Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy; Retiree Health Policy, 72841-72844 [E8-28325]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 231 / Monday, December 1, 2008 / Notices
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: The total respondent burden
is approximately 13,260 hours.
If additional information is required
contact: Lynn Bryant, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, United States
Department of Justice, Patrick Henry
Building, Suite 1600, 601 D Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: November 25, 2008.
Lynn Bryant,
Department Clearance Officer, PRA, United
States Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. E8–28477 Filed 11–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Office of Justice Programs
[OMB Number 1121–0184]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comments Requested
30-day Notice of Information
Collection Under Review: School Crime
Supplement (SCS) to the National Crime
Victimization Survey (NCVS).
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ACTION:
The Department of Justice (DOJ),
Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of
Justice Statistics will be submitting the
following information collection request
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. The proposed
information collection is published to
obtain comments from the public and
affected agencies. This proposed
information collection was previously
published in the Federal Register
Volume 73, Number 186, page 55134 on
September 24, 2008, allowing for a 60
day comment period.
The purpose of this notice is to allow
for an additional 30 days for public
comment until December 31, 2008. This
process is conducted in accordance with
5 CFR 1320.10.
Written comments and/or suggestions
regarding the items contained in this
notice, especially the estimated public
burden and associated response time,
should be directed to the Office of
Management and Budget, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attention Department of Justice Desk
Officer, Washington, DC 20503.
Additionally, comments may be
submitted to OMB via facsimile to (202)
395–5806. Written comments and
suggestions from the public and affected
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agencies concerning the proposed
collection of information are
encouraged. Your comments should
address one or more of the following
four points:
—Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
—Evaluate the accuracy of the agencies
estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
—Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
—Minimize the burden of the collection
of information on those who are to
respond, including through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms
of information technology, e.g.,
permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Overview of This Information
(1) Type of information collection:
Reinstatement, without change, of a
previously approved collection for
which approval has expired.
(2) Title of the Form/Collection:
School Crime Supplement (SCS) to the
National Crime Victimization Survey.
(3) Agency form number, if any, and
the applicable component of the
department sponsoring the collection:
SCS–1. Bureau of Justice Statistics,
Office of Justice Programs, Department
of Justice.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract. Primary: Persons ages 12 to 18
in NCVS sampled households in the
United States. The School Crime
Supplement (SCS) to the National Crime
Victimization Survey collects, analyzes,
publishes, and disseminates statistics on
the prevalence, economic cost, and
consequences of identity theft on
victims.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond/reply: Approximately 9,445
persons ages 12 to 18 will complete an
SCS interview. We estimate the average
length of the ITS interview for these
individuals will be 0.167 hours (10
minutes).
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: The total respondent burden
is approximately 1,577 hours.
If additional information is required
contact: Lynn Bryant, Department
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Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, Patrick Henry Building,
Suite 1600, 601 D Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: November 24, 2008.
Lynn Bryant,
Department Clearance Officer, PRA, United
States Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. E8–28390 Filed 11–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Policy; Retiree Health Policy
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, DOL.
ACTION: Request for information.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document requests
information from the public to assist the
Department of Labor in studying and
understanding the role of Voluntary
Employees’ Beneficiary Associations in
providing health and welfare benefits to
retired workers in the United States.
DATES: Written or electronic responses
must be submitted to the Department of
Labor on or before December 31, 2008.
Responses: To facilitate the receipt
and processing of responses, OASP
encourages interested persons to submit
their responses electronically to https://
www.regulations.gov. Persons
submitting responses electronically
should not submit paper copies. Persons
interested in submitting written
responses on paper should send or
deliver their responses (preferably, at
least three copies) to the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Policy, Frances
Perkins Building, 200 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Room S–2312,
Washington, DC 20210. All written
responses will be available to the
public, without change, online at
llllll.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathleen Franks, Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Room S–2312, U.S.
Department of Labor, Washington, DC
20210, telephone (202) 693–5959. This
is not a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
An important goal of the Department
of Labor (the Department or DOL) is to
advance the public’s knowledge and
understanding of retirement savings and
health benefits and their critical
importance to the future well-being of
workers and their families. The
Employee Benefits Research Institute
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(EBRI), a major industry funded
research group, recently reported in its
2008 Retirement Confidence Survey
(RCS), that health care costs have
become an important issue for retirees,
with almost half of retirees saying they
have spent more than expected on
health care expenses.1 The EBRI survey
found that 34 percent of all workers
now expect to have access to employersponsored health insurance in
retirement, down 8 percentage points
from 2007. The survey also found that,
although 41 percent of retirees say they
currently have access to health
insurance through a former employer,
many employers are eliminating health
care coverage for future retirees. A key
policy question, therefore, is how to
better help employers and employees
prepare for post-retirement health care
costs.
