Notice of Proposed Exemptions, 30631-30642 [E9-15159]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 122 / Friday, June 26, 2009 / Notices
Department, telephone (202) 693–8540
(This is not a toll-free number).
Individual Retirement Accounts (the
IRAs) for Ralph Hartwell, Harold Latin,
Kenlon Johnson, Carol Johnson, Shanon
Taylor, Michael Ball, Dianne Barkas,
Roy Barkas, Harry DeWall, Alice Pike,
Steven Larsen, C. Timothy Hopkins,
Wayne Meuleman, Robert L. Miller,
and Richard T. Scott (Collectively, the
Participants), Located in Idaho Falls,
Idaho, and Elsewhere
[Prohibited Transaction Exemption 2009–17;
Exemption Application Numbers D–11536
through D–11550]
Exemption
The sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of sections 4975(c)(1)(A),(D),
and (E) of the Code, shall not apply to
the cash sales (the Sales) of certain
shares of closely held common stock
(the Stock) of the Bank of Idaho Holding
Company (the Company) by the IRAs 9
to the Participants, disqualified persons
with respect to their respective IRAs,
provided that the following conditions
are satisfied:
(a) The Sale of the Stock by each IRA
is a one-time transaction for cash;
(b) The terms and conditions of each
Sale are at least as favorable to each IRA
as those obtainable in an arm’s length
transaction with an unrelated party;
(c) Each IRA receives the fair market
value of the Stock on the date of the
Sale as determined by a qualified,
independent appraiser; and
(d) Each IRA does not pay any
commissions, costs, or other expenses in
connection with each Sale.
For a more complete statement of the
facts and representations supporting the
Department’s decision to grant this
exemption, refer to the text of the Notice
of Proposed Exemption published in the
Federal Register on March 26, 2009 at
74 FR 13258.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Mark Judge of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8339 (This is not a
toll-free number).
General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions to which the exemption does
9 Because each IRA has only one Participant,
there is no jurisdiction under 29 CFR 2510.3–3(b).
However, there is jurisdiction under Title II of the
Act pursuant to section 4975 of the Code.
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not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which among other things
require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(B) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) This exemption is supplemental to
and not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transactional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(3) The availability of this exemption
is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations
contained in the application accurately
describe all material terms of the
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 22nd day
of June, 2009.
Ivan Strasfeld,
Director of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. E9–15158 Filed 6–25–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
[Application Nos. and Proposed
Exemptions; D–11432, Iron Workers Local
17 Pension Fund (the Plan); D–11483
Urology Clinics of North Texas, P.A. 401(k)
Profit Sharing Plan and Trust (The Plan);
and L–11451, Ford Motor Corporation and
Its Affiliates (collectively, Ford), et al.]
Notice of Proposed Exemptions
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Exemptions.
SUMMARY: This document contains
notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of
proposed exemptions from certain of the
prohibited transaction restrictions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the
Code).
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30631
Written Comments and Hearing
Requests
All interested persons are invited to
submit written comments or requests for
a hearing on the pending exemptions,
unless otherwise stated in the Notice of
Proposed Exemption, within 45 days
from the date of publication of this
Federal Register Notice. Comments and
requests for a hearing should state: (1)
The name, address, and telephone
number of the person making the
comment or request, and (2) the nature
of the person’s interest in the exemption
and the manner in which the person
would be adversely affected by the
exemption. A request for a hearing must
also state the issues to be addressed and
include a general description of the
evidence to be presented at the hearing.
ADDRESSES: All written comments and
requests for a hearing (at least three
copies) should be sent to the Employee
Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA), Office of Exemption
Determinations, Room N–5700, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20210.
Attention: Application No. lll stated
in each Notice of Proposed Exemption.
Interested persons are also invited to
submit comments and/or hearing
requests to EBSA via e-mail or FAX.
Any such comments or requests should
be sent either by e-mail to:
‘‘moffitt.betty@dol.gov’’, or by FAX to
(202) 219–0204 by the end of the
scheduled comment period. The
applications for exemption and the
comments received will be available for
public inspection in the Public
Documents Room of the Employee
Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N–1513,
200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions
will be provided to all interested
persons in the manner agreed upon by
the applicant and the Department
within 15 days of the date of publication
in the Federal Register. Such notice
shall include a copy of the notice of
proposed exemption as published in the
Federal Register and shall inform
interested persons of their right to
comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
proposed exemptions were requested in
applications filed pursuant to section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in
accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR
32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 122 / Friday, June 26, 2009 / Notices
Effective December 31, 1978, section
102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of
1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred
the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type
requested to the Secretary of Labor.
Therefore, these notices of proposed
exemption are issued solely by the
Department. The applications contain
representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are
summarized below. Interested persons
are referred to the applications on file
with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and
representations.
Iron Workers Local 17 Pension Fund
(the Plan) Located in Cleveland, Ohio
[Application No. D–11432]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act
and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR part 2570 subpart B (55
FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If
the proposed exemption is granted, the
restrictions in sections 406(a)(1)(A),
406(a)(1)(D), and 406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of
the Act and the sanctions resulting from
the application of section 4975 of the
Code, by reason of sections
4975(c)(1)(A) and 4975(c)(1)(D) through
(E) of the Code, shall not apply to the
sale of a leasehold interest, which
includes an office building (the
Building) and certain rights pursuant to
a ground lease, held by the Plan, to the
Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron
Workers Local Union No. 17 (the
Union), a party in interest with respect
to the Plan, provided that the following
conditions are satisfied:
(a) The terms and conditions of the
sale are at least as favorable to the Plan
as those that the Plan could obtain in an
arm’s length transaction with an
unrelated party;
(b) The Plan receives the greater of
$285,000 or the fair market value of the
Building and lot on which the Building
is located (the Lot), as of the date of the
sale, as determined by a qualified,
independent appraiser;
(c) The sale is a one-time transaction
for cash;
(d) The Plan pays no commissions,
costs, or other expenses in connection
with the sale (other than fees associated
with the retention of a qualified,
independent appraiser and the retention
of a qualified, independent fiduciary);
(e) The Board of Trustees retains a
qualified, independent fiduciary, who
will review and approve the
methodology used by the qualified,
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independent appraiser, will ensure that
such methodology is properly applied
in determining the fair market value of
the Building and Lot as of the date of
the sale, and will determine whether it
is prudent to go forward with the
proposed transaction; and
(f) Prior to the publication of a final
exemption, if granted, in the Federal
Register, regarding the transaction that
is the subject of this proposed
exemption, the Union: Files Form 5330
(Return of Excise Taxes Related to
Employee Benefit Plans) with the
Internal Revenue Service and pays all
applicable excise taxes that are due by
reason of its prohibited past leasing to
the Plan of the Lot on which the subject
Building was constructed by the Plan;
and Provides a copy of the cancelled
check and other documentary evidence
to the Department indicating that the
taxes were correctly computed and paid.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Plan is a multi-employer,
defined benefit pension plan, created
and maintained pursuant to collective
bargaining agreements between the
Union and the Construction Employers
Association (CEA). The Plan is
administered by a Board of Trustees (the
Trustees), consisting of three trustees
appointed by the Union and three, by
the CEA. As of April 30, 2008, the Plan
had approximately 2,180 participants
and beneficiaries and total assets of
approximately $115,313,797.
2. Among the assets of the Plan is its
leasehold interest in a property located
at 1564 East 23rd Street, Cleveland,
Ohio. A one-story office building (the
Building), measuring 4114 square feet,
sits on a 51′ x 147′ lot belonging to the
Union (the Lot) that is currently being
leased to the Plan. The lease provides
for an initial term of 99 years until 2084
and a rental rate of $200 per month.
Under the lease terms, the Plan also has
an option to terminate the lease at any
time, to extend the term of the lease
indefinitely at the same rental rate, or to
purchase the Lot for $20,000. The
Building is adjacent to, and shares a
common wall with, the Union’s
building at 1544 East 23rd Street,
Cleveland, Ohio. There is a parking lot
consisting of eight parking spaces in
front of the Building. The immediate
neighborhood is a mixed-use
commercial area.
The Building was constructed on the
Lot by the Plan in 1986, pursuant to a
feasibility study by Coopers & Lybrand
commissioned by the Trustees; Coopers
& Lybrand opined that it would be more
cost-effective in the long run for the
Plan to construct its own office space
rather than to continue renting, as it had
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been doing. Subsequently, the Plan
entered into a lease for the Lot with the
Union, made retroactive to September
1985 but without the benefit of an
administrative prohibited transaction
exemption.1
The Plan uses the Building for
administrative office space and also
leases office space to its ‘‘sister plans,’’
the Iron Workers Local 17 Annuity
Fund and the Iron Workers Local 17
Insurance Benefit Fund, pursuant to
Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE)
76–1 and PTE 77–10.2 According to the
applicant, shared expenses are allocated
on a pro rata basis, with the Plan
consistently receiving an allocation of
approximately 40% of shared expenses.
3. The Building and Lot were
appraised by James P. Prosek, SRA, and
Aaron Baaske, CRA, CREA, independent
appraisers located in Amherst, Ohio.
Mr. Prosek and Mr. Baaske are
experienced real estate appraisers
licensed in the state of Ohio and are
members of recognized societies that
award professional designations in their
field. In their appraisal report, Mr.
Prosek and Mr. Baaske utilized the Sales
Comparison Approach and the Income
Approach, with greater reliance on the
former, to arrive at an estimated value
of $285,000, as of November 14, 2008,
for the fee simple interest of the
Building and Lot (as a unified property).
They then opined that the value of the
Union’s leased fee interest in the
property, belonging to the Union as the
lessor, is $20,000, or the amount
specified in the Plan’s option to
purchase the Lot under the terms of the
ground lease. To isolate the value of the
Plan’s leasehold interest in the property,
they then subtracted $20,000 from the
value of the fee simple interest
1 The Department is not proposing any exemptive
relief herein for these past prohibited transactions,
whose background is described in greater detail in
Facts and Representations #5, below.
2 PTE 76–1 (41 FR 12740, March 26, 1976) is a
class exemption that provides relief from sections
406(a) and 407(a) of the Act (and section
4975(c)(1)(A) through (D) of the Code), under
certain conditions, for the leasing of office space by
a multiple employer plan to a participating
employee organization, participating employer,
participating employer association, or another
multiple employer plan, which is a party in interest
or disqualified person with respect to the plan. PTE
77–10 (42 FR 33918, July 1, 1977) is a class
exemption that provides relief from section
406(b)(2) of the Act, under certain conditions, for
the leasing of office space by a multiple employer
plan to a participating employee organization,
participating employer (without regard to whether
the office space constitutes ‘‘qualifying employer
real property’’), participating employer association,
or another multiple employer plan, which is a party
in interest with respect to the plan or to which it
is related by virtue of having common trustees. The
Department expresses no opinion herein as to
whether the Plan’s leases to its ‘‘sister plans’’ satisfy
the terms and conditions of PTEs 76–1 and 77–10.
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($285,000), so that the value of the
Plan’s interest is $265,000, as of
November 14, 2008. Although the Plan
does not own the whole property but
only the leasehold interest, the Union is
willing to pay a purchase price
encompassing the fair market value of
both the Building and Lot as a unified
property.
Mr. Prosek and Mr. Baaske also
determined that no premium is due
from the Union to the Plan, as a term of
the proposed sale, for any assemblage
value resulting from the adjacency of
the Union’s building to the Plan’s
Building. The appraisers state, ‘‘A study
of the influence of incremental size on
office property values in this market
does not reveal a premium being paid,
on a price per square foot basis, for
larger properties. In fact, some tendency
toward diminishing return on size is
evident * * *.’’ The report continues,
‘‘Further, the subject building was
designed and built for a single user
* * *. It was not designed to be
incorporated with the neighboring
building and combining the two might
result in a larger building that offers less
than optimum utility.’’ The report
concludes, ‘‘[T]he highest and best use
of the subject property is a continuation
of its current use as an independent
office facility.’’
In regard to the fair market rental
value of the Building, Mr. Prosek and
Mr. Baaske state, ‘‘The observed leasing
activity produces a fairly tight range of
contract and asking rents, generally
from about $9.00 to $12.00 per square
foot of building area * * *. These leases
and offerings suggest rent, assuming the
described market expense structure,
near $10.50 per square foot per year as
appropriate for the subject space.’’
4. The Trustees have retained Ms.
Nell Hennessy, President and Chief
Executive Officer of Fiduciary
Counselors Inc. (FCI) to act as an
independent fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Ms. Hennessy has headed FCI
since its incorporation in 1999. From
1993 to 1998, she served as Deputy
Executive Director and Chief Negotiator
of the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC), the federal agency
that guarantees private defined benefit
pensions. Prior to Ms. Hennessy’s
employment at the PBGC, Ms. Hennessy
was a partner in the law firm of Willkie
Farr & Gallagher, where she advised
clients on a wide range of benefit,
investment, and corporate governance
issues. Ms. Hennessy will review and
approve the methodology used by the
appraisers to ensure that such
methodology is properly applied in
determining the fair market value of the
Building and Lot, to be updated as of
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the date of the sale. She also will
determine whether it is prudent to go
forward with the proposed transaction.
5. At the Department’s request, the
applicant provided background on the
Union’s past and on-going lease of the
Lot to the Plan. According to the
applicant, the Cincinnati Regional
Office opened an investigation of the
Plan in 1985, which continued until
1989. The investigator advised the
Union that, because the Plan did not
have separate title to the Building, use
of the Plan assets to construct the
Building on Union land was a
prohibited transaction.
Upon the advice of counsel, the
Union, on July 10, 1987, entered into a
lease of the Lot located at 1564 East
23rd Street to the Plan, with a
retroactive effective date of September
1, 1985, pursuant to the terms described
in Facts and Representations #2, above.
The Trustees represent that they were
advised by counsel, at that time, that the
ground lease was covered by the
statutory exemption contained in
section 408(b)(2) of the Act.3 The
Trustees, however, were unable to
locate and produce contemporaneous
written documentation of the advice
from an ERISA counsel regarding the
applicability of section 408(b)(2) to the
lease.4 The applicant has agreed, as a
condition of this proposed exemption,
to file Form 5330 and pay all applicable
excise taxes that are due by reason of its
prohibited past leasing to the Plan of the
Lot on which the subject Building was
constructed.
