ERRP funds are going fast, but employers still have time to act

billion of the original $5 billion has now been paid out under the Early Retiree Reinsurance Program (ERRP), according to an article this month in Business Insurance. We’ve been watching the ERRP since its inception (posts 1, 2, 3, 4), and didn’t think the $5 billion allocation would last long. A July 2010 EBRI article […]Read More… from ERRP funds are going fast, but employers still have time to act

2011 IRS Pension Limits and Social Security Wage Base

The IRS just published the retirement plan limits for 2011.  Most of the limits for retirement plans are unchanged – again.  They’re the same as 2009 and 2010: Maximum annual pension plan benefit $195,000 Maximum annual addition for defined contribution plans 49,000 Maximum 401(k) elective deferral 16,500 Maximum catchup contribution (age 50 and over) 5,500 […]Read More… from 2011 IRS Pension Limits and Social Security Wage Base

Pension funding relief bill signed today

This just in:  President Obama signed the Preservation of Access to Care for Medicare Beneficiaries and Pension Relief Act today.   Title I of the Act is about Medicare physician reimbursements, and Title II is about pension funding relief. The funding relief is in the form of extended shortfall amortization periods.  Employers who choose to can […]Read More… from Pension funding relief bill signed today

Fixing a §401(a)(4) test failure

Our philosophy for coverage and nondiscrimination testing has always been “everything passes, some plans just take a little longer to prove it”. That was put to the test recently for one of our law firm clients:  an unusually young new partner was causing their  §401(a)(4) nondiscrimination test to fail.  We emptied the whole toolbox on […]Read More… from Fixing a §401(a)(4) test failure

Update: the retiree health reinsurance gold rush

Last week, the HHS published an interim final rule for the new Early Retiree Reinsurance Program (should we call it ERRP?). In our first post on this, we noted that a lot was still unknown.  There still is, but it’s becoming clearer. The White House fact sheet says “Employers can use the savings to either […]Read More… from Update: the retiree health reinsurance gold rush

Pre-funding OPEB liabilities

There’s a great article on funding OPEB liabilities by the MN State Auditor’s office.  It’s written for counties, but it applies as well to cities, school districts and other government employers in Minnesota. Whether or not to pre-fund OPEB liabilities isn’t a no-brainer.  It’s standard practice for public pensions, and it’s required for private pensions.  […]Read More… from Pre-funding OPEB liabilities

State-mandated implicit rate subsidies

Several states (Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana and Florida) have a “mandated” implicit rate subsidy.  That means almost every public-sector employer in these states has an OPEB liability. Each of these states has a statute that says public employers: must allow retirees to stay in the health plan until age 65, and can’t charge them any more […]Read More… from State-mandated implicit rate subsidies