DoL Provides Relief on Form 5500 Reporting for 403(b)
Plans
July 20, 2009 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - The U.S.
Department of Labor, in Field Assistance Bulletin 2009-02 has
provided transitional relief for administrators of 403(b)
plans that make good faith efforts to transition for the 2009
plan year to the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act's generally applicable annual reporting
requirements.
The DoL said the relief is limited to the Form 5500
annual reporting requirements, including the requirement
for large plans to include as part of their annual report
the report of an independent qualified public accountant
(see
403(b) Plans to File Full Form 5500
).
Specifically, FAB 2009-02 provides that the
administrator of a 403(b) plan does not need to treat
annuity contracts and custodial accounts as part of the
employer's Title I plan or as plan assets for purposes
of ERISA's annual reporting requirements provided that:
-
the contract or account was issued to a current or
former employee before January 1, 2009;
-
the employer ceased to have any obligation to make
contributions (including employee salary reduction
contributions), and in fact ceased making contributions
to the contract or account before January 1,
2009;
-
all of the rights and benefits under the contract
or account are legally enforceable against the insurer
or custodian by the individual owner of the contract or
account without any involvement by the employer;
and
-
the individual owner of the contract is fully
vested in the contract or account.
In addition, the DoL said current or former employees
with only contracts or accounts that are excludable from
the plan's Form 5500 or Form 5500-SF under the above
transition relief do not need to be counted as participants
covered under the plan for Form 5500 annual reporting
purposes. The DoL also will not reject a Form 5500 on the
basis of a "qualified," "adverse" or disclaimed
opinion if the accountant expressly states that the sole
reason for such an opinion was because such pre-2009
contracts were not covered by the audit or included in the
plan's financial statements.
The Labor Department said it generally finds
unacceptable and rejects Form 5500 filings with adverse,
qualified or disclaimer opinions, which the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) said its
members may do in the case of 403(b) plan filings.
Following passage of new 403(b) regulations in July
2007, the DoL separately published Form 5500 revisions and
related final regulations generally effective for plan
years beginning on or after January 1, 2009. Some plan
administrators expressed concern that the historical
treatment of 403(b) plans as a collection of individual
contracts with respect to which employees could engage in a
range of actions without the consent or involvement of an
employer or plan administrator could make it costly, and in
some cases impossible, to identify and obtain financial
information about certain pre-2009 contracts and custodial
accounts to which the employer is no longer making employer
contributions or forwarding employee salary reduction
contributions.
The FAB said employers and investment providers have
noted in particular that in many cases they would not be
able to obtain the information necessary to include these
contracts and accounts in the expanded Form 5500 required
for 403(b) plans beginning with the 2009 plan year (see
Providers Need More Time and Guidance for
Form 5500 Rules
). Moreover, even in cases where some annual reporting with
respect to the contracts would be possible, the compliance
efforts involved would be substantial and expensive.
FAB 2009-02 is
here
.
Rebecca Moore
editors@plansponsor.com