Where’s Waldo? (and Mary…and Joe…and Pat)
Every plan has participants—and, sooner or later, will therefore have “ex” participants—and sometimes those participants go…missing. And that can be a real problem for retirement plan fiduciaries.
While most are likely aware of the fiduciary obligation to keep accurate records, many are less aware that there is also an obligation to take “appropriate steps” to ensure that the participants and beneficiaries are paid their full benefits when due. But what are the “appropriate steps”?
Why It Matters
This is a growing concern of regulators; in fact, (now former) Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for the Employee Benefits Security Administration Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson has noted that,?“In fiscal year 2020 alone, EBSA’s investigators helped missing and nonresponsive participants recover benefits with a present value in excess of $1.4 billion.”
The good news is, the Labor Department has published some guidance on the subject—in fact, it’s a triple dose of guidance?related to helping retirement plan fiduciaries meet their obligations under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) to distribute retirement benefits to missing participants.
What You Can—and Should—Do
Plan fiduciaries will likely find most helpful the first document in the package. Titled “Missing Participants—Best Practices for Pension Plans,” the document outlines those key best practices that you will want to make sure are a part of your process in keeping up with those missing participants. Those best practices are outlined under four broad headings:?
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But the place you should probably start—and one cited in the Labor Department guidance—is the National Registry of Unclaimed Retirement Benefits. It is a free public service designed to help employers or plan fiduciaries and former employees locate each other so the former employees can claim their overlooked or abandoned retirement money.
What better way to not only find “Waldo,” but to ensure that your ex-participants are reunited with the benefits they have earned—to fulfill your responsibilities as a plan fiduciary—and to avoid potential issues with federal agencies down the road.
[i] There are some other good tips here: https://www.penchecks.com/what-to-do-with-missing-participants-and-required-minimum-distributions/???????
this post originally appeared here
Writer of case studies & articles | ERISA Translator | Savvy Plan Administrator | 401(k) | 403(b) | Cash Balance | SPDs | Plan Documents | EBP Audits | Forms 5500 | ERISA | DOL/IRS Regulations | Myron Floren wannabe ????
3 年Yes, missing participants cause a lot of headaches for plan sponsors and TPAs. Their missing status also creates problems when they're due small amount forced distributions, resulting in an uncashed check problem. Glad for every bit of guidance from Uncle Sam.
Retirement Plan Advisor, Working with sponsors as a Fiduciary, on all aspects of Pension Plans
3 年In the midst of it !
Director of Retirement Plan Services | Educator | Public Speaker | Fiduciary Advisor | Content Creator | Gordo
3 年This is one of those subjects that seems really boring right up until something goes wrong at which point it can become very exciting (not in a good way). Thanks for the insight Nevin Adams!