Pendency of Request for Determination of Substantial Damage With Respect to the Cessation of the Obligation To Contribute by USF Red Star, Inc., to the Freight Drivers and Helpers Local Union No. 557 Pension Fund, 19110-19111 [E9-9515]
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[FR Doc. E9–9504 Filed 4–24–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY
CORPORATION
Pendency of Request for
Determination of Substantial Damage
With Respect to the Cessation of the
Obligation To Contribute by USF Red
Star, Inc., to the Freight Drivers and
Helpers Local Union No. 557 Pension
Fund
AGENCY: Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:55 Apr 24, 2009
Jkt 217001
ACTION:
Notice of Pendency.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY: This notice advises interested
persons that the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation (‘‘PBGC’’) has
received a request from the Freight
Drivers and Helpers Local Union No.
557 Pension Fund for a determination of
substantial damage under section
4203(d)(4) of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act, as amended
(‘‘ERISA’’), with respect to the cessation
of covered operations under the plan by
USF Red Star, Inc. Section 4203(d)
provides a special withdrawal rule for
cessations of the obligation to contribute
or the cessation of operations involving
plans and employers in the trucking
industry. Under that special rule, an
employer ceasing covered operations is
considered not to have withdrawn from
the plan if certain conditions are met.
One of these conditions is the employer
must furnish a bond or deposit money
in escrow with a bank or financial
institution satisfactory to the plan. After
the bond/escrow requirement has been
satisfied, the PBGC may make a
determination under section 4203(d)(4)
that the cessation has caused substantial
damage to the plan’s contribution base,
in which case the employer will be
treated as having withdrawn from the
plan and the bond/escrow will be paid
to the plan. In making a determination,
PBGC will consider the cessation of the
obligation to contribute or cessation of
covered operations by other employers.
Thus, a determination in any one case
may affect other cases involving the
same plan. The purpose of this notice is
to advise interested persons of this
request for such a determination and to
solicit their views on it.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before May 15, 2009, to be assured of
consideration.
ADDRESSES: All written comments
should be addressed to: Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation, Office of the
Chief Counsel, 1200 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20005–4026. The
request for a finding of substantial
damage and the comments received will
be available for public inspection at the
PBGC Communications and Public
Affairs Department, Suite 1100, at the
above address, between the hours of 9
a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Eric
Field, Attorney, Office of the Chief
Counsel, Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation, 1200 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20005–4026; telephone
202–326–4000, ext. 3987 (202–326–4179
for TTY and TDD). These are not tollfree numbers.
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Background
Section 4203(a) of ERISA defines a
complete withdrawal from a
multiemployer plan as the permanent
cessation of the obligation to contribute
under the plan or the permanent
cessation of all covered operations
under the plan.
Section 4203(d) of ERISA, however,
provides a special withdrawal liability
rule for plans in the trucking industry.
That industry, for purposes of this rule,
is considered to include the long and
short haul trucking industry, the
household goods moving industry, and
the public warehousing industry. The
rule is limited to trucking plans in
which substantially all of the
contributions required are made by
employers primarily engaged in the
trucking industry. The rule is also
limited to trucking employers, i.e., those
employers that have an obligation to
contribute under a trucking plan
primarily for work in the trucking
industry.
Under section 4203(d), a trucking
employer will not be considered to have
withdrawn from a plan within the
meaning of a trucking industry plan
merely because the employer
permanently ceases to have an
obligation to contribute under the plan
or permanently ceases all covered
operations under the plan, if certain
conditions are met. One condition is
that the employer must not continue to
perform work within the jurisdiction of
the plan. Another condition is that the
employer must furnish a bond or
establish an escrow account in an
amount equal to 50 percent of its
withdrawal liability.
After the bond is posted or the escrow
is established, the PBGC may, within 60
months after the cessation of the
employer’s covered operations or
obligation to contribute, make a
determination about whether the
cessation (considered together with any
cessations by other employers)
substantially damaged the plan’s
contribution base. If the PBGC makes a
finding under section 4203(d)(4) that the
contribution base has suffered
substantial damage, the employer will
be treated as having withdrawn from the
plan on the date when the obligation to
contribute or covered operations ceased.