6. The Trustees have determined that
the proposed sale to the Union of the
Plan’s leasehold interest, which
includes the Building, a right of first
refusal to purchase the Lot, a purchase
option for the Lot, and an option to
renew for successive terms, is in the
best interests of the Plan. According to
the applicant, the Plan and its ‘‘sister
plans’’ have reduced the size of their
respective office staffs over the past few
years and thus their need for office
space. Although the Plan’s leasehold
3 The Department’s review of correspondence
with the Cincinnati Regional Office revealed that
the field office had advised their counsel that the
ground lease was a prohibited transaction and that
an administrative prohibited transaction exemption
should be sought to cover it. The regulation at 29
CFR 2550.408b–2 clarifies that section 408(b)(2)
provides relief for payments by a plan for leases of
office space. It also limits the scope of the
exemptive relief to section 406(a) so that relief from
section 406(b), which prohibits, among other things,
self-dealing by plan fiduciaries, is not provided.
4 The request for retroactive prohibited
transaction relief for the ground lease was
withdrawn. The Department’s standard for
obtaining a retroactive prohibited transaction
exemption is set forth in ERISA Technical Release
85–1.
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30633
interest represents less than three-tenths
of one percent of the Plan’s assets, the
Trustees believe that it is in the best
interests of the Plan to divest itself of
this illiquid asset. Further, the Plan will
eliminate the operating and
maintenance expenses associated with
the Building. It is represented that the
Plan will realize savings by renting the
smaller amount of office space it needs
rather than continuing to occupy the
Building, as explained below.
All three of the Iron Workers Local 17
plans will rent nearby office space from
an unrelated party following the sale of
the Plan’s leasehold interest to the
Union. The three plans will split the
monthly rental cost of $1,125 per
month. Based upon the Plan’s current
expense allocation of 40% of the overall
cost, the Plan will pay rent of $450 per
month, or $5,400 per year. The Plan’s
expense allocation in 2007 in
connection with the Building that it
currently occupies (for holding costs,
such as the land lease, utilities, and
taxes) was $10,383 per year, the amount
not offset by rent payments from the
Plan’s sister plans. Thus, according to
the Trustees, the move to different office
space will yield annual savings to the
Plan of $4,983, approximately 47%.
Although the Plan owns only the
leasehold interest, the Union is willing
to pay the greater of $285,000 or the fair
market value for the fee simple interest
of the Building and Lot as a unified
property (as previously stated in Facts
and Representations #3, above); the fair
market value is to be updated as of the
date of the sale by a qualified,
independent appraiser. The Plan’s cost
of construction for the Building was
initially quoted at $231,900, but, due to
cost overruns, came to a total of
$321,738.5 Nevertheless, the Trustees
represent that the Plan saved
approximately $16,830 in rental costs
from owning the Building, which also
has generated rental income for the
Plan. Although the minimum $285,000
sales price will not enable the Plan to
recoup its construction and holding
costs of $640,631, the Trustees state that
the Plan has had use of the Building for
the past 22 years and the imputed value
of the rental income it did not have to
pay is estimated to be $367,463.
7. The Trustees represent that the
subject sale will be a one-time
transaction for cash and that the Plan
will incur no fees, commissions, or
other expenses in connection with the
sale (other than fees associated with the
5 The Department expresses no opinion herein as
to whether the cost overruns paid by the Plan
violated any of the provisions of part 4 of Title I
of the Act.
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retention of a qualified, independent
appraiser and the retention of a
qualified, independent fiduciary). The
Union is also bearing the costs of the
exemption application and of notifying
interested persons.
8. In summary, the applicant
represents that the proposed transaction
satisfies the statutory criteria for an
exemption under section 408(a) of the
Act for the following reasons: (a) The
terms and conditions of the sale will be
at least as favorable to the Plan as those
that the Plan could obtain in an arm’s
length transaction with an unrelated
party; (b) the Plan will receive the
greater of $285,000 or the fair market
value of the Building and Lot as of the
date of the sale, as determined by a
qualified, independent appraiser; (c) the
sale will be a one-time transaction for
cash; (d) the Plan will pay no
commissions, costs, or other expenses in
connection with the sale (other than fees
associated with the retention of a
qualified, independent appraiser and
the retention of a qualified, independent
fiduciary); and (e) the Trustees have
retained a qualified, independent
fiduciary, who will review and approve
the methodology used by the qualified,
independent appraiser, will ensure that
such methodology is properly applied
in determining the fair market value of
the Building and Lot as of the date of
the sale, and will determine whether it
is prudent to go forward with the
proposed transaction.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Karin Weng of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8557. (This is not
a toll-free number).
Urology Clinics of North Texas, P.A.
401(k) Profit Sharing Plan and Trust
(The Plan) Located in Dallas, TX
[Application No. D–11483]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act
and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code and
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55
FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If
the exemption is granted, the
restrictions of sections 406(a), 406(b)(1)
and (b)(2) of the Act and the sanctions
resulting from the application of section
4975 of the Code, by reason of section
4975(c)(1)(A) through (E) of the Code,
will not apply to the proposed sale (the
Sale) of a 2.52 percent ownership
interest comprising five (5.0) Class I
Units (the Units) issued by the Center
for Pediatric Surgery (CPS), an unrelated
party, by the individually directed
account in the Plan (the Account) of
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David Ewalt, M.D. (Dr. Ewalt), to Dr.
Ewalt, a party in interest with respect to
the Plan.
This proposed exemption is subject to
the following conditions:
(a) The Sale is a one-time transaction
for cash;
(b) the closing of the Sale (the Closing
Date) occurs within 60 days of the
Department’s grant of the final
exemption;
(c) the Units are sold to Dr. Ewalt at
the greater of the fair market value of the
Units as of the Closing Date, as
determined by a qualified, independent
appraiser or for $441,000 for the 2.52
percent interest of ownership of CPS;
(d) in addition to the sale price
described above, the Account will have
received $408,954.00 in consideration
for the reduction of the Account’s
interest in CPS as a result of an
investment by Cook Children’s Health
Care System (Cook) in CPS;
(e) the proceeds from the Sale are
credited to the Account simultaneously
with the transfer of the Units’ title to Dr.
Ewalt;
(f) neither the Plan nor the Account
pay any fees, commissions, or other
costs or expenses associated with the
Sale; and
(g) the terms and conditions of the
Sale remain at least as favorable to the
Account as the terms and conditions
obtainable under similar circumstances
negotiated at arm’s length with an
unrelated party.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. Urology Clinics of North Texas,
P.A. (the Employer) has its principal
office and place of business in Dallas,
TX. The Employer has 27 physician
partners including Dr. Ewalt.
2. The Plan is a defined contribution
profit sharing plan and has 147
participants and beneficiaries. As of
December 31, 2007, the Plan’s assets
were valued at $20,190,735.00. The
Plan’s trustees consist of four
physicians. Dr. Ewalt is one of the
trustees of the Plan and is also a
member of the Plan’s administrative
committee. The value of the Account as
of May 8, 2009 is $1,336,000.00.
3. In 2002, the Plan purchased 4.63
percent (4.63%) interest in CPS for the
benefit of the Account from the Plano
Pediatric Surgery Center (Plano Center).
The Plano Center was the entity that
originally established CPS and it is not
affiliated in any way with the Employer,
the Plan or Dr. Ewalt. The Account paid
$43,500 for the 4.63% interest in CPS.
The acquisition of the Units occurred at
the time of the original capitalization of
CPS.
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4. CPS was formed in 2005 as an
outpatient surgery facility in Plano,
Texas. Construction on CPS’ facility was
completed in 2006. CPS currently
performs cases in the following medical
specialties: GI, Dermatology,
Ophthalmology, Dental Surgery,
Orthopedic Surgery, ENT, General
Surgery, Plastic Surgery, and Urology.
5. Since 2006, the Units have
generated Unrelated Business Taxable
Income (UBTI) under Code section 511.
It is represented that the Plan has paid
income taxes equal to $74,789 in 2006
and $58,937.00 in 2007 resulting from
the UBTI. It is estimated that for the
2008 tax year, the Plan will pay $59,000
in income tax based on the UBTI. It is
represented that the Account has borne
the entire tax burden on behalf of the
Plan. Due to the burden on the Account
for paying taxes generated by the UBTI,
Dr. Ewalt determined that selling the
Units was in the best interest of the
Account. Following the Sale, the
Account would no longer be subject to
UBTI liability. Because CPS is a medical
provider, only physicians or entities
representing physicians could purchase
the Units. Moreover, the general partner
of CPS must also approve any sales of
the Units to any outside physicians or
entities that represent physicians.
Accordingly, Dr. Ewalt proposes to
purchase the Units from the Account.
6. The Employer hired Vincent
Kickirillo (the Appraiser) of VMG
Health, LLC, to appraise the value of the
Units. He is a member of the
Association for Investment Management
and Research, the National Association
of Certified Valuation Analysts and the
Dallas Society of Financial Analysts. In
addition, he holds a Chartered Financial
Analyst designation. Neither the
Appraiser nor VMG Health, LLC have
any affiliation with the Employer and
less than one percent of the income
received by VMG Health, LLC is
generated from services rendered to the
Plan or any party in interest with
respect to the Plan. The Appraiser
applied a minority discount to the Units
of 25 percent when compared to a
controlling interest stake. The Appraiser
valued each one percent interest of
ownership of CPS at $175,000 as of
January 9, 2008. Since the Units
represent a 4.63% interest in CPS, the
value of the Units as of January 9, 2008
was $810,250 ($175,000 x 4.63).
7. On August 1, 2008, Cook Children’s
Health Care System (Cook) completed a
capital investment in CPS that resulted
in Cook’s ownership of 51 percent of the
aggregate ownership interest CPS. Cook
is not a party in interest to the Plan. The
Cook investment did not represent an
actual purchase from the Account of any
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of the Units. Instead, the Cook
investment represented an injection of
capital into CPS which resulted in the
issuance of additional ownership units
to Cook and dilution of the then existing
investors of CPS.
8. Prior to the investment by Cook,
individual investors, including the
Account, together held an 81 percent
aggregate interest in CPS, while the
remaining 19 percent interest was held
by Nuettera Holdings, LLC, (Nuettera)
the entity providing business
management services to CPS. Following
the investment by Cook, the individual
investors’ aggregate interest in CPS has
been reduced to 44 percent and the
interest held by Nuettera Holdings, LLC
has been reduced to five percent.6 Due
to the Cook investment and the resulting
dilution and reduction of the ownership
of the individual investors, the
Account’s aggregate interest in CPS
decreased from 4.63 percent to 2.52
percent. As consideration for this
dilution of their ownership interest, the
previous investors received a special
cash distribution from CPS. The
Account’s share of this cash
consideration was $408,954.00. This
amount was deposited in the Account
and invested in accordance with Dr.
Ewalt’s directions. On March 30, 2009,
the Appraiser updated his appraisal
concerning the value of a one percent
ownership interest in CPS as a result of
the Cook investment. The Appraiser
determined that a one percent interest
in CPS is valued at $175,000. Therefore,
the current value of the Units which
now represent a 2.52% interest in CPS
is valued at $441,000 (2.52 x $175,000).
9. In summary, it is represented that
the Sale satisfies the statutory criteria
for an exemption under Section 408(a)
of the Act for the following reasons: (a)
The Sale to Dr. Ewalt is a one-time
transaction for cash; (b) the Closing Date
occurs within 60 days of grant of the
final exemption; (c) the Units will be
sold to Dr. Ewalt at the greater of the fair
market value of the Units as of the
Closing Date, as determined by a
6 Nuetttera was engaged to provide management
services for the surgery center. Nuettera held an
ownership interest in CPS, but that interest was
represented by units of a different class (Class II
units) than those held by the physician
practitioners who owned the remaining interests in
CPS (Class I units). When Cook acquired its interest
in CPS in 2008, it acquired both Class I and Class
II units. The dilution of Nuettera’s interest in CPS
was proportionately greater than the dilution of the
physicians’ interests because Cook acquired
seventy-five percent (75%) of the Class II units. In
contrast, the aggregate ownership of the physicians
was diluted by roughly fifty-four percent (54%)
following the Cook investment. The reason the
relative dilution of the two groups was different
was a result of the fact that the two groups owned
different classes of units.
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qualified, independent appraiser, or
$441,000; (d) In addition to the sale
price described above, the Account will
have received $408,954.00 from Cook in
consideration for the reduction of the
Account’s interest in CPS; (e) the Sale
proceeds from the transaction are
credited simultaneously to Dr. Ewalt’s
Account as the transfer of the Units’ title
to Dr. Ewalt; (f) the Account pays no
fees, commissions or other costs and
expenses associated with the Sale; (g)
The terms and conditions of the Sale
remain at least as favorable to the
Account as the terms and conditions
obtainable under similar circumstances
negotiated at arm’s length with an
unrelated party.
Notice to Interested Parties: Notice of
the proposed exemption shall be given
to all interested persons in the manner
agreed upon by the Employer and
Department within 15 days of the date
of publication of this notice of proposed
exemption in the Federal Register.
Comments and requests for a hearing are
due forty-five (45) days after publication
of this notice in the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anh-Viet Ly of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8648 (this is not a
toll-free number).
Ford Motor Corporation and Its
Affiliates (Collectively, Ford) Located in
Detroit, MI
[Application No. L–11451]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act
and in accordance with the procedures
set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart
B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the exemption is granted, the
restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(B),
406(a)(1)(D), 406(b)(1), and 406(b)(2) of
the Act shall not apply, effective July
13, 2006, to: (1) Monthly cash advances
to Ford by the Independent Health Care
Trust for UAW Retirees of Ford Motor
Company (the DC VEBA), as defined in
section III(f), below, of this exemption,
to reimburse Ford for the estimated
mitigation of certain health care
expenses (the Mitigation), as defined in
section III(h), below, of this exemption,
and during the period from July 14,
2006 through February 28, 2007, for the
payment of dental expenses incurred by
participants in the DC VEBA; and (2) an
annual ‘‘true-up’’ of the Mitigation
payments and dental expenses against
the actual expenses incurred, with the
result that: (a) if Ford has been
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30635
underpaid by the DC VEBA, Ford
receives the balance outstanding from
the DC VEBA with interest, or (b) if the
DC VEBA has overpaid Ford, Ford
reimburses the DC VEBA for the amount
overpaid, with interest.