In 1928, the Internal Revenue Code
(the Code) was amended to provide taxexempt status for a Voluntary
Employees’ Beneficiary Association
(VEBA). VEBAs are one way that
employers can fund and pay for welfare
benefits for their employees. The federal
government primarily regulates VEBAs
through the Code, U.S. Department of
the Treasury (Treasury) regulations, and
DOL regulations related to the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act
(ERISA). Section 501(c)(9) of the Code
defines a VEBA as an association
organized to pay life, sick, accident, and
similar benefits to members or their
dependents, or designated beneficiaries.
Typically established as a trust, the
VEBA uses its assets to pay eligible
benefits under a plan. Employer
contributions to a VEBA for retiree
health coverage may be excludable from
an employee’s gross income under
section 106 of the Code. Retiree health
benefits paid from a VEBA are generally
excludable from retirees’ gross income
under section 105(b) of the Code and a
VEBA’s income is generally exempt
from taxation.2 To qualify as a VEBA, an
association must meet, among other
requirements, the following
requirements under Section 501(c) (9) of
1 See EBRI Issue Brief No. 316, The 2008
Retirement Confidence Survey: Americans Much
More Worried about Retirement, Health Costs a Big
Concern (April 2008), available at https://
www.ebri.org.
2 However, a VEBA’s income, including income
on amounts set aside for post-retirement medical
benefits, might be subject to unrelated business
income tax. See sections 511 and 512 of the Code
and Treasury regulations at 26 CFR 1.512(a)–5T,
Q&A–3. Finally, the Code provides guidance
regarding the type of health benefits that may be
received by employees and retirees on a tax-free
basis.
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the Code and Treasury regulations at 26
CFR Section 1.501(c) (9)–1:
(a) It must be an employees’
association;
(b) Membership in the association
must be voluntary; 3
(c) The organization must provide for
payment of life, sick, accident, or other
benefits to its members or their
dependents or designated beneficiaries,
and substantially all of its operations
must be in furtherance of providing
such benefits; and
(d) No part of the net earnings of the
organization may inure, by other than
by the payment of benefits referred to in
paragraph (c) above, to the benefit of
any private shareholder or individual.
The membership of a Section
501(c)(9) VEBA must consist of
individuals who are employees with an
employment-related common bond.
This common bond may be a common
employer or affiliated employers,
coverage under one or more collective
bargaining agreements, membership in a
labor union, or membership in one or
more locals of a national or
international labor union. Thus, a VEBA
can fund benefits for employees and
retirees of a single employer or, in
certain cases, for a group of employers.
A trust does not satisfy the
requirements for VEBA status under
Section 501(c)(9) of the Code unless it
gives timely notice to the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) that it is applying
for recognition of such status,4 and
receives such recognition from IRS. In
addition, a VEBA must meet certain
nondiscrimination requirements under
Section 505 of the Code, unless it is part
of a plan maintained pursuant to a
collective bargaining agreement and the
plan was the subject of good faith
bargaining between employee
representatives and employers.5
B. Laws Regulating VEBAs
A VEBA that is part of a private sector
employee welfare benefit plan must also
adhere to the fiduciary, annual
reporting, disclosure and other
requirements of ERISA, which are
administered by the Department’s
3 Although membership in a VEBA must be
voluntary for the participating employees, an
association is considered voluntary although
membership is required of all employees, provided
that the employees do not incur a detriment (for
example, in the form of deductions from pay) as a
result of membership in the association. Nor will
an employer be deemed to have imposed
involuntary membership on an employee if
membership is required as the result of a collective
bargaining agreement or as an incident of
membership in a labor organization.
4 IRS Form 1024 is used for this purpose. See 26
CFR 1.501(a)–1(a)(2), 1.505(c)–1T.
5 For other rules regarding VEBAs, see generally
26 CFR 1.501(c)(9)–2 through 1.501(c )(9)–9.
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Employee Benefit Security
Administration (EBSA). Persons
responsible for investment and
management of the VEBA’s assets are
fiduciaries, and must comply with
ERISA’s general prudence and
prohibited transaction provisions. The
employee welfare benefit plans funded
by a VEBA generally must also file an
annual Form 5500 financial report. If
the plan has 100 or more participants,
the annual report must include an audit
report prepared by an independent
qualified public accountant.
Pursuant to ERISA’s annual reporting
requirements, the audit report must
comply with American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (AICPA),
Statement of Position (SOP) 92–6,
Accounting and Reporting by Health
and Welfare Benefit Plans, which
governs employee benefit plan’s
accounting for post-retirement benefits
other than pensions. SOP 92–6 was
issued in August 1992 and generally
became effective for single-employer
plans for plan years beginning after
December 15, 1992.6 Employer
accounting for postretirement benefits
other than pensions must comply with
Financial Accounting Standard Number
106 (FAS 106), Employers’ Accounting
for Postretirement Benefits Other Than
Pensions. FAS 106 was issued in
December 1990 and became mandatory
for most employers for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 1992.7
ERISA does not impose an explicit
requirement on employers or on unions
to fund VEBAs, nor does it outline any
rules for determining what a ‘‘proper’’
level of funding for a VEBA would be.