In that event, the bond or escrow will
be paid to the plan, and the employer
will be liable for the remainder of the
withdrawal liability. If the PBGC makes
a finding under section 4203(d)(5) that
no substantial damage has occurred, or
if it does not make a finding of
substantial damage under section
E:\FR\FM\27APN1.SGM
27APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 79 / Monday, April 27, 2009 / Notices
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
4203(d)(4) within the 60-month period
referred to above, the bond will be
canceled or the escrow refunded, and
the employer will have no further
liability with respect to the cessation.
As stated above, each cessation must
be considered within the context of
other cessations under the same plan in
determining its effect on the plan’s
contribution base. Thus, the treatment
afforded one employer’s cessation of the
obligation to contribute may affect the
treatment given a cessation by another
employer. Accordingly, not only the
plan and employer involved in a
particular case, but other present and
former contributing employers, and
participants and beneficiaries, may have
an interest in the outcome of a request
for a determination of substantial
damage or no substantial damage.
The Request
The Freight Drivers and Helpers Local
Union No. 557 Pension Fund (the
‘‘Fund’’) has requested a determination
that the cessation of the obligation to
contribute by USF Red Star, Inc. (‘‘Red
Star’’), together with cessations by other
employers, has resulted in substantial
damage to the Fund’s contribution base.
In the request, the Fund represents that:
1. The Fund is a trucking industry
plan within the meaning of section
4203(d)(2), with over 85 percent of its
contributing employers engaged in the
trucking industry and over 85 percent of
its contributions coming from those
employers. Red Star was a trucking
industry employer that operated for
approximately 25 years in the
Baltimore, Maryland area.
2. On May 23, 2004, Red Star ceased
the trucking operations for which it was
obligated to contribute to the Fund. The
Fund assessed withdrawal liability
against Red Star in the amount of
$11,756,604.
3. In May 2005, Red Star became part
of the Yellow-Roadway control group,
and its parent is YRC Regional
Transportation. YRC Regional
Transportation established a letter of
credit with Bank of America on
February 16, 2007, in the amount of
$3,840,154.74. (The Fund represents
that, in a decision dated February 27,
2009, an arbitrator ruled that Red Star
did not fail to timely post security and
that it may do so now.)
4. The Fund represents that the
cumulative effect of Red Star’s ceasing
to have an obligation to contribute to the
Fund caused substantial damage based
on the following particulars:
A. Decline in active population—The
reported active population on the
Fund’s 2007 Form 5500, Schedule B,
was 567. The number of active
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:55 Apr 24, 2009
Jkt 217001
participants shows a 45 percent drop
from 1997 to 2004, as the active
participant count fell from 1,217 in 1997
to 671 in 2004, while the retiree and
deferred participant population
remained stable, going from 2,357
participants in 1997 to 2,348
participants 2004 (it was at 2,311
participants in 2006).
B. Decline in hours of contributions—
The number of hours for which
contributions are required to be made
(i.e., the contribution base units) have
fallen 48 percent since 2000. For the
plan year ending December 21, 2000,
there were 2,091,015 hours of
contributions; in 2004, the year of
withdrawal, contributions fell to
1,207,486 hours; and in 2006 the drop
was to 1,083,042 hours.
C. Decline in the number of
contribution employers—In 1985, the
Fund had 56 employers. In 1990, there
were 33 employers. By 2000, there were
19 employers, and, in 2005, there were
only 13 employers.
D. Decline in contribution base—Red
Star was approximately 21 percent of
the contribution base in the years
leading up to its 2004 withdrawal, with
an individual five-year contribution
base of $6,619,040. The contribution
base was $31,047,940 for all employers
in the same period. Further, for all
employers, the five-year contribution
base as of the end of 2001 was
$35,102,710, and, as of the end of 2006,
was $23,830,654.