Section II. Conditions
This proposed exemption is
conditioned upon adherence to the
material facts and representations
described herein and upon satisfaction
of the following conditions:
(a) A committee (the Committee), as
defined in section III(d), below, of this
exemption, acting as a fiduciary
independent of Ford, has represented
and will continue to represent the DC
VEBA and its participants and
beneficiaries for all purposes with
respect to the Mitigation process under
the settlement agreement (the DC VEBA
Settlement Agreement or the Settlement
Agreement), as defined in section III(g),
below, of this exemption.
(b) The Committee for the DC VEBA
has discharged and will continue to
discharge its duties consistent with the
terms of the DC VEBA and the
Settlement Agreement.
(c) The Committee and actuaries
retained by the Committee have
reviewed and approved and will
continue to review and approve the
estimation process involved in the
Mitigation, which results in the monthly
Mitigation amount paid to Ford.
(d) Outside auditors retained by the
Committee, along with an
administrative company that is partly
owned by the DC VEBA, have audited
and will audit the calculation of the
true-up to determine whether there are
any differences between the estimated
Mitigation and actual Mitigation
amounts and have made and will make
such information available to Ford.
(e) Ford has provided various reports
and records to the Committee
concerning dental care reimbursements
for the period from July 14, 2006,
through February 28, 2007, which were
subject to review and audit by the
Committee, and Ford has provided and
will continue to provide various reports
and records to the Committee
concerning the Mitigation required
under the Settlement Agreement which
were and will continue to be subject to
review and audit by the Committee.
(f) The terms of the covered
transactions are no less favorable and
will continue to be no less favorable to
the DC VEBA than the terms negotiated
at arm’s length under similar
circumstances between unrelated third
parties.
(g) The interest rate applied to any
true-up payments is a reasonable rate, as
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set forth in the DC VEBA Settlement
Agreement, and will continue to be a
reasonable rate that runs from the
beginning of the year being trued up and
does not and will not present a windfall
or detriment to either party.
(h) The DC VEBA has not incurred
and will continue not to incur any fees,
costs, or other charges (other than those
described in the DC VEBA and the DC
VEBA Settlement Agreement) as a result
of the covered transactions described
herein.
(i) Ford and the Committee have
maintained and will continue to
maintain for a period of six (6) years
from the date of any of the covered
transactions, any and all records
necessary to enable the persons
described in section II(j), below, of this
exemption to determine whether
conditions of this exemption have been
and will continue to be met, except that
(1) a prohibited transaction will not be
considered to have occurred if, due to
circumstances beyond the control of
Ford or the Committee, the records are
lost or destroyed prior to the end of the
six-year period, and (2) no party in
interest other than Ford or the
Committee shall be subject to the civil
penalty that may be assessed under
section 502(i) of the Act if the records
are not maintained, or are not available
for examination as required by section
II(j), below, of this exemption.
(j)(1) Except as provided in section
II(j)(2), below, of this exemption and
notwithstanding any provisions of
subsections (a)(2) and (b) of section 504
of the Act, the records referred to in
section II(i), above, of this exemption
have been or will be unconditionally
available at their customary location
during normal business hours to:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department;
(B) The International Union, United
Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural
Implement Workers of America (the
UAW) or any duly authorized
representative of the UAW;
(C) Ford or any duly authorized
representative of Ford; and
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of
the DC VEBA, or any duly authorized
representative of such participant or
beneficiary.
(2) None of the persons described in
section II(j)(1)(B) or (D), above, in this
exemption is authorized to examine the
trade secrets of Ford, or commercial or
financial information that is privileged
or confidential.
Section III. Definitions
For purposes of this proposed
exemption, the term—
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16:39 Jun 25, 2009
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(a) ‘‘Ford’’ means Ford Motor
Company and its affiliates.
(b) ‘‘Affiliate’’ means:
(1) Any person directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with such other
person;
(2) Any officer, director, or partner,
employee or relative (as defined in
section 3(15) of the Act) of such other
person; or
(3) Any corporation, partnership or
other entity of which such other person
is an officer, director or partner. (For
purposes of this definition, the term
‘‘control’’ means the power to exercise
a controlling influence over the
management or policies of a person
other than an individual.)
(c) ‘‘Class’’ or ‘‘Class Members’’ mean
all persons who, as of the ratification
date (the Ratification Date), as defined
in section I(a) of the Settlement
Agreement, (i.e., December 22, 2005)
were: (1) Ford/UAW hourly employees
who had retired from Ford with
eligibility to participate in retirement in
the Hospital-Surgical-Medical-DrugDental-Vision Program (the Original
Plan), as in effect prior to the
Ratification Date, or (2) the spouses,
surviving spouses, and dependents of
Ford/UAW hourly employees, who, as
of the Ratification Date, were eligible for
post-retirement or surviving spouse
health care coverage under the Original
Plan as a consequence of a Ford/UAW
hourly employee’s retirement from Ford
or death prior to retirement. Active
employees, as defined in section I(A) of
the Settlement Agreement, are not
members of the Class.
(d) ‘‘Committee’’ means the seven (7)
individuals, consisting of two classes:
(1) The UAW with three members, and
(2) the public class with four members,
who act as the named fiduciary and
administrator of the DC VEBA.
(e) ‘‘Court’’ or ‘‘Michigan District
Court’’ means the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of
Michigan.
(f) ‘‘DC VEBA’’ means the defined
contribution—Voluntary Employees’
Beneficiary Association trust
established by Ford pursuant to the
Settlement Agreement and the trust
agreement (the Trust Agreement).
(g) ‘‘DC VEBA Settlement Agreement’’
or the ‘‘Settlement Agreement’’ means
the agreement, dated February 13, 2006,
which was entered into between Ford,
the UAW, and class representatives, on
behalf of a class of plaintiffs in a class
action suit cited as Int’l Union, UAW, et.
al. v. Ford Motor Company (Civil Case
No. 05–74730 (E.D. Mich. July 13, 2006),
aff’d, 497 F.3d 615 (6th Cir. 2007)
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Frm 00137
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(hereinafter referred to as the Hardwick
I Case).
(h) ‘‘Mitigation’’ means the reduction
of monthly contributions, deductibles,
out-of-pocket maximums, co-insurance
payments, or any other payment in
accordance with section 14 of the
Settlement Agreement to the extent
payments from the DC VEBA are made,
as directed by the Committee, to Ford
and/or to providers, insurance carriers
and other agreed-upon entities.
(i) ‘‘OPEB’’ means Other PostEmployment Benefits. The OPEB
Valuation is an actuarially developed
valuation of a company’s post
retirement benefit obligations, other
than for pension and other retirement
income plans. The OPEB Valuation is
based on a set of uniform financial
reporting standards promulgated by the
Financial Accounting Standards Board
and embodied in Financial Accounting
Standard 106, as revised from time to
time. The types of benefits addressed in
an OPEB Valuation typically are retiree
healthcare (medical, dental, vision,
hearing) life insurance, tuition
assistance, and legal services
(j) ‘‘Shares’’ or ‘‘Stock’’ refers to the
common stock of Ford for which the par
value is $.01.
(k) ‘‘UAW’’ means the International
Union, United Automobile, Aerospace
and Agricultural Implement Workers of
America or the United Auto Workers, if
shortened.
(l) ‘‘VEBA’’ means a voluntary
employees’ beneficiary association.
(m) ‘‘Defined Contribution Plan’’ or
‘‘the Defined Contribution Plan of the
Independent Health Care Trust for UAW
Retirees of Ford Motor Company’’
means the defined contribution welfare
benefit plan funded by the DC VEBA
following the effective date (the
Effective Date), as defined in section
I(A) of the Settlement Agreement (i.e.,
July 13, 2006), which will include the
requirement to make contributions to
the DC VEBA, as set forth in section 13
of the Settlement Agreement.
Effective Date: If granted, this
proposed exemption will be effective as
of July 13, 2006.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. Ford is primarily engaged in
automotive production and marketing
operations. Ford designs, manufactures,
and markets vehicles worldwide, with
its largest operating presence in North
America. As of December 31, 2005, Ford
had approximately 131,000 active
employees in the United States, of
whom approximately 86,000 are
represented by the UAW and other
unions. Approximately 590,000 retirees
and dependents in the U.S. receive
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retiree health benefits from Ford, and of
this total, as of January 1, 2006,
approximately 170,000 are hourly
retirees and spouses, surviving spouses,
and eligible dependents.
Ford is a corporation organized under
the laws of the State of Delaware and
maintains its headquarters in Dearborn,
Michigan. As of December 17, 2007,
Ford had total assets of
$279,264,000,000, as reported in the
consolidated balance sheet in Ford’s
Form 10–k filed for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2007.
2. The DC VEBA Settlement
Agreement, dated February 13, 2006,
was entered into among Ford, the UAW,
and class representatives, on behalf of
plaintiffs (i.e., the Class Members), in
the Hardwick I Case. The Settlement
Agreement was approved by the United
States District Court for the Eastern
District of Michigan in an order dated
July 13, 2006, and was affirmed by the
United States Court of Appeals for the
6th Circuit in 2007. The Hardwick I
Case contested whether Ford had the
right to unilaterally modify retiree
welfare benefits for hourly retired Ford
employees who had been represented by
the UAW. The settlement of the
Hardwick I Case provided Ford with the
opportunity to address its retiree health
care costs in an agreed-upon fashion
without compromising the future rights
of Ford, the UAW, and the hourly
retired Ford employees.
3. Ford’s spiraling retiree health care
costs were at the heart of the Hardwick
I Case. Ford and the UAW engaged in
discussions regarding the impact of
rising health care costs on Ford’s
financial condition. In conjunction
therewith, Ford provided the UAW and
the Class with extensive information as
to its financial condition and its health
care expenditures. Separate teams of
investment bankers, actuaries, and legal
experts reviewed Ford’s information
and provided an assessment to the UAW
and to the Class as to the state of Ford’s
financial condition. Upon completion of
such review, the UAW, the
representatives of the Class, and counsel
to the Class concluded that, without the
Settlement Agreement, Ford’s ability to
provide retiree health care benefits to
Class Members would be unlikely over
the long term.
4. The Settlement Agreement modifies
the health plan that Ford sponsors for
its hourly retirees and their enrolled
spouses and dependents. The modified
plan imposes new cost sharing
requirements with respect to retiree
health benefits. Specifically, the Ford
modified retiree health plan will require
hourly retiree participants to make
monthly contributions toward the cost
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16:39 Jun 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
of their retiree health coverage, and also
imposes annual deductibles, out-ofpocket maximums, and certain coinsurance payments on participants and
beneficiaries.
In order to soften the impact of these
new cost sharing obligations, the
Settlement Agreement created a new
employee welfare benefit plan, as
described in section 3(1) of the Act. The
new welfare benefit plan is called the
Defined Contribution Plan of the
Independent Health Care Trust for UAW
Retirees of Ford Motor Company (the
Defined Contribution Plan). The
purpose of the Defined Contribution
Plan is to provide mitigation to the
affected Ford retirees of the costs shifted
to them and no longer to be paid by the
Ford modified health plan.
5. The Defined Contribution Plan
Mitigation benefits will be paid from a
new voluntary employee beneficiary
trust, the DC VEBA, controlled by a
seven (7) member Committee which is
independent of Ford. The DC VEBA
qualifies as a ‘‘voluntary employees’
beneficiary association’’ within the
meaning of section 501(c)(9) of the
Code. The DC VEBA was established on
July 18, 2006, through a welfare benefit
trust (the Trust), as described under
section 419(A)(f)(5)(A) of the Code. The
Trust was established by the Trust
Agreement between State Street Bank
and Trust (the Trustee) and Ford.
Under the terms of the Settlement
Agreement, Ford is required to make
certain contributions to the DC VEBA.
In this regard, Ford is obligated to make
a contribution in cash in the amount of
$30 million as soon as practicable
following the Effective Date (i.e., July
13, 2006) of the Settlement Agreement.
It is represented that on August 10,
2006, the initial cash contribution in the
amount of $30 million was paid into the
DC VEBA. Ford is obligated to make a
second contribution in cash in the
amount of $35 million on the third
anniversary of the first contribution and
to make a third contribution in cash in
the amount of $43 million in 2011, on
the anniversary of the first contribution.
It is represented that Ford’s obligation to
make the second contribution and, if
necessary, the third contribution, will
be moved up to the extent necessary in
order to enable the DC VEBA to
continue paying mitigation at the initial
mitigation level.
In addition, monthly cash
contributions relating to certain wage
increases and COLA amounts for active
hourly employees will be diverted into
the DC VEBA. Further, a series of
contributions in cash (the Contribution
Obligation) based on the increase in the
notional value of 8,750,000 shares of
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30637
common stock of Ford (the Notional
Shares) will be made. Each of these cash
contributions will be equal to the value
of any appreciation in the share price of
Ford common stock over a value based
on a share price of $8.145. One third of
the Notional Shares shall be taken into
account on the Effective Date of the
Settlement Agreement (i.e., July 13,
2006); one third on the first anniversary
of the Effective Date; and the final third
on the second anniversary of the
Effective Date. The right to such cash
contributions is non-transferable, and
the DC VEBA shall have no shareholder
rights with respect to such cash
contributions based on Notional Shares.
It is represented that the calculation of
such cash contribution will be based on
the average price per share of Ford
common stock for the five (5)
consecutive trading days ending on the
day preceding the applicable of the
three (3) calculation dates. In the event
of a special dividend issued by Ford
prior to the third anniversary of the
Effective Date, Ford will be obligated to
make a contribution in cash equal to the
per share dividend times the total
number of Notional Shares minus the
number of Notional Shares with respect
to which Ford has already made a cash
contribution based on such Notional
Shares.
Under section 13.C of the Settlement
Agreement, no contributions are payable
by Ford to the DC VEBA, unless and
until Ford has received either
assurances that such contributions are
covered by an exemption issued by the
Department, or do not violate section
406 and 407 of the Act. In this regard,
with respect to the value of the Notional
Shares, as of the Effective Date of the
Settlement Agreement (i.e., July 13,
2006), Ford’s common stock had not
increased above the base value as set
forth in section 13.C of the Settlement
Agreement, and, as a result, no
contribution was due to the DC VEBA
with respect to that measurement date.