Rather, employer contributions to
VEBAs are generally made either on a
contractual basis or at the employer’s
discretion.8 Some VEBAs are
established based on a collective
bargaining agreement requiring the
employer to make a substantial initial
payment and then much smaller, if any,
6 SOP 92–6 was subsequently amended by
Statement of Position 01–02, issued in April 2001.
SOP 01–02 clarifies some of the disclosures
required by SOP 92–6.
7 FAS 106 was amended by the issuance of FAS
132, Employers’ Disclosures about Pensions and
Other Postretirement Benefits, issued in February
1998, which revised employers’ disclosures about
pension and other postretirement benefit plans.
8 Sections 419 and 419A of the Code, which set
forth specific rules regarding the amount and timing
of employer deductions for contributions to VEBAs
and other welfare benefit funds, were enacted in
DEFRA, in response to concerns with abuses of
VEBAs and other welfare benefit funds. DEFRA also
added Code section 512(a)(3), which contains
special rules for computing the unrelated business
taxable income of a VEBA, and section 4976, which
provides for an excise tax on certain benefits paid
from welfare benefit funds (including VEBAs) and
on reversions to the benefit of the employer of any
portion of a welfare benefit fund.
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additional payments thereafter. These
funds are invested, and some
combination of the initial assets and the
returns on the investments are then
used to pay benefits over time.
Naturally, the size of the initial
payment, the returns on the
investments, and the level of benefits
provided will have major impacts on the
VEBA’s ability to pay for benefits over
the long-term.
Depending on the purpose of a VEBA
with fixed initial assets, the fiduciaries
charged with administering the
employee welfare benefit plan may be
faced with difficult choices. Unless the
VEBA’s investment returns cover all the
costs incurred by the VEBA for payment
of benefits and administration, the
assets of the VEBA will diminish over
time, and eventually the VEBA may be
unable to continue to pay the plan
benefits. Thus, depending on its level of
initial funding, a plan funded solely
through a diminishing-asset VEBA faces
a potential trade-off between the level of
health benefits secured by the VEBA
and the length of time that the plan will
be able to continue to provide benefits.
This could result in conflicting interests
between older participants, who may be
primarily interested in maximizing the
value of short-term benefits, and
younger participants, who may have a
greater interest in maximizing the
number of years that the plan is able to
provide benefits. When considering this
trade-off, plan participants should be
aware that, even in an apparently wellfunded VEBA, investment risks and
other cost factors may affect the VEBA’s
financial condition and may, in some
cases, necessitate that plan benefits be
substantially reduced.
C. The Department’s Observations on
VEBAs
The Department has observed that
employers, particularly large employers
with unionized workforces, are
increasingly exploring the financial, tax
and accounting advantages of
transferring retiree health liabilities to a
stand-alone VEBA not managed or
controlled by the employer. Most
notably, recent agreements between
several automobile manufacturers and
the United Auto Workers (UAW) union
have called for the establishment of
stand-alone VEBAs to fund retiree
health care liabilities. These VEBAs
were formed pursuant to settlements
resolving long-standing disputes
between the UAW and the auto makers
regarding the extent to which the auto
makers had a legal obligation to
continue to provide health care benefits
to retired workers. The settlements call
for the new VEBAs to be funded with
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tens of billions of dollars in assets
transferred from the automobile
manufacturers. Both the investment
strategies for the VEBAs and the level of
benefits paid by the plans funded
through the VEBAs will be set by an
eleven member board of which five are
appointed by the UAW, and the other
six individuals selected initially by the
judge approving the settlement. Under
the terms of the settlement agreement, a
candidate for a vacancy among the six
non-UAW-selected board positions
would be selected by a favorable vote of
nine of the existing board members with
arbitration available in the event of
deadlock, giving the UAW-selected
members substantial control over the
process.
The Department reviewed documents
that were publicly disclosed during the
litigation and discussed the formation of
the VEBAs with the parties. Some of the
specific concerns raised by the
Department were whether the
investment expectations that had been
used to calculate the VEBAs’ longevity
were set at unrealistically high levels,
and whether the projected cost of
providing benefits was set too low. The
Department was also concerned that the
plan documents did not provide the
trustees with any guidance on how, in
the exercise of their fiduciary duties,
they should resolve the inherent conflict
of interest between older workers, who
might prefer higher benefit levels even
if those higher benefits exhaust the
VEBAs more quickly, and younger
workers, who might prefer somewhat
lower benefits if that meant that the
benefits would be available over a
longer period of time. As a result of
these discussions, the parties agreed to
make available to the beneficiaries and
other interested members of the public
more financial information about the
VEBAs, including more information
about the various financial and actuarial
assumptions behind the VEBAs. The
parties also agreed to a modification in
the trust agreement governing the
VEBAs to clarify the intent of the parties
and provide guidance to the fiduciary
Committee members that ‘‘[i]n
exercising its authority over benefit
design, the Committee shall be guided
by the principle that the Plans should
provide substantial health benefits for
the duration of the lives of all
participants and beneficiaries.’’
The Department is interested in
learning whether broader changes in the
labor market may result in changes in
retiree health plan offerings and how
VEBAs can play a role in
accommodating those changes.