E. Investment losses—In 2000, the
Fund had $174,305,491 in assets. In
2002 the amount was $139,746,646. As
of 2006, the assets were $164,573,989.
The latest asset figure, which was used
in the certification of critical status that
the Fund’s actuary made on March 31,
2009, was a projection of $119,256,121,
as of January 1, 2009.
F. Unfunded vested benefits—The
Fund was fully funded from 1995 to
2000. In 2001 The Fund’s unfunded
vested benefits for withdrawal liability
purposes were $22,428,786. The
corresponding amount for 2004 was
$69,511,407, and for the end of 2006
was $61,167,323. For its 2009
certification of critical status, the Fund
reported $119,256,121, in assets, and a
present value of benefits equaling
$50,833,707, for active participants, and
$166,256,970, for non-active
participants. That certification projects
an accumulated funding deficiency
under section 431 of the Internal
Revenue Code of $9.2 million for the
2012 plan year. The net funding charges
for that year are about $20 million;
projected contributions are $5.5 million
and the projected credit balance at the
beginning of the year is $4.5 million.
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
19111
Thus, contributions for the 2012 plan
year would have to triple in order to
avoid a funding deficiency.
Comments
All interested persons are invited to
submit written comments on the
pending request to the PBGC to: Suite
930, Attn: Multiemployer Coordinator,
at the above address. All comments will
be made part of the record. Comments
received, as well as the relevant
information submitted in support of the
request, will be available for public
inspection in Suite 1100 at the above
address.
Issued at Washington, DC, on this 21st day
of April 2009.
Vincent K. Snowbarger,
Acting Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
[FR Doc. E9–9515 Filed 4–24–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7708–01–P
POSTAL SERVICE
Board of Governors; Sunshine Act
Meeting
DATE AND TIME: Monday, May 4, 2009, at
6 p.m.; Tuesday, May 5, 2009, at 10
a.m.; Wednesday, May 6, 2009, at 8:30
a.m.
PLACE: Washington, DC, at U.S. Postal
Service Headquarters, 475 L’Enfant
Plaza, SW., in the Benjamin Franklin
Room.
STATUS: May 4 at 6 p.m.—Closed; May
5 at 10 a.m.—Closed; May 6 at 8:30
a.m.—Open.
Matters To Be Considered
Monday, May 4 at 6 p.m. (Closed)
1. Financial Matters.
2. Strategic Issues.
3. Pricing.
4. Personnel Matters and
Compensation Issues.
5. Governors’ Executive Session—
Discussion of prior agenda items and
Board Governance.
Tuesday, May 5 at 10 a.m. (Closed)
1. Continuation of Monday’s closed
session agenda.
Wednesday, May 6 at 8:30 a.m. (Open)
1. Call to Order and Approval of
Minutes of Previous Meetings.
2. Remarks of the Chairman of the
Board.
3. Recognition of Former Board
Chairman.
4. Remarks of the Postmaster General
and CEO.
5. Committee Assignments and
Committee Reports.
E:\FR\FM\27APN1.SGM
27APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 79 (Monday, April 27, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 19110-19111]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-9515]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY CORPORATION
Pendency of Request for Determination of Substantial Damage With
Respect to the Cessation of the Obligation To Contribute by USF Red
Star, Inc., to the Freight Drivers and Helpers Local Union No. 557
Pension Fund
AGENCY: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of Pendency.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice advises interested persons that the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation (``PBGC'') has received a request from the
Freight Drivers and Helpers Local Union No. 557 Pension Fund for a
determination of substantial damage under section 4203(d)(4) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act, as amended (``ERISA''), with
respect to the cessation of covered operations under the plan by USF
Red Star, Inc. Section 4203(d) provides a special withdrawal rule for
cessations of the obligation to contribute or the cessation of
operations involving plans and employers in the trucking industry.