As of the first anniversary of the
Effective Date, (i.e., July 13, 2007),
Ford’s common stock had increased
over the base value; however, based on
section 13.C of the Settlement
Agreement, Ford declined to make a
contribution at that time. In this regard,
pursuant to section 13.C, Ford and the
UAW have the option to agree upon a
contribution to replace the Contribution
Obligation, as set forth therein, if certain
alternatives had not been satisfied by
the first anniversary of the Effective
Date of the Settlement Agreement.
Because neither of the alternatives were
satisfied by such date, Ford and the
UAW agreed in the Memorandum of
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Understanding on Post Retirement
Medical Care, dated November 3, 2007,
(the MOU) (as subsequently embodied
in a settlement agreement, dated March
28, 2008, (the New Settlement
Agreement), that Ford shall satisfy its
Contribution Obligation, pursuant to
section 13.C, by making an aggregate
cash contribution of $33 million to the
DC VEBA, within five (5) days of the
‘‘Final Effective Date’’ (as defined in the
New Settlement Agreement) 7 in full
satisfaction of Ford’s obligations
thereunder.
6. The Committee acts as the named
fiduciary and administrator for the
Defined Contribution Plan and is
responsible for the administration,
operation, management and
interpretation of the Trust, as set forth
in the Trust Agreement. In this regard,
the Committee appoints (and may
remove) the Trustee, the investment
managers of the DC VEBA’s assets, and
other suitable professionals and agents
to provide advice and services to the
Committee or the Trust. The
Committee’s duties include directing
the investment of the assets of the Trust,
except and to the extent that the
Committee has invested such authority
in the Trustee or has appointed an
investment manager. In addition the
Trust may be amended in writing at any
time and from time to time, in whole or
in part, by the action of the Committee.
It is represented that Ford has no right
to amend the Trust at any time.
The Committee is comprised of seven
individuals, consisting of two classes,
the ‘‘UAW class,’’ and the ‘‘public
class.’’ The UAW Class has three (3)
members which are appointed by the
UAW and serve at the discretion of the
UAW. The members of the UAW class
may be removed or replaced at any time
by written notice by the President of the
UAW to the members of the Committee.
The public class has four (4) members
who serve terms of four (4) years, except
that the initial members serve terms, as
set forth in the Trust Agreement. In the
event of a vacancy in the public class,
whether by expiration of a term,
resignation, removal, incapacity, death
or otherwise, the public class will elect
a new member of the public class by
majority vote of the continuing public
class members, excluding such member
vacating his or her seat. A public class
7 It is represented that ‘‘Final Effective Date’’
means the later of the date on which the U.S.
District Court enters the approval order or the date
on which Ford has completed, on a basis reasonably
satisfactory to Ford, its discussions with the staff of
the SEC regarding certain accounting treatment
with respect to the New VEBA and Ford’s postemployment retiree health obligation for the
covered group.
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Jkt 217001
member can be removed by the
affirmative vote of any five (5) other
members of the Committee at any time.
One of the members of the public
class serves as the Chair of the
Committee. William E. Spriggs serves in
the capacity as Chairman of the
Committee. The Committee Chair serves
for a term of two (2) years. Any
successor Committee Chair will be
elected by a majority vote of the
Committee.
All of the members of the Committee
are independent of Ford. The members
of the Committee do not include any
Ford representative, and Ford does not
have any authority to select members of
the Committee. No member of the
Committee may be an affiliate of Ford,
as the term, ‘‘Affiliate,’’ is defined in
section III(b), above of this exemption,
including a current or former officer,
director or salaried employee of Ford.
No member of the public class may be
an active employee or retiree of the
UAW, nor may any member of the
public class have any financial or
institutional relationship with Ford,
with the Committee or any Committee
member that the Committee, in its sole
discretion determines to be material.
The Committee handles
administrative tasks on behalf of the DC
VEBA and the Defined Contribution
Plan which is funded by the DC VEBA,
as described in the Settlement
Agreement, through Retiree Health
Administration Company, LLC (RHAC).
RHAC is a limited liability company set
up to administer the Defined
Contribution Plan on behalf of the
Committee. RHAC is jointly owned by
the UAW–GM VEBA and the DC VEBA.
RHAC has joined and will continue to
join with the Committee’s outside
auditors in auditing the calculation of
the true-up in connection with the
Defined Contribution Plan.
RHAC also administers the provision
of dental coverage to eligible retirees by
the DC VEBA. For the plan year
beginning in July 2006 and for January
and February of 2007, Ford provided
dental coverage for UAW–Ford retirees
and surviving spouses and their
dependents, and the DC VEBA
reimbursed Ford for the claims and
premiums attributable to this group.
From and after March 1, 2007, dental
benefits are provided by the DC VEBA
to eligible groups separate and apart
from Ford, without Mitigation or
reimbursement arrangement of any
kind. The DC VEBA has contracted
directly with carriers for dental services
and has paid the applicable claims and
premiums directly. Claims processing is
contracted out to Blue Cross Blue Shield
of Michigan. Maintaining eligibility
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
records is contracted to Ford’s National
Employee Service Center which also
provides a call center to respond to
participant needs. RHAC pays the bills,
negotiates and monitors outside vendor
contracts, audits claims and eligibility,
coordinates the activities of outside
professionals, and provides for certain
other needs of the Committee with
respect to the provision of dental
benefits.
The Committee has retained George
Johnson & Company as its outside
auditor responsible for the audit of the
financial statements for the DC VEBA
and the Defined Contribution Plan,
including preparation of certain annual
form filings. The Committee has also
retained Plante & Morgan, L.L.P.
(Plante) as its outside auditor
responsible for assisting the staff of the
Committee with the review of
differences between estimated and
actual Mitigation amounts. As such,
Plante has audited the calculation of the
true-up and has made and will continue
to make, such information available to
Ford.
The Committee has retained
Milliman, Inc. (Milliman), as its actuary.
The Committee and Milliman have
reviewed and approved the estimation
process which results in the monthly
Mitigation amounts paid to Ford and
will continue to do so.
7. As of December 31, 2006, the DC
VEBA had cash of approximately $119
million. The DC VEBA uses its assets to
mitigate the cost sharing requirements
imposed on the retirees by the
Settlement Agreement. Initial levels of
Mitigation are set forth in the Settlement
Agreement, and may be modified later
by the Committee in accordance with
the terms of the Settlement Agreement
and the Trust Agreement.
8. The initial Mitigation levels
provide for Mitigation of monthly
retiree contributions down to $10 per
individual and $21 per family (from $50
per individual, and $105 per family).
Deductibles will be mitigated down to
an annual maximum of $150 per
individual (from $300 per individual)
and $300 per family (from $600 per
family). The out-of-pocket maximum
will be mitigated so that it is capped for
in-network benefits at $250 per
individual per year (from $500 per
individual) and $500 per family per year
(from $1,000 per family), and capped for
out-of-network benefits at $500 per
individual (from $1,000 per individual)
and $1,000 per family (from $2,000 per
family). It is represented that the
Mitigation provided by the Defined
Contribution Plan through the DC VEBA
provides a significant benefit to
participants who would otherwise be
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required to make these payments out of
their own pockets.
In addition, dental benefits were
provided from July 2006 through
February 2007, pursuant to a
reimbursement arrangement with Ford.
Since March 1, 2007, however, the DC
VEBA has been the sole source of dental
benefits for eligible groups.
9. In order to reduce the
administrative burden on the DC VEBA,
and avoid having participants initially
pay the costs and subsequently request
reimbursement upon submission of
documentation, the Settlement
Agreement contemplates having Ford
act as the conduit through which the DC
VEBA will make Mitigation.
Specifically, Ford will make certain
payments that hourly retirees and their
enrolled dependents would otherwise
be required to make out of their own
pockets. Ford will then accept
Mitigation payments from the DC VEBA
and apply such payments in accordance
with the direction and instruction of the
Committee for the benefit of the
participants in the Defined Contribution
Plan.
This reimbursement process
anticipates monthly advance payments
to Ford from the DC VEBA of the
actuarially anticipated cost of the initial
Mitigation amounts, with a true-up no
later than December 23 of the following
calendar year.
Specifically, the Mitigation process
will work as follows: Annually, no later
than May 1 of the preceding year, the
Committee will inform Ford of the
Mitigation levels for the following
calendar year. Thereafter, no later than
September 1 of the year preceding the
forthcoming Mitigation year, Ford will
provide the Committee with a
preliminary estimate of the annual
mitigation amount for the following
calendar year. On December 1 of the
preceding year, Ford will provide the
Committee with the actuariallydetermined, final estimated annual
mitigation amount. Both the preliminary
and final estimated mitigation amounts
need to be agreed to by the Committee.
Then, as of the beginning of the
calendar year of Mitigation, the DC
VEBA will pay to Ford on a monthly
basis an amount equal to 1⁄12 of the final
estimated annual mitigation amount.
No later than December 1 following
the calendar year in which the monthly
estimated mitigation payments have
been made, Ford and the DC VEBA will
engage in a true-up process. Ford will
provide the Committee an actuarial
report that determines the actual annual
Mitigation amount and compares it to
the estimated annual Mitigation
payments that Ford received during the
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16:39 Jun 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
prior year. No later than December 23 of
the year following the year being truedup, a true-up payment either will be
paid by the DC VEBA to Ford, or by
Ford back to the DC VEBA. Interest for
any late payments, or for any true-up
payment (whether from Ford back to the
DC VEBA or from the DC VEBA to Ford)
will be paid at the interest rate 8 for
Other Post-Employment Benefits (the
OPEB), as defined in section III(i) of this
exemption. In addition, Ford is required
to provide detailed quarterly reports to
the Committee detailing retiree health
claims experience, and the Committee
shall have the right to request a
reasonable audit of Ford’s books and
records with respect to Mitigation
payments made to Ford by the DC
VEBA. The amount of any true-up
payment will need to be approved by
the Committee. If there is a dispute as
to the true-up report or the amount of
the true-up payment, undisputed
amounts will be paid and the parties
will enter into an arbitration dispute
process, as set forth in the Settlement
Agreement, which involves
independent decision-makers who will
resolve any true-up dispute.
10. It is represented that the DC VEBA
has made estimated Mitigation
payments for health care to Ford for
every month beginning with August
2006 and continuing to the present. The
DC VEBA has separately reimbursed
Ford for dental claims and premiums
that Ford paid on behalf of the
participants in the DC VEBA for the
period from July 14, 2006, through
February 28, 2007. As stated previously
in this proposed exemption, beginning
March 1, 2007, the DC VEBA has
contracted directly for dental services
for its participants. It is represented that
the amount of the dental reimbursement
payments for 2006 and 2007 do not
include the monthly administrative fee
paid to Ford for maintaining eligibility
records and providing a call center to
respond to participant needs.9 For the
8 The OPEB interest rate, as defined in section
13(D) of the Settlement Agreement, is the discount
rate used by Ford’s health care actuaries in
accordance with the Financial Accounting Standard
106 (FAS 106) actuarial valuation for the applicable
period. Ford has also represented that the OPEB
interest rate is the discount rate that a company
uses to value ‘‘Other Post-Retirement Employee
Benefits’’ for FAS 106 accounting reporting. The
discount rate is based on market yields, as of a
plan’s annual measurement date, on high quality
fixed income securities of duration similar to the
benefit obligation. For purposes of Ford’s retiree
health obligation, its OPEB interest rate is
developed each year in consultation with its
outside accountants. Ford used an OPEB interest
rate of 5.75% in 2005, of 5.75% in 2004, and of
6.25% in 2003 relating to retiree health.
9 Ford relies on the relief provided by the
statutory exemption, pursuant to section 408(b)(2)
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30639
period July 2006, through December
2006, the DC VEBA made total
Mitigation reimbursement payments to
Ford for health care and dental benefits
of approximately $30,755,460 and
$16,141,185, respectively. For the
period January 2007, through December
2007, the DC VEBA made total
Mitigation reimbursement payments to
Ford for health care and dental benefits
of approximately $83,900,004 and
$14,891,491, respectively. For the
period January 2008, through March
2008, the DC VEBA made total
Mitigation reimbursement payments to
Ford solely for health care benefits of
approximately $22,375,000. For the
period April 2008, through April 2009,
the DC VEBA made total Mitigation
reimbursement payments to Ford solely
for health care benefits of approximately
$30,873,428.
On February 7, 2008, Ford paid to the
DC VEBA a 2006 true-up payment in the
amount of $866,387. In addition, Ford
paid to the DC VEBA interest in the
amount of $74,929.91 in two (2)
payments dated February 7, 2008, and
April 17, 2008, of approximately
$72,777 and $2,153, respectively. The
total true-up payment for the year 2006,
including interest, was $941,316.91. The
total true-up payment for the year 2007,
including interest of $46,368, was
$492,305. The true-up amount for 2008
will not be determined until the fall of
2009.
11. Ford requests a retroactive
administrative exemption from the
Department with respect to the
following transactions: (a) monthly cash
advances to Ford by the DC VEBA to
reimburse Ford for the estimated
Mitigation of certain health care
expenses and for the payment of certain
dental expenses incurred by
participants in the DC VEBA; and (b) an
annual true-up of such Mitigation
payments and such dental expenses.
Further, in this regard, if Ford is
underpaid by the DC VEBA, it would
receive the balance outstanding from the
DC VEBA, with interest. Conversely, if
the DC VEBA overpaid Ford, Ford
would reimburse the DC VEBA for the
amount overpaid, with interest.
Accordingly, Ford requests retroactive
of the Act, in connection with Ford’s providing the
DC VEBA with monthly administrative services,
maintaining eligibility records, and providing a call
center to respond to participant needs. The
Department, herein, is offering no view, as to
whether the provision of such services rendered by
Ford to the DC VEBA is covered by the statutory
exemption provided in section 408(b)(2) of the Act
and the Department’s regulations, thereunder,
pursuant to 29 CFR 2550.408(b)-2. Further the
Department is not providing, herein, any relief with
respect to the provision of such services to the DC
VEBA by Ford.
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relief from sections 406(a)(1)(B), and
406(a)(1)(D), respectively, because these
transactions could be deemed to
constitute the lending of money or
extension of credit between the DC
VEBA and Ford, a party in interest, or
could be viewed as the use by or for the
benefit of a party in interest of plan
assets.
