electronic may be okay
  • Posting in faculty lounge is not
  • Employees must have reasonable opportunity to
    make deferral elections at least once per year
  • Violations of universal availability requirements
    result in plan failure

35
Financial hardships
  • Clear authority to rely on 401(k) regulations for
    guidance on financial hardships
  • Vendors are required to notify employer of
    withdrawal because
  • Salary reduction contributions must be stopped
    for six months
  • To ALL vendors, and
  • All plans (such as 403(b) and 457(b)).

36
Issues related to the plan termination option
  • To allow distributions, contracts and custodial
    accounts would have to be amended
  • Consideration will have to be given to who
    controls the assets of terminated plans
  • Regs permit fully paid up contracts to be treated
    as distributed
  • No relief for custodial accounts
  • How can school districts distribute ALL plan
    assets as is required?
  • Must employees consent to distributions?
  • What about outstanding loans and the 10 early
    distribution penalty if there is a cash
    distribution?

37
Other requirements
  • Elective deferral contributions be remitted to
    the insurance company or custodian as soon as
    administratively possible
  • Suggests standard of no later than 15 business
    days in the month following reduction of salary
  • May require changes to employers procedures
  • Issue to address with TPA or common remitter
  • Consider electronic remitting

38
What the regulations do not do
  • Do not impose a fiduciary duty on employers
  • IRS does not have authority to do so
  • Public schools are exempt from ERISA, so ERISA
    duties do not apply
  • However, every state has established certain
    standards for appropriate behavior between
    employers and employees and when handling assets
    on behalf of another
  • May be potential litigation (just have to wait
    and see)

39
What to do now
  • Take time to make good decisions
  • Schools will have to decide how to address new
    responsibilities
  • Ignore the changes and continue as before?
  • Do it yourself?
  • Partner with product providers? (coupled with
    service contracts)
  • Use a third party administrator as manager
  • Level of service is important
  • Strings?
  • Costs

40
More to do
  • Review current 403(b) program
  • Vendors
  • Terms of plan (eligibility and exclusions)
  • Procedures
  • Plan communications (notice to employees)
  • Enrollment procedures
  • Payroll issues

41
How will your new plan compare to your current
plan?
  • Everything you do in the interim period should
    focus on reaching goals in a consistent manner by
    12/31/2008
  • Plan design and documentation
  • Vendor selection
  • Compliance/administrative support
  • Employee communication

42
Questions?
Contact your retirement plan consultant WEA Trust
Member Benefits 1-800-279-4030
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