Examples of these changes may include
the aging of the labor force and
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increasing number of retirees, the
increasing concentration of employment
in the service sector, and changes in
skill, productivity, and compensation
patterns. The labor market may be
affected by increases in the cost and
utilization of health care, and by global
competition facing plan sponsors.
Changes in the labor markets, including
effects on retirement ages, labor force
participation, career patterns, and the
way in which workers are compensated,
may ultimately affect group and
individual health insurance markets,
government programs, and the demand
for health care goods and services.
Recent regulatory changes which will
allow employers to coordinate retiree
health benefits with Medicare for
Medicare-eligible retirees may also spur
interest in how plans funded by VEBAs
can be used to provide retirees health
care coverage that ‘‘bridges’’ the gap
between retirement and eligibility for
Medicare or cover additional expenses
not covered by Medicare. Specifically, a
final rule published by the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) in December 2007 permits
employers to create, adopt or maintain
a wide range of retiree health plan
designs that provide different coverage
for retirees age 65 and over without
violating the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act. The rule also allows
unions to negotiate for health benefits
that coordinate with Medicare.9
Finally, the Department is aware of
recent research on VEBAs that has
highlighted the benefits from VEBAs to
employers and employees, and that
suggests that VEBAs may be a desirable
option for them. One recent study, by
the Segal Company, entitled Study of
Retiree Health VEBAs, examined 25
stand-alone VEBAs in the
manufacturing, retail or transportation
industries (Segal Study).10 According to
the Segal Study, VEBAs can provide
security for current and future retirees
by setting aside funds for retiree benefits
that cannot be used for other corporate
purposes. It also noted that VEBAs are
a vehicle for an employer to remove
FAS 106 liability from its financial
statements, and that employers can fund
the trust through a variety of
mechanisms, including cash, company
9 See EEOC Final Rule under 29 CFR Parts 1625
and 1627 on Age Discrimination in Employment
Act and Retiree Health Benefits, 72 Fed. Reg. 72938
(Dec. 26, 2007).
10 https://www.segalco.com/publications/
surveysandstudies/2008VEBAs.pdf. For another
synopsis of the Segal Study, see Wohl, Under the
Hood: After Acceptance from UAW, VEBAs Get a
Closer Look, Employee Benefits News (March 2008)
(available at ebn.benefitnews.com/asset/article/
547851/under-hood-after-acceptance-uawvebas.html?pg=).
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stock, or other assets. The Segal Study
further pointed out that VEBAs may
allow unions and retirees more input
into benefit levels and contributions
because they may have seats on the
VEBA’s board of trustees or other
governing body. On the other hand, the
Segal Study suggested that it is not
possible for VEBAs to guarantee a set
level of benefits far into the future, or to
provide retirees with protection from
investment risk, because the financial
condition of the trust may be adversely
affected by unpredictable risks,
downturns in the market, or health care
cost increases.
Another study, the Mercer 2007
National Survey of Employer-Sponsored
Health Plans (Mercer Study), found that
among employers with 500 or more
employees that offer retiree health
insurance, 11 percent use a VEBA to
fund it, and an additional 5 percent are
considering using one. The Mercer
Study also determined that VEBA use is
most common among the largest retiree
health sponsors (28 percent of those
with 10,000 or more employees) and
those in the transportationcommunications-utilities industry group
(38 percent), followed by the financial
services (19 percent) and manufacturing
(13 percent) industry groups.11
Finally, a recent paper by Aaron
Bernstein entitled ‘‘Can VEBAs
Alleviate Retiree Health Care
Problems?,’’ published as part of the
Harvard Law School Pensions and
Capital Stewardship Project Labor and
Worklife Program, examined VEBAs in
the context of declining retiree health
coverage and discussed the ways that
VEBAs could help union and nonunion
employees in both the private and
public sector.12
D. Request for Information
The purpose of this notice is to obtain
information to assist the Department in
studying and understanding the role of
VEBAs in providing health and welfare
benefits to retired workers in the United
States. In order to assist interested
parties in responding, this document
contains a list of specific areas of
interest. The Department recognizes that
these areas of interest may not address
all relevant issues. Accordingly,
interested parties are invited to submit
comments on other issues that they
believe are pertinent.
1. What economic and demographic
forces are driving changes in retiree
health plan offerings and VEBA use?
11 See
https://www.mercer.com/
referencecontent.jhtml?idContent=1287790
12 The article is available at: https://
www.law.harvard.edu/programs/lwp/
occasionalpapers_Ap9_.
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2. What are the consequences to
employees, employers, and the public of
increasing VEBA use by employers to
fund retiree health benefits?
3. Is there a need for changes in
ERISA or in the Department’s ERISA
regulations to better govern the
administration of VEBAs?
4. Should VEBAs that are larger,
whether in terms of assets, number of
beneficiaries, or both, be subject to
different regulatory requirements than
smaller VEBAs?
5. Aside from the general fiduciary
obligations imposed by ERISA, should
other requirements be imposed on
VEBA governance structure to better
protect the economic interests of
participants?