Under that special rule, an employer ceasing covered operations is
considered not to have withdrawn from the plan if certain conditions
are met. One of these conditions is the employer must furnish a bond or
deposit money in escrow with a bank or financial institution
satisfactory to the plan. After the bond/escrow requirement has been
satisfied, the PBGC may make a determination under section 4203(d)(4)
that the cessation has caused substantial damage to the plan's
contribution base, in which case the employer will be treated as having
withdrawn from the plan and the bond/escrow will be paid to the plan.
In making a determination, PBGC will consider the cessation of the
obligation to contribute or cessation of covered operations by other
employers. Thus, a determination in any one case may affect other cases
involving the same plan. The purpose of this notice is to advise
interested persons of this request for such a determination and to
solicit their views on it.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before May 15, 2009, to be
assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: All written comments should be addressed to: Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation, Office of the Chief Counsel, 1200 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20005-4026. The request for a finding of substantial
damage and the comments received will be available for public
inspection at the PBGC Communications and Public Affairs Department,
Suite 1100, at the above address, between the hours of 9 a.m. and 4
p.m., Monday through Friday.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Eric Field, Attorney, Office of the
Chief Counsel, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20005-4026; telephone 202-326-4000, ext. 3987 (202-
326-4179 for TTY and TDD). These are not toll-free numbers.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 4203(a) of ERISA defines a complete withdrawal from a
multiemployer plan as the permanent cessation of the obligation to
contribute under the plan or the permanent cessation of all covered
operations under the plan.
Section 4203(d) of ERISA, however, provides a special withdrawal
liability rule for plans in the trucking industry. That industry, for
purposes of this rule, is considered to include the long and short haul
trucking industry, the household goods moving industry, and the public
warehousing industry. The rule is limited to trucking plans in which
substantially all of the contributions required are made by employers
primarily engaged in the trucking industry. The rule is also limited to
trucking employers, i.e., those employers that have an obligation to
contribute under a trucking plan primarily for work in the trucking
industry.
Under section 4203(d), a trucking employer will not be considered
to have withdrawn from a plan within the meaning of a trucking industry
plan merely because the employer permanently ceases to have an
obligation to contribute under the plan or permanently ceases all
covered operations under the plan, if certain conditions are met. One
condition is that the employer must not continue to perform work within
the jurisdiction of the plan. Another condition is that the employer
must furnish a bond or establish an escrow account in an amount equal
to 50 percent of its withdrawal liability.
After the bond is posted or the escrow is established, the PBGC
may, within 60 months after the cessation of the employer's covered
operations or obligation to contribute, make a determination about
whether the cessation (considered together with any cessations by other
employers) substantially damaged the plan's contribution base. If the
PBGC makes a finding under section 4203(d)(4) that the contribution
base has suffered substantial damage, the employer will be treated as
having withdrawn from the plan on the date when the obligation to
contribute or covered operations ceased. In that event, the bond or
escrow will be paid to the plan, and the employer will be liable for
the remainder of the withdrawal liability. If the PBGC makes a finding
under section 4203(d)(5) that no substantial damage has occurred, or if
it does not make a finding of substantial damage under section
[[Page 19111]]
4203(d)(4) within the 60-month period referred to above, the bond will
be canceled or the escrow refunded, and the employer will have no
further liability with respect to the cessation.
As stated above, each cessation must be considered within the
context of other cessations under the same plan in determining its
effect on the plan's contribution base. Thus, the treatment afforded
one employer's cessation of the obligation to contribute may affect the
treatment given a cessation by another employer. Accordingly, not only
the plan and employer involved in a particular case, but other present
and former contributing employers, and participants and beneficiaries,
may have an interest in the outcome of a request for a determination of
substantial damage or no substantial damage.