With respect to violations of section
406(b) of the Act, in the opinion of Ford,
the involvement in such transactions by
the Committee, a fiduciary of the
Defined Contribution Plan and the DC
VEBA that is independent of Ford,
eliminates any issues under section
406(b) of the Act. However, to eliminate
any uncertainty respecting the issue,
Ford seeks retroactive relief under
section 406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of the Act.
If granted, the exemption would be
effective as of July 13, 2006.
As discussed in paragraph 5, above of
the Summary of Facts and
Representations of this proposed
exemption, the Settlement Agreement
grants to the DC VEBA a right to receive,
and obligates Ford to make
contributions that are based on the
increase in the notional value of
8,750,000 shares of Ford common stock.
Such contributions will be nontransferable cash contributions
determined on each of (i) the Effective
Date of the Settlement Agreement (i.e.,
July 13, 2006), (ii) the first anniversary
of the Effective Date, and (iii) the second
anniversary of the Effective Date. The
Department is not providing exemptive
relief herein with respect to the
Contribution Obligation because, in the
view of the Department, the
Contribution Obligation is merely a
contractual provision evidenced in the
DC VEBA Settlement Agreement which
is designed to determine the amount of
additional cash contributions that must
be made to the DC VEBA.10
12. It is represented that the
Mitigation payments significantly
benefit the interests of Ford hourly
retirees and their covered dependents.
Having the Mitigation paid directly from
the DC VEBA would otherwise involve
significant delays and out of pocket
expenditures by plan participants.
13. Without an administrative
exemption, Ford states that the DC
VEBA would be required to establish a
costly administrative scheme to
10 The Department further believes that the
Contribution Obligation is not an ‘‘employer
security: Within the meaning of section 407(d)(1) of
the Act. Since it appears that the Contribution
Obligation does not result in the acquisition or
holding by the DC VEBA of an ‘‘employer security,’’
the Department has not proposed separate
exemptive relief herein with respect to such
obligation.
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16:39 Jun 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
reimburse participants in the DC VEBA.
In this regard, Ford retirees’ would be
charged the full costs of the monthly
contributions, co-pays, and deductibles.
These retirees would then have to apply
for reimbursement payments, via a
claim form, from the DC VEBA or its
retained third party administrator. This
alternative would have the dual effect of
significantly delaying payments to the
retirees and placing large and expensive
administrative burdens on the DC
VEBA, and hardship on the retirees
themselves.
14. It is represented that the proposed
exemption is administratively feasible
with terms clearly established in the
Settlement Agreement and the Trust
document. Further, implementation of
the covered transactions provides the
resolution to the Hardwick I Case,
enabling Ford to fund the DC VEBA and
provide Mitigation amounts to the
retirees.
15. The proposed exemption contains
sufficient safeguards in that Ford and
the UAW negotiated at arm’s length over
the terms of the covered transaction and
such terms were memorialized in a
court-approved Settlement Agreement
involving both the UAW and Class
Counsel. In addition, the UAW, which
represents the interests of the Ford
hourly retirees and their dependents,
fully supports the requested exemption.
Further the terms of the Settlement
Agreement, including the Mitigation
payment process and the DC VEBA
contribution rules, were subject to a
fairness hearing and a judicial
determination that it is fair and
reasonable to Ford hourly retirees.
It is represented that the calculation
of the Mitigation payments is subject to
the strict scrutiny of actuaries retained
by the DC VEBA and requires the
ultimate approval of the Committee. The
process by which the Mitigation
payments are established ensures that
the monthly Mitigation payments will
reflect an actuarially sound estimate of
the projected mitigation costs.
The Committee, acting as
independent fiduciary of the Defined
Contribution Plan and the DC VEBA,
ensures that the cash contributions
based on the value of Notional Shares
are correctly calculated and timely
contributed to the DC VEBA.
Finally, the interest rate used to
calculate the true-up payments is a
reasonable rate, as set forth in the DC
VEBA Settlement Agreement and does
not present a windfall or detriment to
either Ford or the DC VEBA.
16. Ford and the Committee will each
maintain records of covered transactions
for a period of six (6) years. The
Committee maintains records of
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Sfmt 4703
payments made or received by the DC
VEBA, quarterly reports, and dental
claims records, but no other health
benefit claims records. Ford has
provided the reports required under the
Settlement Agreement with respect to
the estimated Mitigation and the trueup. Ford will continue to provide all
reports and records concerning the
Mitigation required under the
Settlement Agreement, and such reports
have been and will continue to be
subject to review and audit by the
Committee, as provided in the
Settlement Agreement.
17. It is represented that ultimately,
the DC VEBA will be terminated and its
assets transferred to a new VEBA (the
New VEBA). However, several steps will
occur before this happens. These steps
were first described in the MOU, dated
November 3, 2007, and agreed to by
Ford and the UAW. The terms of the
MOU were subsequently embodied in
the New Settlement Agreement between
Ford and the UAW, and the Class
representatives, on behalf of the
applicable class in: (a) The class action
of Int’l Union, UAW, et. al. v. Ford
Motor Company, Civil Action No. 07–
14845 (E.D. Mich. filed Nov. 9, 2007)
and/or (b) the class action of the
Hardwick I Case. The New Settlement
Agreement resolves and settles any and
all claims for Ford contributions to the
DC VEBA, and provides for the
termination of the DC VEBA and the
transfer of all assets and liabilities of the
DC VEBA to the New VEBA. In the
event of an inconsistency between the
New Settlement Agreement and any
prior agreements or documents,
including the MOU, the New Settlement
Agreement will control.
In the negotiations leading to the
MOU and the New Settlement
Agreement, Ford advised the UAW of its
intent to terminate the Hardwick I Case
Settlement Agreement in accordance
with its terms in 2011 and exercise its
right to terminate and/or modify retiree
health coverage for all UAW retirees and
their dependents, and the UAW
reasserted its position that postretirement medical coverage for current
UAW retirees is vested and unalterable.
The New Settlement Agreement
provides that as of the day following the
‘‘Implementation Date’’ (as defined in
the New Settlement Agreement), the
‘‘New Plan’’ (as defined in the New
Settlement Agreement) and the New
VEBA shall be the employee welfare
benefit plan and trust that are
exclusively responsible for all retiree
medical benefits for which Ford, the
Ford Retiree Health Plan (as defined in
the New Settlement Agreement), and
any other Ford entity or benefit plan
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 122 / Friday, June 26, 2009 / Notices
formerly would have been responsible
with regard to the class and covered
group.
With regard to the DC VEBA, section
12.C of the New Settlement Agreement
states that the ‘‘Approval Order’’ (as
defined in the New Settlement
Agreement) shall direct the Committee
and the Trustee of the DC VEBA to
transfer all assets and liabilities of the
DC VEBA to the New VEBA and
terminate the DC VEBA within fifteen
(15) days after the Implementation Date.
This transfer of assets and liabilities
shall include, but not be limited to, the
transfer of all rights and obligations
granted to or imposed on the DC VEBA
under section 14.C of the Settlement
Agreement. Further, Ford agrees that, on
the day following the Implementation
Date, the New VEBA shall be
substituted for the DC VEBA for such
purposes. The Approval Order shall
further provide that the DC VEBA shall
be terminated after this payment is
made.
In addition, the New Settlement
Agreement makes certain provisions
with respect to the wage and COLA
deferrals and other contributions
payable to the DC VEBA, and further
provides that Ford shall satisfy the
Contribution Obligation, set forth in
section 13.C of the Settlement
Agreement by making an aggregate cash
contribution of $33 million to the DC
VEBA within five (5) days of the Final
Effective Date in full satisfaction of its
obligations thereunder.
18. In summary, Ford represents that
the transactions have satisfied and will
continue to satisfy the statutory criteria
for an exemption under section 408(a) of
the Act because:
(a) The Committee, acting as a
fiduciary independent of Ford, has
represented and will continue to
represent the DC VEBA and its
participants and beneficiaries for all
purposes with respect to the Mitigation
process under the Settlement
Agreement.
(b) The Committee for the DC VEBA
has discharged and will continue to
discharge its duties consistent with the
terms of the Settlement Agreement.
(c) The Committee and actuaries
retained by the Committee have
reviewed and approved and will
continue to review and approve the
estimation process involved in the
Mitigation, which results in the monthly
Mitigation amount paid to Ford.
(d) Outside auditors retained by the
Committee, along with an
administrative company that is partly
owned by the DC VEBA, have audited
and will audit the calculation of the
true-up to determine whether there are
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16:39 Jun 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
any differences between the estimated
Mitigation and actual Mitigation
amounts and have made and will make
such information available to Ford.
(e) Ford has provided various report
and records to the Committee
concerning dental care reimbursements
for the period from July 14, 2006
through February 28, 2007, which were
subject to review and audit by the
Committee, and Ford has provided and
will continue to provide various reports
and records to the Committee
concerning the Mitigation required
under the Settlement Agreement which
were and will continue to be subject to
review and audit by the Committee.
(f) The terms of the covered
transactions are no less favorable and
will continue to be no less favorable to
the DC VEBA than the terms negotiated
at arm’s length under similar
circumstances between unrelated third
parties.
(g) The interest rate applied to any
true-up payments is a reasonable rate, as
set forth in the DC VEBA Settlement
Agreement, and will continue to be a
reasonable rate that runs from the
beginning of the year being trued up and
does not and will not present a windfall
or detriment to either party.
(h) The DC VEBA has not incurred
and will continue not to incur any fees,
costs or other charges (other than those
described in the DC VEBA and the DC
VEBA Settlement Agreement) as a result
of the covered transactions described
herein.
(i) Ford and the Committee have
maintained and will continue to
maintain for a period of six (6) years
from the date of any of the covered
transactions, any and all records
necessary to determine whether
conditions of this exemption have been
and will continue to be met.
Notice to Interested Persons
Ford will provide notice of the
proposed exemption to: (1) The UAW;
and (2) persons who on or after
December 22, 2005, and prior to the date
of the filing of the application for
exemption (i.e., November 27, 2007)
were: (a) Ford/UAW hourly employees
who had retired from Ford with
eligibility to participate during
retirement in the Ford health plan, or (b)
spouses or surviving spouses of Ford/
UAW hourly employees, who on or after
December 22, 2005, were eligible for
post-retirement or surviving spouse
health care coverage from Ford
(collectively, Interested Persons) within
twenty (20) calendar days of the
publication of the notice of proposed
exemption in the Federal Register. Such
notice will be provided to Interested
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
30641
Persons by first-class mail, at the last
known mailing address of such
Interested Persons and will include a
photocopy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal
Register as well as a supplemental
statement, as required pursuant to 29
CFR 2570.43(b)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on and/or to
request a hearing. Comments and
requests for a hearing with respect to the
proposed exemption are due within fifty
(50) calendar days of the publication of
this pendency notice in the Federal
Register. If you decide to submit written
comments to the Department, your
comments should be limited to the
transactions described in this proposed
exemption. However, if you have
concerns about your retiree health
benefits or any other administrative
issues relating to your benefits, you
should contact NESC, by phone at 1–
800–248–4444, by mail P.O. Box 6214,
Dearborn, MI 48121, or by e-mail at
nesc@ford.com.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Angelena C. Le Blanc of the Department,
at e-mail address ford@dol.gov, or at
telephone number 202–693–8547 (This
is not a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction
provisions to which the exemption does
not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which, among other things,
require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(b) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be
granted under section 408(a) of the Act
and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code,
the Department must find that the
exemption is administratively feasible,
in the interests of the plan and of its
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of the plan;
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(3) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be supplemental to, and
not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transitional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be subject to the express
condition that the material facts and
representations contained in each
application are true and complete, and
that each application accurately
describes all material terms of the
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 22nd day
of June, 2009.
Ivan Strasfeld,
Director of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. E9–15159 Filed 6–25–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
[TA–W–65,921]
Newport Corporation, Irvine, CA;
Notice of Termination of Investigation
Pursuant to Section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on May 15,
2009 in response to a worker petition
filed by the State Workforce Office on
behalf of workers at Newport
Corporation, Irvine, California.
The petitioner has requested that the
petition be withdrawn. Consequently,
the investigation has been terminated.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 27th day of
May 2009.
Linda G. Poole,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E9–15220 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
[TA–W–65,920]
Employment and Training
Administration
Toyal America, Inc., Lockport, IL;
Notice of Termination of Investigation
[TA–W–65,922]
Seton Identification Products, Inc.,
Branford, CT; Notice of Termination of
Investigation
Pursuant to Section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on May 15,
2009 in response to a petition filed on
behalf of workers at Seton Identification
Products, Inc., Branford, Connecticut.
The workers are engaged in activities
related to the production of signs, tags
and labels.
The petitioners have requested that
the petition be withdrawn.
Consequently, the investigation has
been terminated.
Signed in Washington, DC, this 26th day of
May 2009.
Richard Church
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E9–15221 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
In accordance with Section 221 of the
Trade Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on May 15,
2009 in response to a petition filed by
a company official on behalf of workers
of Toyal America, Inc., Lockport,
Illinois.
The petitioner has requested that the
petition be withdrawn. Consequently,
the investigation has been terminated.
Signed in Washington, DC, this 18th day of
May 2009.
Richard Church,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E9–15219 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
16:39 Jun 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
Signed at Washington, DC, this 22nd day
of May 2009.
Richard Church,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E9–15218 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
[TA–W–65,912]
L and L Products, Romeo, MI; Notice
of Termination of Investigation
Pursuant to Section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on May 12,
2009 in response to a petition filed on
behalf of workers of L and L Products,
Romeo, Michigan.
The petitioners have requested that
the petition be withdrawn.
Consequently, the investigation has
been terminated.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 15th day of
May 2009.
Elliott S. Kushner,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E9–15217 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
[TA–W–65,908]
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
DJ Fashions, LLC, New York, NY;
Notice of Termination of Investigation
Employment and Training
Administration
[TA–W–65,913]
Performance Powder Coatings LLC,
Kokomo, IN; Notice of Termination of
Investigation
Pursuant to Section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on May 12,
VerDate Nov<24>2008
2009 in response to a worker petition
filed by a company official on behalf of
workers at Performance Powder
Coatings, LLC, Kokomo, Indiana.
The petitioner has requested that the
petition be withdrawn. Consequently,
the investigation has been terminated.