6. Should plan documents for VEBAs
be required to provide fiduciaries
guidelines on benefit payments to help
the fiduciaries resolve any conflicts of
interest that may develop between
participants at different life cycle
stages?
7. Should the law require that
participants in plans funded by VEBAs
must be provided with actuarial
information indicating the potential
range of benefits the plan is likely to be
able to provide, taking into account
potential future benefits, investment
returns, and changes in the cost of
health benefits?
Leon R. Sequeira,
Assistant Secretary for Policy.
[FR Doc. E8–28325 Filed 11–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–23–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
[TA-W–63,957]
Phillips Plastics Corporation, Precision
Decorating Facility, Including On-Site
Leased Workers From Manpower,
Medford, WI; Amended Certification
Regarding Eligibility To Apply for
Worker Adjustment Assistance and
Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance
In accordance with Section 223 of the
Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2273), and
Section 246 of the Trade Act of 1974 (26
U.S.C. 2813), as amended, the
Department of Labor issued a
Certification of Eligibility To Apply for
Worker Adjustment Assistance and
Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance on October 31, 2008,
applicable to workers of Phillips
Plastics Corporation, Precision
Decorating Facility, Medford,
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Wisconsin. The notice was published in
the Federal Register on November 13,
2008 (73 FR 67209).
At the request of the State agency and
the petitioners, the Department
reviewed the certification for workers of
the subject firm. The workers are
engaged in the production of interior
automotive plastics (i.e. automotive
radio faceplates, heater control
faceplates and buttons and window
switches).
New information shows that workers
leased from Manpower were employed
on-site at the Medford, Wisconsin
location of Phillips Plastics Corporation,
Precision Decorating Facility. The
Department has determined that these
workers were sufficiently under the
control of Phillips Plastics Corporation,
Precision Decorating Facility to be
considered leased workers.
Based on these findings, the
Department is amending this
certification to include workers leased
from Manpower working on-site at the
Medford, Wisconsin location of the
subject firm.
The intent of the Department’s
certification is to include all workers
employed at Phillips Plastics
Corporation, Precision Decorating
Facility, Medford, Wisconsin who were
adversely affected by increased imports
of interior automotive plastics (i.e.,
automotive radio faceplates, heater
control faceplates and buttons and wind
switches).
The amended notice applicable to
TA–W–63,957 is hereby issued as
follows:
’’All workers of Phillips Plastics
Corporation, Precision Decorating Facility,
including on-site leased workers from
Manpower, Medford, Wisconsin, who
became totally or partially separated from
employment on or after July 27, 2007,
through October 31, 2010, are eligible to
apply for adjustment assistance under
Section 223 of the Trade Act of 1974, and are
also eligible to apply for alternative trade
adjustment assistance under Section 246 of
the Trade Act of 1974.’’
Signed at Washington, DC, this 18th day of
November 2008.
Richard Church,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E8–28360 Filed 11–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 231 (Monday, December 1, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 72841-72844]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-28325]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy; Retiree Health
Policy
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy, DOL.
ACTION: Request for information.
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SUMMARY: This document requests information from the public to assist
the Department of Labor in studying and understanding the role of
Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Associations in providing health and
welfare benefits to retired workers in the United States.
DATES: Written or electronic responses must be submitted to the
Department of Labor on or before December 31, 2008.
Responses: To facilitate the receipt and processing of responses,
OASP encourages interested persons to submit their responses
electronically to https://www.regulations.gov. Persons submitting
responses electronically should not submit paper copies. Persons
interested in submitting written responses on paper should send or
deliver their responses (preferably, at least three copies) to the
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Frances Perkins Building,
200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Room S-2312, Washington, DC 20210. All
written responses will be available to the public, without change,
online at ------------.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kathleen Franks, Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Policy, Room S-2312, U.S. Department of Labor,
Washington, DC 20210, telephone (202) 693-5959. This is not a toll-free
number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
An important goal of the Department of Labor (the Department or
DOL) is to advance the public's knowledge and understanding of
retirement savings and health benefits and their critical importance to
the future well-being of workers and their families. The Employee
Benefits Research Institute
[[Page 72842]]
(EBRI), a major industry funded research group, recently reported in
its 2008 Retirement Confidence Survey (RCS), that health care costs
have become an important issue for retirees, with almost half of
retirees saying they have spent more than expected on health care
expenses.\1\ The EBRI survey found that 34 percent of all workers now
expect to have access to employer-sponsored health insurance in
retirement, down 8 percentage points from 2007. The survey also found
that, although 41 percent of retirees say they currently have access to
health insurance through a former employer, many employers are
eliminating health care coverage for future retirees. A key policy
question, therefore, is how to better help employers and employees
prepare for post-retirement health care costs.
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\1\ See EBRI Issue Brief No. 316, The 2008 Retirement Confidence
Survey: Americans Much More Worried about Retirement, Health Costs a
Big Concern (April 2008), available at https://www.ebri.org.
