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June 2002
Fiduciary Responsibility for
401(k) Plans
Many
people view plan documents as word processing forms, plan design as
"fill-in-the-blank," plan administration as pushing the right button on a
computer, and 401(k) investments as nothing more than a group of mutual funds.
Unfortunately, that viewpoint underestimates the difficulty (and the importance)
of properly designing and operating a 401(k) plan.
To
unlock the full value of a retirement plan, it must be designed to fit the
workforce and the budget of the sponsoring employer. The documents need to be
tailored to that design.
Finally, the plan's investments must be properly selected and monitored to
provide superior retirement benefits. These steps are critical for both legal
compliance and employee satisfaction.
In other words, quality advice and good
service can make a difference...and can help deliver a benefit that serves the
sponsor's needs and is appreciated by its employees.
The Fiduciary Requirement
However, it goes beyond that. ERISA imposes a fiduciary responsibility on
employers to prudently operate their plans and manage the investments. While
large companies have financial executives and in-house benefits staffs, small
and mid-sized companies must rely on outside help--from their plan
administrators and other advisors.
Employers are free to design their plans to accomplish their business
objectives--subject to the Internal Revenue Code's tax qualification rules.
However, once designed, plans must be operated under ERISA's fiduciary rules for
the exclusive benefit of the participating employees.
This
newsletter discusses some of ERISA's most important fiduciary rules:
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Who are the responsible fiduciaries?
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Selection and
monitoring of investments.
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Accurate and
complete administration.
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Reporting and
disclosure requirements.
Who Are the Responsible
Fiduciaries?
When
an employer establishes an ERISA plan, it is the initial fiduciary. The employer
needs to decide whether to appoint individuals or committees to be responsible
for those duties. If a plan committee is appointed, the committee members are
fiduciaries and must perform their duties under ERISA's "prudent expert"
standard. If the employer keeps some or all of those duties, its officers or
principals who perform those duties are ERISA fiduciaries.
Further, the appointment of a fiduciary is itself a fiduciary act. Therefore,
whoever appoints the officers or committee members has a duty to prudently
select those persons and to periodically review their work to make sure they are
doing their job. Typically, it is the Board of Directors or corporate president
who appoints the fiduciaries. As a result, the Board members or the president
are also fiduciaries.
In
order for the directors, officers and committee members to perform their duties
competently, they must know the answers to these questions:
As
fiduciaries, the officers, directors and committee members must perform their
duties in a knowledgeable, careful and skillful manner. Those duties include:
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Operating the plan according to its terms;
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Overseeing the plan's
investments;
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Making sure participants
receive the information required by ERISA; and
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Filing the necessary
government reports.
This
requires knowledge of the rules governing retirement plans and the technical
skills needed to comply with those laws. Fortunately, the fiduciaries can rely
on competent outside advisors--such as third party administrators--to help with
those jobs.
Selection and Monitoring of
Investments
The
selection of investments for participant-directed 401(k) plans requires that the
officers or committee members answer the following questions:
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Is each investment option prudent and suitable for the participants?
- Do the funds, in the aggregate,
constitute a broad range of investment options?
- Is the investment package suitable for
the abilities of the particular workforce--or, if not, can it be made so
through offering investment education or advice to the participants?
Fiduciaries have a duty to monitor the funds and to remove any funds that don't
perform well. Some investment providers (such as insurance companies, mutual
fund companies and banks) help fiduciaries by giving them performance, expense,
benchmark and other information and by removing under performing funds from
their investment packages.
Other advisors, such as investment consultants, can help the fiduciaries
evaluate the investments being offered to the participants.
Accurate and Complete
Administration
The
fiduciaries are responsible for overseeing the administration of the plan. The
fiduciaries need to understand the legal requirements for retirement plans and
to monitor compliance with those requirements. There are many aspects to plan
administration including:
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Enrolling and covering the right employees.
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Selection and monitoring of
the administration firm.
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Correction of problems.
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Handling IRS audits and DOL
investigations.
Enrolling and Covering the Right
Employees
Covering the right employees is essential to the proper administration of a
plan. Two important areas where employers need advice are:
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Is the plan sponsor a
member of a controlled group or affiliated service group, requiring that
employees of other companies be considered for testing or inclusion in the plan?