PO 00000
Frm 00143
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Pursuant to Section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on May 11,
2009 in response to a petition filed by
a company official on behalf of the
workers at DJ Fashions, LLC, New York,
New York.
The petitioner has requested that the
petition be withdrawn. Consequently,
the investigation has been terminated.
E:\FR\FM\26JNN1.SGM
26JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 122 (Friday, June 26, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30631-30642]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-15159]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
[Application Nos. and Proposed Exemptions; D-11432, Iron Workers Local
17 Pension Fund (the Plan); D-11483 Urology Clinics of North Texas,
P.A. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan and Trust (The Plan); and L-11451, Ford
Motor Corporation and Its Affiliates (collectively, Ford), et al.]
Notice of Proposed Exemptions
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Exemptions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of proposed exemptions from
certain of the prohibited transaction restrictions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code).
Written Comments and Hearing Requests
All interested persons are invited to submit written comments or
requests for a hearing on the pending exemptions, unless otherwise
stated in the Notice of Proposed Exemption, within 45 days from the
date of publication of this Federal Register Notice. Comments and
requests for a hearing should state: (1) The name, address, and
telephone number of the person making the comment or request, and (2)
the nature of the person's interest in the exemption and the manner in
which the person would be adversely affected by the exemption. A
request for a hearing must also state the issues to be addressed and
include a general description of the evidence to be presented at the
hearing.
ADDRESSES: All written comments and requests for a hearing (at least
three copies) should be sent to the Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), Office of Exemption Determinations, Room N-5700,
U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC
20210. Attention: Application No. ------ stated in each Notice of
Proposed Exemption. Interested persons are also invited to submit
comments and/or hearing requests to EBSA via e-mail or FAX. Any such
comments or requests should be sent either by e-mail to:
``moffitt.betty@dol.gov'', or by FAX to (202) 219-0204 by the end of
the scheduled comment period. The applications for exemption and the
comments received will be available for public inspection in the Public
Documents Room of the Employee Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N-1513, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions will be provided to all
interested persons in the manner agreed upon by the applicant and the
Department within 15 days of the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal Register and shall inform
interested persons of their right to comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The proposed exemptions were requested in
applications filed pursuant to section 408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).
[[Page 30632]]
Effective December 31, 1978, section 102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4
of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred the authority of the
Secretary of the Treasury to issue exemptions of the type requested to
the Secretary of Labor. Therefore, these notices of proposed exemption
are issued solely by the Department. The applications contain
representations with regard to the proposed exemptions which are
summarized below. Interested persons are referred to the applications
on file with the Department for a complete statement of the facts and
representations.
Iron Workers Local 17 Pension Fund (the Plan) Located in Cleveland,
Ohio
[Application No. D-11432]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570 subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If the proposed
exemption is granted, the restrictions in sections 406(a)(1)(A),
406(a)(1)(D), and 406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of the Act and the sanctions
resulting from the application of section 4975 of the Code, by reason
of sections 4975(c)(1)(A) and 4975(c)(1)(D) through (E) of the Code,
shall not apply to the sale of a leasehold interest, which includes an
office building (the Building) and certain rights pursuant to a ground
lease, held by the Plan, to the Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron
Workers Local Union No. 17 (the Union), a party in interest with
respect to the Plan, provided that the following conditions are
satisfied:
(a) The terms and conditions of the sale are at least as favorable
to the Plan as those that the Plan could obtain in an arm's length
transaction with an unrelated party;
(b) The Plan receives the greater of $285,000 or the fair market
value of the Building and lot on which the Building is located (the
Lot), as of the date of the sale, as determined by a qualified,
independent appraiser;
(c) The sale is a one-time transaction for cash;
(d) The Plan pays no commissions, costs, or other expenses in
connection with the sale (other than fees associated with the retention
of a qualified, independent appraiser and the retention of a qualified,
independent fiduciary);
(e) The Board of Trustees retains a qualified, independent
fiduciary, who will review and approve the methodology used by the
qualified, independent appraiser, will ensure that such methodology is
properly applied in determining the fair market value of the Building
and Lot as of the date of the sale, and will determine whether it is
prudent to go forward with the proposed transaction; and
(f) Prior to the publication of a final exemption, if granted, in
the Federal Register, regarding the transaction that is the subject of
this proposed exemption, the Union: Files Form 5330 (Return of Excise
Taxes Related to Employee Benefit Plans) with the Internal Revenue
Service and pays all applicable excise taxes that are due by reason of
its prohibited past leasing to the Plan of the Lot on which the subject
Building was constructed by the Plan; and Provides a copy of the
cancelled check and other documentary evidence to the Department
indicating that the taxes were correctly computed and paid.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Plan is a multi-employer, defined benefit pension plan,
created and maintained pursuant to collective bargaining agreements
between the Union and the Construction Employers Association (CEA). The
Plan is administered by a Board of Trustees (the Trustees), consisting
of three trustees appointed by the Union and three, by the CEA. As of
April 30, 2008, the Plan had approximately 2,180 participants and
beneficiaries and total assets of approximately $115,313,797.
2. Among the assets of the Plan is its leasehold interest in a
property located at 1564 East 23rd Street, Cleveland, Ohio. A one-story
office building (the Building), measuring 4114 square feet, sits on a
51' x 147' lot belonging to the Union (the Lot) that is currently being
leased to the Plan. The lease provides for an initial term of 99 years
until 2084 and a rental rate of $200 per month. Under the lease terms,
the Plan also has an option to terminate the lease at any time, to
extend the term of the lease indefinitely at the same rental rate, or
to purchase the Lot for $20,000. The Building is adjacent to, and
shares a common wall with, the Union's building at 1544 East 23rd
Street, Cleveland, Ohio. There is a parking lot consisting of eight
parking spaces in front of the Building. The immediate neighborhood is
a mixed-use commercial area.
The Building was constructed on the Lot by the Plan in 1986,
pursuant to a feasibility study by Coopers & Lybrand commissioned by
the Trustees; Coopers & Lybrand opined that it would be more cost-
effective in the long run for the Plan to construct its own office
space rather than to continue renting, as it had been doing.
Subsequently, the Plan entered into a lease for the Lot with the Union,
made retroactive to September 1985 but without the benefit of an
administrative prohibited transaction exemption.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Department is not proposing any exemptive relief herein
for these past prohibited transactions, whose background is
described in greater detail in Facts and Representations 5,
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Plan uses the Building for administrative office space and also
leases office space to its ``sister plans,'' the Iron Workers Local 17
Annuity Fund and the Iron Workers Local 17 Insurance Benefit Fund,
pursuant to Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 76-1 and PTE 77-
10.\2\ According to the applicant, shared expenses are allocated on a
pro rata basis, with the Plan consistently receiving an allocation of
approximately 40% of shared expenses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ PTE 76-1 (41 FR 12740, March 26, 1976) is a class exemption
that provides relief from sections 406(a) and 407(a) of the Act (and
section 4975(c)(1)(A) through (D) of the Code), under certain
conditions, for the leasing of office space by a multiple employer
plan to a participating employee organization, participating
employer, participating employer association, or another multiple
employer plan, which is a party in interest or disqualified person
with respect to the plan. PTE 77-10 (42 FR 33918, July 1, 1977) is a
class exemption that provides relief from section 406(b)(2) of the
Act, under certain conditions, for the leasing of office space by a
multiple employer plan to a participating employee organization,
participating employer (without regard to whether the office space
constitutes ``qualifying employer real property''), participating
employer association, or another multiple employer plan, which is a
party in interest with respect to the plan or to which it is related
by virtue of having common trustees. The Department expresses no
opinion herein as to whether the Plan's leases to its ``sister
plans'' satisfy the terms and conditions of PTEs 76-1 and 77-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. The Building and Lot were appraised by James P. Prosek, SRA, and
Aaron Baaske, CRA, CREA, independent appraisers located in Amherst,
Ohio. Mr. Prosek and Mr. Baaske are experienced real estate appraisers
licensed in the state of Ohio and are members of recognized societies
that award professional designations in their field. In their appraisal
report, Mr. Prosek and Mr. Baaske utilized the Sales Comparison
Approach and the Income Approach, with greater reliance on the former,
to arrive at an estimated value of $285,000, as of November 14, 2008,
for the fee simple interest of the Building and Lot (as a unified
property). They then opined that the value of the Union's leased fee
interest in the property, belonging to the Union as the lessor, is
$20,000, or the amount specified in the Plan's option to purchase the
Lot under the terms of the ground lease. To isolate the value of the
Plan's leasehold interest in the property, they then subtracted $20,000
from the value of the fee simple interest
[[Page 30633]]
($285,000), so that the value of the Plan's interest is $265,000, as of
November 14, 2008. Although the Plan does not own the whole property
but only the leasehold interest, the Union is willing to pay a purchase
price encompassing the fair market value of both the Building and Lot
as a unified property.
Mr. Prosek and Mr. Baaske also determined that no premium is due
from the Union to the Plan, as a term of the proposed sale, for any
assemblage value resulting from the adjacency of the Union's building
to the Plan's Building. The appraisers state, ``A study of the
influence of incremental size on office property values in this market
does not reveal a premium being paid, on a price per square foot basis,
for larger properties. In fact, some tendency toward diminishing return
on size is evident * * *.'' The report continues, ``Further, the
subject building was designed and built for a single user * * *. It was
not designed to be incorporated with the neighboring building and
combining the two might result in a larger building that offers less
than optimum utility.'' The report concludes, ``[T]he highest and best
use of the subject property is a continuation of its current use as an
independent office facility.''
In regard to the fair market rental value of the Building, Mr.
Prosek and Mr. Baaske state, ``The observed leasing activity produces a
fairly tight range of contract and asking rents, generally from about
$9.00 to $12.00 per square foot of building area * * *. These leases
and offerings suggest rent, assuming the described market expense
structure, near $10.50 per square foot per year as appropriate for the
subject space.''
4. The Trustees have retained Ms. Nell Hennessy, President and
Chief Executive Officer of Fiduciary Counselors Inc. (FCI) to act as an
independent fiduciary on behalf of the Plan. Ms. Hennessy has headed
FCI since its incorporation in 1999. From 1993 to 1998, she served as
Deputy Executive Director and Chief Negotiator of the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), the federal agency that guarantees private
defined benefit pensions. Prior to Ms. Hennessy's employment at the
PBGC, Ms. Hennessy was a partner in the law firm of Willkie Farr &
Gallagher, where she advised clients on a wide range of benefit,
investment, and corporate governance issues. Ms. Hennessy will review
and approve the methodology used by the appraisers to ensure that such
methodology is properly applied in determining the fair market value of
the Building and Lot, to be updated as of the date of the sale. She
also will determine whether it is prudent to go forward with the
proposed transaction.
5. At the Department's request, the applicant provided background
on the Union's past and on-going lease of the Lot to the Plan.
According to the applicant, the Cincinnati Regional Office opened an
investigation of the Plan in 1985, which continued until 1989. The
investigator advised the Union that, because the Plan did not have
separate title to the Building, use of the Plan assets to construct the
Building on Union land was a prohibited transaction.
Upon the advice of counsel, the Union, on July 10, 1987, entered
into a lease of the Lot located at 1564 East 23rd Street to the Plan,
with a retroactive effective date of September 1, 1985, pursuant to the
terms described in Facts and Representations 2, above. The
Trustees represent that they were advised by counsel, at that time,
that the ground lease was covered by the statutory exemption contained
in section 408(b)(2) of the Act.\3\ The Trustees, however, were unable
to locate and produce contemporaneous written documentation of the
advice from an ERISA counsel regarding the applicability of section
408(b)(2) to the lease.\4\ The applicant has agreed, as a condition of
this proposed exemption, to file Form 5330 and pay all applicable
excise taxes that are due by reason of its prohibited past leasing to
the Plan of the Lot on which the subject Building was constructed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Department's review of correspondence with the
Cincinnati Regional Office revealed that the field office had
advised their counsel that the ground lease was a prohibited
transaction and that an administrative prohibited transaction
exemption should be sought to cover it. The regulation at 29 CFR
2550.408b-2 clarifies that section 408(b)(2) provides relief for
payments by a plan for leases of office space. It also limits the
scope of the exemptive relief to section 406(a) so that relief from
section 406(b), which prohibits, among other things, self-dealing by
plan fiduciaries, is not provided.
\4\ The request for retroactive prohibited transaction relief
for the ground lease was withdrawn. The Department's standard for
obtaining a retroactive prohibited transaction exemption is set
forth in ERISA Technical Release 85-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. The Trustees have determined that the proposed sale to the Union
of the Plan's leasehold interest, which includes the Building, a right
of first refusal to purchase the Lot, a purchase option for the Lot,
and an option to renew for successive terms, is in the best interests
of the Plan. According to the applicant, the Plan and its ``sister
plans'' have reduced the size of their respective office staffs over
the past few years and thus their need for office space. Although the
Plan's leasehold interest represents less than three-tenths of one
percent of the Plan's assets, the Trustees believe that it is in the
best interests of the Plan to divest itself of this illiquid asset.
Further, the Plan will eliminate the operating and maintenance expenses
associated with the Building. It is represented that the Plan will
realize savings by renting the smaller amount of office space it needs
rather than continuing to occupy the Building, as explained below.
All three of the Iron Workers Local 17 plans will rent nearby
office space from an unrelated party following the sale of the Plan's
leasehold interest to the Union. The three plans will split the monthly
rental cost of $1,125 per month. Based upon the Plan's current expense
allocation of 40% of the overall cost, the Plan will pay rent of $450
per month, or $5,400 per year. The Plan's expense allocation in 2007 in
connection with the Building that it currently occupies (for holding
costs, such as the land lease, utilities, and taxes) was $10,383 per
year, the amount not offset by rent payments from the Plan's sister
plans. Thus, according to the Trustees, the move to different office
space will yield annual savings to the Plan of $4,983, approximately
47%.