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In 1928, the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) was amended to
provide tax-exempt status for a Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary
Association (VEBA). VEBAs are one way that employers can fund and pay
for welfare benefits for their employees. The federal government
primarily regulates VEBAs through the Code, U.S. Department of the
Treasury (Treasury) regulations, and DOL regulations related to the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). Section 501(c)(9) of
the Code defines a VEBA as an association organized to pay life, sick,
accident, and similar benefits to members or their dependents, or
designated beneficiaries. Typically established as a trust, the VEBA
uses its assets to pay eligible benefits under a plan. Employer
contributions to a VEBA for retiree health coverage may be excludable
from an employee's gross income under section 106 of the Code. Retiree
health benefits paid from a VEBA are generally excludable from
retirees' gross income under section 105(b) of the Code and a VEBA's
income is generally exempt from taxation.\2\ To qualify as a VEBA, an
association must meet, among other requirements, the following
requirements under Section 501(c) (9) of the Code and Treasury
regulations at 26 CFR Section 1.501(c) (9)-1:
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\2\ However, a VEBA's income, including income on amounts set
aside for post-retirement medical benefits, might be subject to
unrelated business income tax. See sections 511 and 512 of the Code
and Treasury regulations at 26 CFR 1.512(a)-5T, Q&A-3. Finally, the
Code provides guidance regarding the type of health benefits that
may be received by employees and retirees on a tax-free basis.
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(a) It must be an employees' association;
(b) Membership in the association must be voluntary; \3\
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\3\ Although membership in a VEBA must be voluntary for the
participating employees, an association is considered voluntary
although membership is required of all employees, provided that the
employees do not incur a detriment (for example, in the form of
deductions from pay) as a result of membership in the association.
Nor will an employer be deemed to have imposed involuntary
membership on an employee if membership is required as the result of
a collective bargaining agreement or as an incident of membership in
a labor organization.
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(c) The organization must provide for payment of life, sick,
accident, or other benefits to its members or their dependents or
designated beneficiaries, and substantially all of its operations must
be in furtherance of providing such benefits; and
(d) No part of the net earnings of the organization may inure, by
other than by the payment of benefits referred to in paragraph (c)
above, to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual.
The membership of a Section 501(c)(9) VEBA must consist of
individuals who are employees with an employment-related common bond.
This common bond may be a common employer or affiliated employers,
coverage under one or more collective bargaining agreements, membership
in a labor union, or membership in one or more locals of a national or
international labor union. Thus, a VEBA can fund benefits for employees
and retirees of a single employer or, in certain cases, for a group of
employers.
A trust does not satisfy the requirements for VEBA status under
Section 501(c)(9) of the Code unless it gives timely notice to the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that it is applying for recognition of
such status,\4\ and receives such recognition from IRS. In addition, a
VEBA must meet certain nondiscrimination requirements under Section 505
of the Code, unless it is part of a plan maintained pursuant to a
collective bargaining agreement and the plan was the subject of good
faith bargaining between employee representatives and employers.\5\
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\4\ IRS Form 1024 is used for this purpose. See 26 CFR 1.501(a)-
1(a)(2), 1.505(c)-1T.
\5\ For other rules regarding VEBAs, see generally 26 CFR
1.501(c)(9)-2 through 1.501(c )(9)-9.
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B. Laws Regulating VEBAs
A VEBA that is part of a private sector employee welfare benefit
plan must also adhere to the fiduciary, annual reporting, disclosure
and other requirements of ERISA, which are administered by the
Department's Employee Benefit Security Administration (EBSA). Persons
responsible for investment and management of the VEBA's assets are
fiduciaries, and must comply with ERISA's general prudence and
prohibited transaction provisions. The employee welfare benefit plans
funded by a VEBA generally must also file an annual Form 5500 financial
report. If the plan has 100 or more participants, the annual report
must include an audit report prepared by an independent qualified
public accountant.
Pursuant to ERISA's annual reporting requirements, the audit report
must comply with American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
(AICPA), Statement of Position (SOP) 92-6, Accounting and Reporting by
Health and Welfare Benefit Plans, which governs employee benefit plan's
accounting for post-retirement benefits other than pensions. SOP 92-6
was issued in August 1992 and generally became effective for single-
employer plans for plan years beginning after December 15, 1992.\6\
Employer accounting for postretirement benefits other than pensions
must comply with Financial Accounting Standard Number 106 (FAS 106),
Employers' Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions.
FAS 106 was issued in December 1990 and became mandatory for most
employers for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1992.\7\
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\6\ SOP 92-6 was subsequently amended by Statement of Position
01-02, issued in April 2001. SOP 01-02 clarifies some of the
disclosures required by SOP 92-6.
\7\ FAS 106 was amended by the issuance of FAS 132, Employers'
Disclosures about Pensions and Other Postretirement Benefits, issued
in February 1998, which revised employers' disclosures about pension
and other postretirement benefit plans.