Are there other workers, such as temporary employees, leased employees or
misclassified independent contractors, who may be entitled to benefits under the
plan? Is the plan properly drafted
to exclude those workers if they are reclassified as common law employees?
Just
asking the questions, however, is not enough. The issues are fact-intensive and
the analysis is complex. For example, the analysis of a potential affiliated
service group--and its consequences and planning alternatives--requires
knowledge of Internal Revenue Code provisions, and an understanding of the
ownership of the entities and how they work together to provide their services
to their customers.
How
does a plan sponsor know to ask the right questions and, once asked, to analyze
the answers? The failure to do so
can result in disqualification of the plan or in a costly correction. In order
to identify and respond to those issues, plan sponsors need help from their
advisors.
Plan
sponsors face another important coverage issue--how to educate the employees
about the plan, the importance of making deferrals into the plan and the 401(k)
investment alternatives. Without participation by the rank-and-file employees
(or substantial contributions by the employer), the officers or principals of
the sponsor will be limited in their ability to defer and the value of the plan
will be diminished.
Employee participation is a function of thoughtful plan design, good
communication, quality investments and effective face-to-face enrollment
meetings. The plan fiduciaries should work with their advisors to make sure the
employees are given clear and thorough explanations of the requirements to
participate, the importance of deferring and the basics of investing.
Selection and Monitoring of the
Administration Firm
The
fiduciaries have a duty to prudently select and monitor the firm that provides
administrative services to their plan. The fiduciaries should ask these
questions:
Correction of Problems/Handling
IRS Audits and DOL Investigations
In a
perfect world, there would not be any problems. However, inevitably, problems do
occur. Employers and plan fiduciaries need help in correcting those problems.
Plans are regularly audited by the IRS and investigated by the DOL. While most
employers will only experience one or two government audits over the life of a
plan, administrators regularly help their plan sponsors respond to government
inquiries and to navigate through that difficult process. That experience can be
invaluable to a plan sponsor.
Other Administrative Issues
Other important administrative issues are:
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Who is responsible for making sure that "excess" amounts are not being
contributed to the plan--that is, amounts that violate the 415
limits on allocations, the 401(a)(17) limits on compensation, the 402(g) limits
on deferrals, and the ADP and ACP limits on deferrals and matches for highly
compensated employees? In addition,
if excess amounts are contributed, who decides on the best method of correction?
How is that decision made?
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Who determines eligibility of employees to participate in the plan?
If a mistake is made, how does it get corrected?
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What are the criteria for a hardship withdrawal?
What steps must the fiduciaries take to comply with the qualification
rules in approving a request for a hardship withdrawal?
A
plan sponsor should be able to rely on its administration firm to do most of
this work and to provide advice to the employer on the decisions it must make.
Satisfying the Reporting and
Disclosure Requirements
ERISA imposes a number of reporting and disclosure requirements on 401(k) plans.
For example, plan sponsors and fiduciaries must file an annual report, Form
5500, with the government each year. In addition, participants must be given
summary plan descriptions (SPDs), statements of material modifications (SMMs),
and summary annual reports (SARs) at specified times. Participants must be given
information about their benefits upon request and, if the plan wants 404(c)
fiduciary protection, participants are entitled to detailed information about
the plan and its investments. An ERISA fidelity bond must be obtained and, in
some circumstances, an independent CPA must audit a plan annually.
It
is almost impossible for small and mid-sized employers to know these rules. As a
result, plan sponsors need help in complying with the reporting and disclosure
requirements.
Conclusion
The administrative and investment duties of
employers and their fiduciaries are numerous and complex. The failure to comply
with ERISA's rules can result in penalties, government audits and even
liability. Fortunately, with help from competent, experienced advisors, ERISA
can be a map to compliance, rather than a trap for the unwary.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
If Qualified Plan Administrators,
Inc. may assist you in reviewing your current plan, or in establishing a new
plan, please contact Karen Dixon at 706-724-4557 or
803-252-0393.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
This publication is designed to
provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter
covered.
It is provided with the understanding that QPA, Inc. is not engaged in
rendering legal or accounting advice.
If legal or accounting advice is required, the services of a competent
professional person should be sought.
For additional questions, please call a QPA representative at 706-724-4557, fax
a note to 706-722-1208, or come by our office at 306 Sixth Street, Augusta, GA.
June
2002
© 2002 Benefit Insights,
Inc. All rights reserved
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