Although the Plan owns only the leasehold interest, the Union is
willing to pay the greater of $285,000 or the fair market value for the
fee simple interest of the Building and Lot as a unified property (as
previously stated in Facts and Representations 3, above); the
fair market value is to be updated as of the date of the sale by a
qualified, independent appraiser. The Plan's cost of construction for
the Building was initially quoted at $231,900, but, due to cost
overruns, came to a total of $321,738.\5\ Nevertheless, the Trustees
represent that the Plan saved approximately $16,830 in rental costs
from owning the Building, which also has generated rental income for
the Plan. Although the minimum $285,000 sales price will not enable the
Plan to recoup its construction and holding costs of $640,631, the
Trustees state that the Plan has had use of the Building for the past
22 years and the imputed value of the rental income it did not have to
pay is estimated to be $367,463.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The Department expresses no opinion herein as to whether the
cost overruns paid by the Plan violated any of the provisions of
part 4 of Title I of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. The Trustees represent that the subject sale will be a one-time
transaction for cash and that the Plan will incur no fees, commissions,
or other expenses in connection with the sale (other than fees
associated with the
[[Page 30634]]
retention of a qualified, independent appraiser and the retention of a
qualified, independent fiduciary). The Union is also bearing the costs
of the exemption application and of notifying interested persons.
8. In summary, the applicant represents that the proposed
transaction satisfies the statutory criteria for an exemption under
section 408(a) of the Act for the following reasons: (a) The terms and
conditions of the sale will be at least as favorable to the Plan as
those that the Plan could obtain in an arm's length transaction with an
unrelated party; (b) the Plan will receive the greater of $285,000 or
the fair market value of the Building and Lot as of the date of the
sale, as determined by a qualified, independent appraiser; (c) the sale
will be a one-time transaction for cash; (d) the Plan will pay no
commissions, costs, or other expenses in connection with the sale
(other than fees associated with the retention of a qualified,
independent appraiser and the retention of a qualified, independent
fiduciary); and (e) the Trustees have retained a qualified, independent
fiduciary, who will review and approve the methodology used by the
qualified, independent appraiser, will ensure that such methodology is
properly applied in determining the fair market value of the Building
and Lot as of the date of the sale, and will determine whether it is
prudent to go forward with the proposed transaction.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Karin Weng of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8557. (This is not a toll-free number).
Urology Clinics of North Texas, P.A. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan and
Trust (The Plan) Located in Dallas, TX
[Application No. D-11483]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code and in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If the exemption
is granted, the restrictions of sections 406(a), 406(b)(1) and (b)(2)
of the Act and the sanctions resulting from the application of section
4975 of the Code, by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A) through (E) of the
Code, will not apply to the proposed sale (the Sale) of a 2.52 percent
ownership interest comprising five (5.0) Class I Units (the Units)
issued by the Center for Pediatric Surgery (CPS), an unrelated party,
by the individually directed account in the Plan (the Account) of David
Ewalt, M.D. (Dr. Ewalt), to Dr. Ewalt, a party in interest with respect
to the Plan.
This proposed exemption is subject to the following conditions:
(a) The Sale is a one-time transaction for cash;
(b) the closing of the Sale (the Closing Date) occurs within 60
days of the Department's grant of the final exemption;
(c) the Units are sold to Dr. Ewalt at the greater of the fair
market value of the Units as of the Closing Date, as determined by a
qualified, independent appraiser or for $441,000 for the 2.52 percent
interest of ownership of CPS;
(d) in addition to the sale price described above, the Account will
have received $408,954.00 in consideration for the reduction of the
Account's interest in CPS as a result of an investment by Cook
Children's Health Care System (Cook) in CPS;
(e) the proceeds from the Sale are credited to the Account
simultaneously with the transfer of the Units' title to Dr. Ewalt;
(f) neither the Plan nor the Account pay any fees, commissions, or
other costs or expenses associated with the Sale; and
(g) the terms and conditions of the Sale remain at least as
favorable to the Account as the terms and conditions obtainable under
similar circumstances negotiated at arm's length with an unrelated
party.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. Urology Clinics of North Texas, P.A. (the Employer) has its
principal office and place of business in Dallas, TX. The Employer has
27 physician partners including Dr. Ewalt.
2. The Plan is a defined contribution profit sharing plan and has
147 participants and beneficiaries. As of December 31, 2007, the Plan's
assets were valued at $20,190,735.00. The Plan's trustees consist of
four physicians. Dr. Ewalt is one of the trustees of the Plan and is
also a member of the Plan's administrative committee. The value of the
Account as of May 8, 2009 is $1,336,000.00.
3. In 2002, the Plan purchased 4.63 percent (4.63%) interest in CPS
for the benefit of the Account from the Plano Pediatric Surgery Center
(Plano Center). The Plano Center was the entity that originally
established CPS and it is not affiliated in any way with the Employer,
the Plan or Dr. Ewalt. The Account paid $43,500 for the 4.63% interest
in CPS. The acquisition of the Units occurred at the time of the
original capitalization of CPS.
4. CPS was formed in 2005 as an outpatient surgery facility in
Plano, Texas. Construction on CPS' facility was completed in 2006. CPS
currently performs cases in the following medical specialties: GI,
Dermatology, Ophthalmology, Dental Surgery, Orthopedic Surgery, ENT,
General Surgery, Plastic Surgery, and Urology.
5. Since 2006, the Units have generated Unrelated Business Taxable
Income (UBTI) under Code section 511. It is represented that the Plan
has paid income taxes equal to $74,789 in 2006 and $58,937.00 in 2007
resulting from the UBTI. It is estimated that for the 2008 tax year,
the Plan will pay $59,000 in income tax based on the UBTI. It is
represented that the Account has borne the entire tax burden on behalf
of the Plan. Due to the burden on the Account for paying taxes
generated by the UBTI, Dr. Ewalt determined that selling the Units was
in the best interest of the Account. Following the Sale, the Account
would no longer be subject to UBTI liability. Because CPS is a medical
provider, only physicians or entities representing physicians could
purchase the Units. Moreover, the general partner of CPS must also
approve any sales of the Units to any outside physicians or entities
that represent physicians. Accordingly, Dr. Ewalt proposes to purchase
the Units from the Account.
6. The Employer hired Vincent Kickirillo (the Appraiser) of VMG
Health, LLC, to appraise the value of the Units. He is a member of the
Association for Investment Management and Research, the National
Association of Certified Valuation Analysts and the Dallas Society of
Financial Analysts. In addition, he holds a Chartered Financial Analyst
designation. Neither the Appraiser nor VMG Health, LLC have any
affiliation with the Employer and less than one percent of the income
received by VMG Health, LLC is generated from services rendered to the
Plan or any party in interest with respect to the Plan. The Appraiser
applied a minority discount to the Units of 25 percent when compared to
a controlling interest stake. The Appraiser valued each one percent
interest of ownership of CPS at $175,000 as of January 9, 2008. Since
the Units represent a 4.63% interest in CPS, the value of the Units as
of January 9, 2008 was $810,250 ($175,000 x 4.63).
7. On August 1, 2008, Cook Children's Health Care System (Cook)
completed a capital investment in CPS that resulted in Cook's ownership
of 51 percent of the aggregate ownership interest CPS. Cook is not a
party in interest to the Plan. The Cook investment did not represent an
actual purchase from the Account of any
[[Page 30635]]
of the Units. Instead, the Cook investment represented an injection of
capital into CPS which resulted in the issuance of additional ownership
units to Cook and dilution of the then existing investors of CPS.
8. Prior to the investment by Cook, individual investors, including
the Account, together held an 81 percent aggregate interest in CPS,
while the remaining 19 percent interest was held by Nuettera Holdings,
LLC, (Nuettera) the entity providing business management services to
CPS. Following the investment by Cook, the individual investors'
aggregate interest in CPS has been reduced to 44 percent and the
interest held by Nuettera Holdings, LLC has been reduced to five
percent.\6\ Due to the Cook investment and the resulting dilution and
reduction of the ownership of the individual investors, the Account's
aggregate interest in CPS decreased from 4.63 percent to 2.52 percent.
As consideration for this dilution of their ownership interest, the
previous investors received a special cash distribution from CPS. The
Account's share of this cash consideration was $408,954.00. This amount
was deposited in the Account and invested in accordance with Dr.
Ewalt's directions. On March 30, 2009, the Appraiser updated his
appraisal concerning the value of a one percent ownership interest in
CPS as a result of the Cook investment. The Appraiser determined that a
one percent interest in CPS is valued at $175,000. Therefore, the
current value of the Units which now represent a 2.52% interest in CPS
is valued at $441,000 (2.52 x $175,000).
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\6\ Nuetttera was engaged to provide management services for the
surgery center. Nuettera held an ownership interest in CPS, but that
interest was represented by units of a different class (Class II
units) than those held by the physician practitioners who owned the
remaining interests in CPS (Class I units). When Cook acquired its
interest in CPS in 2008, it acquired both Class I and Class II
units. The dilution of Nuettera's interest in CPS was
proportionately greater than the dilution of the physicians'
interests because Cook acquired seventy-five percent (75%) of the
Class II units. In contrast, the aggregate ownership of the
physicians was diluted by roughly fifty-four percent (54%) following
the Cook investment. The reason the relative dilution of the two
groups was different was a result of the fact that the two groups
owned different classes of units.
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9. In summary, it is represented that the Sale satisfies the
statutory criteria for an exemption under Section 408(a) of the Act for
the following reasons: (a) The Sale to Dr. Ewalt is a one-time
transaction for cash; (b) the Closing Date occurs within 60 days of
grant of the final exemption; (c) the Units will be sold to Dr. Ewalt
at the greater of the fair market value of the Units as of the Closing
Date, as determined by a qualified, independent appraiser, or $441,000;
(d) In addition to the sale price described above, the Account will
have received $408,954.00 from Cook in consideration for the reduction
of the Account's interest in CPS; (e) the Sale proceeds from the
transaction are credited simultaneously to Dr. Ewalt's Account as the
transfer of the Units' title to Dr. Ewalt; (f) the Account pays no
fees, commissions or other costs and expenses associated with the Sale;
(g) The terms and conditions of the Sale remain at least as favorable
to the Account as the terms and conditions obtainable under similar
circumstances negotiated at arm's length with an unrelated party.
Notice to Interested Parties: Notice of the proposed exemption
shall be given to all interested persons in the manner agreed upon by
the Employer and Department within 15 days of the date of publication
of this notice of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. Comments
and requests for a hearing are due forty-five (45) days after
publication of this notice in the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Anh-Viet Ly of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8648 (this is not a toll-free number).
Ford Motor Corporation and Its Affiliates (Collectively, Ford) Located
in Detroit, MI
[Application No. L-11451]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the exemption is granted, the restrictions of sections
406(a)(1)(B), 406(a)(1)(D), 406(b)(1), and 406(b)(2) of the Act shall
not apply, effective July 13, 2006, to: (1) Monthly cash advances to
Ford by the Independent Health Care Trust for UAW Retirees of Ford
Motor Company (the DC VEBA), as defined in section III(f), below, of
this exemption, to reimburse Ford for the estimated mitigation of
certain health care expenses (the Mitigation), as defined in section
III(h), below, of this exemption, and during the period from July 14,
2006 through February 28, 2007, for the payment of dental expenses
incurred by participants in the DC VEBA; and (2) an annual ``true-up''
of the Mitigation payments and dental expenses against the actual
expenses incurred, with the result that: (a) if Ford has been underpaid
by the DC VEBA, Ford receives the balance outstanding from the DC VEBA
with interest, or (b) if the DC VEBA has overpaid Ford, Ford reimburses
the DC VEBA for the amount overpaid, with interest.
Section II. Conditions
This proposed exemption is conditioned upon adherence to the
material facts and representations described herein and upon
satisfaction of the following conditions:
(a) A committee (the Committee), as defined in section III(d),
below, of this exemption, acting as a fiduciary independent of Ford,
has represented and will continue to represent the DC VEBA and its
participants and beneficiaries for all purposes with respect to the
Mitigation process under the settlement agreement (the DC VEBA
Settlement Agreement or the Settlement Agreement), as defined in
section III(g), below, of this exemption.
(b) The Committee for the DC VEBA has discharged and will continue
to discharge its duties consistent with the terms of the DC VEBA and
the Settlement Agreement.
(c) The Committee and actuaries retained by the Committee have
reviewed and approved and will continue to review and approve the
estimation process involved in the Mitigation, which results in the
monthly Mitigation amount paid to Ford.
(d) Outside auditors retained by the Committee, along with an
administrative company that is partly owned by the DC VEBA, have
audited and will audit the calculation of the true-up to determine
whether there are any differences between the estimated Mitigation and
actual Mitigation amounts and have made and will make such information
available to Ford.
(e) Ford has provided various reports and records to the Committee
concerning dental care reimbursements for the period from July 14,
2006, through February 28, 2007, which were subject to review and audit
by the Committee, and Ford has provided and will continue to provide
various reports and records to the Committee concerning the Mitigation
required under the Settlement Agreement which were and will continue to
be subject to review and audit by the Committee.
(f) The terms of the covered transactions are no less favorable and
will continue to be no less favorable to the DC VEBA than the terms
negotiated at arm's length under similar circumstances between
unrelated third parties.
(g) The interest rate applied to any true-up payments is a
reasonable rate, as
[[Page 30636]]
set forth in the DC VEBA Settlement Agreement, and will continue to be
a reasonable rate that runs from the beginning of the year being trued
up and does not and will not present a windfall or detriment to either
party.
(h) The DC VEBA has not incurred and will continue not to incur any
fees, costs, or other charges (other than those described in the DC
VEBA and the DC VEBA Settlement Agreement) as a result of the covered
transactions described herein.
(i) Ford and the Committee have maintained and will continue to
maintain for a period of six (6) years from the date of any of the
covered transactions, any and all records necessary to enable the
persons described in section II(j), below, of this exemption to
determine whether conditions of this exemption have been and will
continue to be met, except that (1) a prohibited transaction will not
be considered to have occurred if, due to circumstances beyond the
control of Ford or the Committee, the records are lost or destroyed
prior to the end of the six-year period, and (2) no party in interest
other than Ford or the Committee shall be subject to the civil penalty
that may be assessed under section 502(i) of the Act if the records are
not maintained, or are not available for examination as required by
section II(j), below, of this exemption.
(j)(1) Except as provided in section II(j)(2), below, of this
exemption and notwithstanding any provisions of subsections (a)(2) and
(b) of section 504 of the Act, the records referred to in section
II(i), above, of this exemption have been or will be unconditionally
available at their customary location during normal business hours to:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or representative of the
Department;
(B) The International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and
Agricultural Implement Workers of America (the UAW) or any duly
authorized representative of the UAW;
(C) Ford or any duly authorized representative of Ford; and
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of the DC VEBA, or any duly
authorized representative of such participant or beneficiary.