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ERISA does not impose an explicit requirement on employers or on
unions to fund VEBAs, nor does it outline any rules for determining
what a ``proper'' level of funding for a VEBA would be. Rather,
employer contributions to VEBAs are generally made either on a
contractual basis or at the employer's discretion.\8\ Some VEBAs are
established based on a collective bargaining agreement requiring the
employer to make a substantial initial payment and then much smaller,
if any,
[[Page 72843]]
additional payments thereafter. These funds are invested, and some
combination of the initial assets and the returns on the investments
are then used to pay benefits over time. Naturally, the size of the
initial payment, the returns on the investments, and the level of
benefits provided will have major impacts on the VEBA's ability to pay
for benefits over the long-term.
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\8\ Sections 419 and 419A of the Code, which set forth specific
rules regarding the amount and timing of employer deductions for
contributions to VEBAs and other welfare benefit funds, were enacted
in DEFRA, in response to concerns with abuses of VEBAs and other
welfare benefit funds. DEFRA also added Code section 512(a)(3),
which contains special rules for computing the unrelated business
taxable income of a VEBA, and section 4976, which provides for an
excise tax on certain benefits paid from welfare benefit funds
(including VEBAs) and on reversions to the benefit of the employer
of any portion of a welfare benefit fund.
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Depending on the purpose of a VEBA with fixed initial assets, the
fiduciaries charged with administering the employee welfare benefit
plan may be faced with difficult choices. Unless the VEBA's investment
returns cover all the costs incurred by the VEBA for payment of
benefits and administration, the assets of the VEBA will diminish over
time, and eventually the VEBA may be unable to continue to pay the plan
benefits. Thus, depending on its level of initial funding, a plan
funded solely through a diminishing-asset VEBA faces a potential trade-
off between the level of health benefits secured by the VEBA and the
length of time that the plan will be able to continue to provide
benefits. This could result in conflicting interests between older
participants, who may be primarily interested in maximizing the value
of short-term benefits, and younger participants, who may have a
greater interest in maximizing the number of years that the plan is
able to provide benefits. When considering this trade-off, plan
participants should be aware that, even in an apparently well-funded
VEBA, investment risks and other cost factors may affect the VEBA's
financial condition and may, in some cases, necessitate that plan
benefits be substantially reduced.
C. The Department's Observations on VEBAs
The Department has observed that employers, particularly large
employers with unionized workforces, are increasingly exploring the
financial, tax and accounting advantages of transferring retiree health
liabilities to a stand-alone VEBA not managed or controlled by the
employer. Most notably, recent agreements between several automobile
manufacturers and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union have called for
the establishment of stand-alone VEBAs to fund retiree health care
liabilities. These VEBAs were formed pursuant to settlements resolving
long-standing disputes between the UAW and the auto makers regarding
the extent to which the auto makers had a legal obligation to continue
to provide health care benefits to retired workers. The settlements
call for the new VEBAs to be funded with tens of billions of dollars in
assets transferred from the automobile manufacturers. Both the
investment strategies for the VEBAs and the level of benefits paid by
the plans funded through the VEBAs will be set by an eleven member
board of which five are appointed by the UAW, and the other six
individuals selected initially by the judge approving the settlement.
Under the terms of the settlement agreement, a candidate for a vacancy
among the six non-UAW-selected board positions would be selected by a
favorable vote of nine of the existing board members with arbitration
available in the event of deadlock, giving the UAW-selected members
substantial control over the process.
The Department reviewed documents that were publicly disclosed
during the litigation and discussed the formation of the VEBAs with the
parties. Some of the specific concerns raised by the Department were
whether the investment expectations that had been used to calculate the
VEBAs' longevity were set at unrealistically high levels, and whether
the projected cost of providing benefits was set too low. The
Department was also concerned that the plan documents did not provide
the trustees with any guidance on how, in the exercise of their
fiduciary duties, they should resolve the inherent conflict of interest
between older workers, who might prefer higher benefit levels even if
those higher benefits exhaust the VEBAs more quickly, and younger
workers, who might prefer somewhat lower benefits if that meant that
the benefits would be available over a longer period of time. As a
result of these discussions, the parties agreed to make available to
the beneficiaries and other interested members of the public more
financial information about the VEBAs, including more information about
the various financial and actuarial assumptions behind the VEBAs. The
parties also agreed to a modification in the trust agreement governing
the VEBAs to clarify the intent of the parties and provide guidance to
the fiduciary Committee members that ``[i]n exercising its authority
over benefit design, the Committee shall be guided by the principle
that the Plans should provide substantial health benefits for the
duration of the lives of all participants and beneficiaries.''
The Department is interested in learning whether broader changes in
the labor market may result in changes in retiree health plan offerings
and how VEBAs can play a role in accommodating those changes. Examples
of these changes may include the aging of the labor force and
increasing number of retirees, the increasing concentration of
employment in the service sector, and changes in skill, productivity,
and compensation patterns. The labor market may be affected by
increases in the cost and utilization of health care, and by global
competition facing plan sponsors. Changes in the labor markets,
including effects on retirement ages, labor force participation, career
patterns, and the way in which workers are compensated, may ultimately
affect group and individual health insurance markets, government
programs, and the demand for health care goods and services.