The Request
The Freight Drivers and Helpers Local Union No. 557 Pension Fund
(the ``Fund'') has requested a determination that the cessation of the
obligation to contribute by USF Red Star, Inc. (``Red Star''), together
with cessations by other employers, has resulted in substantial damage
to the Fund's contribution base. In the request, the Fund represents
that:
1. The Fund is a trucking industry plan within the meaning of
section 4203(d)(2), with over 85 percent of its contributing employers
engaged in the trucking industry and over 85 percent of its
contributions coming from those employers. Red Star was a trucking
industry employer that operated for approximately 25 years in the
Baltimore, Maryland area.
2. On May 23, 2004, Red Star ceased the trucking operations for
which it was obligated to contribute to the Fund. The Fund assessed
withdrawal liability against Red Star in the amount of $11,756,604.
3. In May 2005, Red Star became part of the Yellow-Roadway control
group, and its parent is YRC Regional Transportation. YRC Regional
Transportation established a letter of credit with Bank of America on
February 16, 2007, in the amount of $3,840,154.74. (The Fund represents
that, in a decision dated February 27, 2009, an arbitrator ruled that
Red Star did not fail to timely post security and that it may do so
now.)
4. The Fund represents that the cumulative effect of Red Star's
ceasing to have an obligation to contribute to the Fund caused
substantial damage based on the following particulars:
A. Decline in active population--The reported active population on
the Fund's 2007 Form 5500, Schedule B, was 567. The number of active
participants shows a 45 percent drop from 1997 to 2004, as the active
participant count fell from 1,217 in 1997 to 671 in 2004, while the
retiree and deferred participant population remained stable, going from
2,357 participants in 1997 to 2,348 participants 2004 (it was at 2,311
participants in 2006).
B. Decline in hours of contributions--The number of hours for which
contributions are required to be made (i.e., the contribution base
units) have fallen 48 percent since 2000. For the plan year ending
December 21, 2000, there were 2,091,015 hours of contributions; in
2004, the year of withdrawal, contributions fell to 1,207,486 hours;
and in 2006 the drop was to 1,083,042 hours.
C. Decline in the number of contribution employers--In 1985, the
Fund had 56 employers. In 1990, there were 33 employers. By 2000, there
were 19 employers, and, in 2005, there were only 13 employers.
D. Decline in contribution base--Red Star was approximately 21
percent of the contribution base in the years leading up to its 2004
withdrawal, with an individual five-year contribution base of
$6,619,040. The contribution base was $31,047,940 for all employers in
the same period. Further, for all employers, the five-year contribution
base as of the end of 2001 was $35,102,710, and, as of the end of 2006,
was $23,830,654.
E. Investment losses--In 2000, the Fund had $174,305,491 in assets.
In 2002 the amount was $139,746,646. As of 2006, the assets were
$164,573,989. The latest asset figure, which was used in the
certification of critical status that the Fund's actuary made on March
31, 2009, was a projection of $119,256,121, as of January 1, 2009.
F. Unfunded vested benefits--The Fund was fully funded from 1995 to
2000. In 2001 The Fund's unfunded vested benefits for withdrawal
liability purposes were $22,428,786. The corresponding amount for 2004
was $69,511,407, and for the end of 2006 was $61,167,323. For its 2009
certification of critical status, the Fund reported $119,256,121, in
assets, and a present value of benefits equaling $50,833,707, for
active participants, and $166,256,970, for non-active participants.
That certification projects an accumulated funding deficiency under
section 431 of the Internal Revenue Code of $9.2 million for the 2012
plan year. The net funding charges for that year are about $20 million;
projected contributions are $5.5 million and the projected credit
balance at the beginning of the year is $4.5 million. Thus,
contributions for the 2012 plan year would have to triple in order to
avoid a funding deficiency.
Comments
All interested persons are invited to submit written comments on
the pending request to the PBGC to: Suite 930, Attn: Multiemployer
Coordinator, at the above address. All comments will be made part of
the record. Comments received, as well as the relevant information
submitted in support of the request, will be available for public
inspection in Suite 1100 at the above address.
Issued at Washington, DC, on this 21st day of April 2009.
Vincent K. Snowbarger,
Acting Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
[FR Doc. E9-9515 Filed 4-24-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7708-01-P