Recent regulatory changes which will allow employers to coordinate
retiree health benefits with Medicare for Medicare-eligible retirees
may also spur interest in how plans funded by VEBAs can be used to
provide retirees health care coverage that ``bridges'' the gap between
retirement and eligibility for Medicare or cover additional expenses
not covered by Medicare. Specifically, a final rule published by the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in December 2007 permits
employers to create, adopt or maintain a wide range of retiree health
plan designs that provide different coverage for retirees age 65 and
over without violating the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. The
rule also allows unions to negotiate for health benefits that
coordinate with Medicare.\9\
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\9\ See EEOC Final Rule under 29 CFR Parts 1625 and 1627 on Age
Discrimination in Employment Act and Retiree Health Benefits, 72
Fed. Reg. 72938 (Dec. 26, 2007).
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Finally, the Department is aware of recent research on VEBAs that
has highlighted the benefits from VEBAs to employers and employees, and
that suggests that VEBAs may be a desirable option for them. One recent
study, by the Segal Company, entitled Study of Retiree Health VEBAs,
examined 25 stand-alone VEBAs in the manufacturing, retail or
transportation industries (Segal Study).\10\ According to the Segal
Study, VEBAs can provide security for current and future retirees by
setting aside funds for retiree benefits that cannot be used for other
corporate purposes. It also noted that VEBAs are a vehicle for an
employer to remove FAS 106 liability from its financial statements, and
that employers can fund the trust through a variety of mechanisms,
including cash, company
[[Page 72844]]
stock, or other assets. The Segal Study further pointed out that VEBAs
may allow unions and retirees more input into benefit levels and
contributions because they may have seats on the VEBA's board of
trustees or other governing body. On the other hand, the Segal Study
suggested that it is not possible for VEBAs to guarantee a set level of
benefits far into the future, or to provide retirees with protection
from investment risk, because the financial condition of the trust may
be adversely affected by unpredictable risks, downturns in the market,
or health care cost increases.
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\10\ https://www.segalco.com/publications/surveysandstudies/2008VEBAs.pdf. For another synopsis of the Segal Study, see Wohl,
Under the Hood: After Acceptance from UAW, VEBAs Get a Closer Look,
Employee Benefits News (March 2008) (available at
ebn.benefitnews.com/asset/article/547851/under-hood-after-acceptance-uaw-vebas.html?pg=).
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Another study, the Mercer 2007 National Survey of Employer-
Sponsored Health Plans (Mercer Study), found that among employers with
500 or more employees that offer retiree health insurance, 11 percent
use a VEBA to fund it, and an additional 5 percent are considering
using one. The Mercer Study also determined that VEBA use is most
common among the largest retiree health sponsors (28 percent of those
with 10,000 or more employees) and those in the transportation-
communications-utilities industry group (38 percent), followed by the
financial services (19 percent) and manufacturing (13 percent) industry
groups.\11\
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\11\ See https://www.mercer.com/referencecontent.jhtml?idContent=1287790
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Finally, a recent paper by Aaron Bernstein entitled ``Can VEBAs
Alleviate Retiree Health Care Problems?,'' published as part of the
Harvard Law School Pensions and Capital Stewardship Project Labor and
Worklife Program, examined VEBAs in the context of declining retiree
health coverage and discussed the ways that VEBAs could help union and
nonunion employees in both the private and public sector.\12\
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\12\ The article is available at: https://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/lwp/occasionalpapers_Ap9_.
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D. Request for Information
The purpose of this notice is to obtain information to assist the
Department in studying and understanding the role of VEBAs in providing
health and welfare benefits to retired workers in the United States. In
order to assist interested parties in responding, this document
contains a list of specific areas of interest. The Department
recognizes that these areas of interest may not address all relevant
issues. Accordingly, interested parties are invited to submit comments
on other issues that they believe are pertinent.
1. What economic and demographic forces are driving changes in
retiree health plan offerings and VEBA use?
2. What are the consequences to employees, employers, and the
public of increasing VEBA use by employers to fund retiree health
benefits?
3. Is there a need for changes in ERISA or in the Department's
ERISA regulations to better govern the administration of VEBAs?
4. Should VEBAs that are larger, whether in terms of assets, number
of beneficiaries, or both, be subject to different regulatory
requirements than smaller VEBAs?
5. Aside from the general fiduciary obligations imposed by ERISA,
should other requirements be imposed on VEBA governance structure to
better protect the economic interests of participants?
6. Should plan documents for VEBAs be required to provide
fiduciaries guidelines on benefit payments to help the fiduciaries
resolve any conflicts of interest that may develop between participants
at different life cycle stages?
7. Should the law require that participants in plans funded by
VEBAs must be provided with actuarial information indicating the
potential range of benefits the plan is likely to be able to provide,
taking into account potential future benefits, investment returns, and
changes in the cost of health benefits?
Leon R. Sequeira,
Assistant Secretary for Policy.
[FR Doc. E8-28325 Filed 11-28-08; 8:45 am]
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