(2) None of the persons described in section II(j)(1)(B) or (D),
above, in this exemption is authorized to examine the trade secrets of
Ford, or commercial or financial information that is privileged or
confidential.
Section III. Definitions
For purposes of this proposed exemption, the term--
(a) ``Ford'' means Ford Motor Company and its affiliates.
(b) ``Affiliate'' means:
(1) Any person directly or indirectly, through one or more
intermediaries, controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with such other person;
(2) Any officer, director, or partner, employee or relative (as
defined in section 3(15) of the Act) of such other person; or
(3) Any corporation, partnership or other entity of which such
other person is an officer, director or partner. (For purposes of this
definition, the term ``control'' means the power to exercise a
controlling influence over the management or policies of a person other
than an individual.)
(c) ``Class'' or ``Class Members'' mean all persons who, as of the
ratification date (the Ratification Date), as defined in section I(a)
of the Settlement Agreement, (i.e., December 22, 2005) were: (1) Ford/
UAW hourly employees who had retired from Ford with eligibility to
participate in retirement in the Hospital-Surgical-Medical-Drug-Dental-
Vision Program (the Original Plan), as in effect prior to the
Ratification Date, or (2) the spouses, surviving spouses, and
dependents of Ford/UAW hourly employees, who, as of the Ratification
Date, were eligible for post-retirement or surviving spouse health care
coverage under the Original Plan as a consequence of a Ford/UAW hourly
employee's retirement from Ford or death prior to retirement. Active
employees, as defined in section I(A) of the Settlement Agreement, are
not members of the Class.
(d) ``Committee'' means the seven (7) individuals, consisting of
two classes: (1) The UAW with three members, and (2) the public class
with four members, who act as the named fiduciary and administrator of
the DC VEBA.
(e) ``Court'' or ``Michigan District Court'' means the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.
(f) ``DC VEBA'' means the defined contribution--Voluntary
Employees' Beneficiary Association trust established by Ford pursuant
to the Settlement Agreement and the trust agreement (the Trust
Agreement).
(g) ``DC VEBA Settlement Agreement'' or the ``Settlement
Agreement'' means the agreement, dated February 13, 2006, which was
entered into between Ford, the UAW, and class representatives, on
behalf of a class of plaintiffs in a class action suit cited as Int'l
Union, UAW, et. al. v. Ford Motor Company (Civil Case No. 05-74730
(E.D. Mich. July 13, 2006), aff'd, 497 F.3d 615 (6th Cir. 2007)
(hereinafter referred to as the Hardwick I Case).
(h) ``Mitigation'' means the reduction of monthly contributions,
deductibles, out-of-pocket maximums, co-insurance payments, or any
other payment in accordance with section 14 of the Settlement Agreement
to the extent payments from the DC VEBA are made, as directed by the
Committee, to Ford and/or to providers, insurance carriers and other
agreed-upon entities.
(i) ``OPEB'' means Other Post-Employment Benefits. The OPEB
Valuation is an actuarially developed valuation of a company's post
retirement benefit obligations, other than for pension and other
retirement income plans. The OPEB Valuation is based on a set of
uniform financial reporting standards promulgated by the Financial
Accounting Standards Board and embodied in Financial Accounting
Standard 106, as revised from time to time. The types of benefits
addressed in an OPEB Valuation typically are retiree healthcare
(medical, dental, vision, hearing) life insurance, tuition assistance,
and legal services
(j) ``Shares'' or ``Stock'' refers to the common stock of Ford for
which the par value is $.01.
(k) ``UAW'' means the International Union, United Automobile,
Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America or the United
Auto Workers, if shortened.
(l) ``VEBA'' means a voluntary employees' beneficiary association.
(m) ``Defined Contribution Plan'' or ``the Defined Contribution
Plan of the Independent Health Care Trust for UAW Retirees of Ford
Motor Company'' means the defined contribution welfare benefit plan
funded by the DC VEBA following the effective date (the Effective
Date), as defined in section I(A) of the Settlement Agreement (i.e.,
July 13, 2006), which will include the requirement to make
contributions to the DC VEBA, as set forth in section 13 of the
Settlement Agreement.
Effective Date: If granted, this proposed exemption will be
effective as of July 13, 2006.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. Ford is primarily engaged in automotive production and marketing
operations. Ford designs, manufactures, and markets vehicles worldwide,
with its largest operating presence in North America. As of December
31, 2005, Ford had approximately 131,000 active employees in the United
States, of whom approximately 86,000 are represented by the UAW and
other unions. Approximately 590,000 retirees and dependents in the U.S.
receive
[[Page 30637]]
retiree health benefits from Ford, and of this total, as of January 1,
2006, approximately 170,000 are hourly retirees and spouses, surviving
spouses, and eligible dependents.
Ford is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of
Delaware and maintains its headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan. As of
December 17, 2007, Ford had total assets of $279,264,000,000, as
reported in the consolidated balance sheet in Ford's Form 10-k filed
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2007.
2. The DC VEBA Settlement Agreement, dated February 13, 2006, was
entered into among Ford, the UAW, and class representatives, on behalf
of plaintiffs (i.e., the Class Members), in the Hardwick I Case. The
Settlement Agreement was approved by the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Michigan in an order dated July 13, 2006,
and was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the 6th
Circuit in 2007. The Hardwick I Case contested whether Ford had the
right to unilaterally modify retiree welfare benefits for hourly
retired Ford employees who had been represented by the UAW. The
settlement of the Hardwick I Case provided Ford with the opportunity to
address its retiree health care costs in an agreed-upon fashion without
compromising the future rights of Ford, the UAW, and the hourly retired
Ford employees.
3. Ford's spiraling retiree health care costs were at the heart of
the Hardwick I Case. Ford and the UAW engaged in discussions regarding
the impact of rising health care costs on Ford's financial condition.
In conjunction therewith, Ford provided the UAW and the Class with
extensive information as to its financial condition and its health care
expenditures. Separate teams of investment bankers, actuaries, and
legal experts reviewed Ford's information and provided an assessment to
the UAW and to the Class as to the state of Ford's financial condition.
Upon completion of such review, the UAW, the representatives of the
Class, and counsel to the Class concluded that, without the Settlement
Agreement, Ford's ability to provide retiree health care benefits to
Class Members would be unlikely over the long term.
4. The Settlement Agreement modifies the health plan that Ford
sponsors for its hourly retirees and their enrolled spouses and
dependents. The modified plan imposes new cost sharing requirements
with respect to retiree health benefits. Specifically, the Ford
modified retiree health plan will require hourly retiree participants
to make monthly contributions toward the cost of their retiree health
coverage, and also imposes annual deductibles, out-of-pocket maximums,
and certain co-insurance payments on participants and beneficiaries.
In order to soften the impact of these new cost sharing
obligations, the Settlement Agreement created a new employee welfare
benefit plan, as described in section 3(1) of the Act. The new welfare
benefit plan is called the Defined Contribution Plan of the Independent
Health Care Trust for UAW Retirees of Ford Motor Company (the Defined
Contribution Plan). The purpose of the Defined Contribution Plan is to
provide mitigation to the affected Ford retirees of the costs shifted
to them and no longer to be paid by the Ford modified health plan.
5. The Defined Contribution Plan Mitigation benefits will be paid
from a new voluntary employee beneficiary trust, the DC VEBA,
controlled by a seven (7) member Committee which is independent of
Ford. The DC VEBA qualifies as a ``voluntary employees' beneficiary
association'' within the meaning of section 501(c)(9) of the Code. The
DC VEBA was established on July 18, 2006, through a welfare benefit
trust (the Trust), as described under section 419(A)(f)(5)(A) of the
Code. The Trust was established by the Trust Agreement between State
Street Bank and Trust (the Trustee) and Ford.
Under the terms of the Settlement Agreement, Ford is required to
make certain contributions to the DC VEBA. In this regard, Ford is
obligated to make a contribution in cash in the amount of $30 million
as soon as practicable following the Effective Date (i.e., July 13,
2006) of the Settlement Agreement. It is represented that on August 10,
2006, the initial cash contribution in the amount of $30 million was
paid into the DC VEBA. Ford is obligated to make a second contribution
in cash in the amount of $35 million on the third anniversary of the
first contribution and to make a third contribution in cash in the
amount of $43 million in 2011, on the anniversary of the first
contribution. It is represented that Ford's obligation to make the
second contribution and, if necessary, the third contribution, will be
moved up to the extent necessary in order to enable the DC VEBA to
continue paying mitigation at the initial mitigation level.
In addition, monthly cash contributions relating to certain wage
increases and COLA amounts for active hourly employees will be diverted
into the DC VEBA. Further, a series of contributions in cash (the
Contribution Obligation) based on the increase in the notional value of
8,750,000 shares of common stock of Ford (the Notional Shares) will be
made. Each of these cash contributions will be equal to the value of
any appreciation in the share price of Ford common stock over a value
based on a share price of $8.145. One third of the Notional Shares
shall be taken into account on the Effective Date of the Settlement
Agreement (i.e., July 13, 2006); one third on the first anniversary of
the Effective Date; and the final third on the second anniversary of
the Effective Date. The right to such cash contributions is non-
transferable, and the DC VEBA shall have no shareholder rights with
respect to such cash contributions based on Notional Shares. It is
represented that the calculation of such cash contribution will be
based on the average price per share of Ford common stock for the five
(5) consecutive trading days ending on the day preceding the applicable
of the three (3) calculation dates. In the event of a special dividend
issued by Ford prior to the third anniversary of the Effective Date,
Ford will be obligated to make a contribution in cash equal to the per
share dividend times the total number of Notional Shares minus the
number of Notional Shares with respect to which Ford has already made a
cash contribution based on such Notional Shares.
Under section 13.C of the Settlement Agreement, no contributions
are payable by Ford to the DC VEBA, unless and until Ford has received
either assurances that such contributions are covered by an exemption
issued by the Department, or do not violate section 406 and 407 of the
Act. In this regard, with respect to the value of the Notional Shares,
as of the Effective Date of the Settlement Agreement (i.e., July 13,
2006), Ford's common stock had not increased above the base value as
set forth in section 13.C of the Settlement Agreement, and, as a
result, no contribution was due to the DC VEBA with respect to that
measurement date. As of the first anniversary of the Effective Date,
(i.e., July 13, 2007), Ford's common stock had increased over the base
value; however, based on section 13.C of the Settlement Agreement, Ford
declined to make a contribution at that time. In this regard, pursuant
to section 13.C, Ford and the UAW have the option to agree upon a
contribution to replace the Contribution Obligation, as set forth
therein, if certain alternatives had not been satisfied by the first
anniversary of the Effective Date of the Settlement Agreement. Because
neither of the alternatives were satisfied by such date, Ford and the
UAW agreed in the Memorandum of
[[Page 30638]]
Understanding on Post Retirement Medical Care, dated November 3, 2007,
(the MOU) (as subsequently embodied in a settlement agreement, dated
March 28, 2008, (the New Settlement Agreement), that Ford shall satisfy
its Contribution Obligation, pursuant to section 13.C, by making an
aggregate cash contribution of $33 million to the DC VEBA, within five
(5) days of the ``Final Effective Date'' (as defined in the New
Settlement Agreement) \7\ in full satisfaction of Ford's obligations
thereunder.
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\7\ It is represented that ``Final Effective Date'' means the
later of the date on which the U.S. District Court enters the
approval order or the date on which Ford has completed, on a basis
reasonably satisfactory to Ford, its discussions with the staff of
the SEC regarding certain accounting treatment with respect to the
New VEBA and Ford's post-employment retiree health obligation for
the covered group.
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6. The Committee acts as the named fiduciary and administrator for
the Defined Contribution Plan and is responsible for the
administration, operation, management and interpretation of the Trust,
as set forth in the Trust Agreement. In this regard, the Committee
appoints (and may remove) the Trustee, the investment managers of the
DC VEBA's assets, and other suitable professionals and agents to
provide advice and services to the Committee or the Trust. The
Committee's duties include directing the investment of the assets of
the Trust, except and to the extent that the Committee has invested
such authority in the Trustee or has appointed an investment manager.
In addition the Trust may be amended in writing at any time and from
time to time, in whole or in part, by the action of the Committee. It
is represented that Ford has no right to amend the Trust at any time.
The Committee is comprised of seven individuals, consisting of two
classes, the ``UAW class,'' and the ``public class.'' The UAW Class has
three (3) members which are appointed by the UAW and serve at the
discretion of the UAW. The members of the UAW class may be removed or
replaced at any time by written notice by the President of the UAW to
the members of the Committee.
The public class has four (4) members who serve terms of four (4)
years, except that the initial members serve terms, as set forth in the
Trust Agreement. In the event of a vacancy in the public class, whether
by expiration of a term, resignation, removal, incapacity, death or
otherwise, the public class will elect a new member of the public class
by majority vote of the continuing public class members, excluding such
member vacating his or her seat. A public class member can be removed
by the affirmative vote of any five (5) other members of the Committee
at any time.
One of the members of the public class serves as the Chair of the
Committee. William E. Spriggs serves in the capacity as Chairman of the
Committee. The Committee Chair serves for a term of two (2) years. Any
successor Committee Chair will be elected by a majority vote of the
Committee.
All of the members of the Committee are independent of Ford. The
members of the Committee do not include any Ford representative, and
Ford does not have any authority to select members of the Committee. No
member of the Committee may be an affiliate of Ford, as the term,
``Affiliate,'' is defined in section III(b), above of this exemption,
including a current or former officer, director or salaried employee of
Ford. No member of the public class may be an active employee or
retiree of the UAW, nor may any member of the public class have any
financial or institutional relationship with Ford, with the Committee
or any Committee member that the Committee, in its sole discretion
determines to be material.
The Committee handles administrative tasks on behalf of the DC VEBA
and the Defined Contribution Plan which is funded by the DC VEBA, as
described in the Settlement Agreement, through Retiree Health
Administration Company, LLC (RHAC). RHAC is a limited liability company
set up to administer the Defined Contribution Plan on behalf of the
Committee. RHAC is jointly owned by the UAW-GM VEBA and the DC VEBA.
RHAC has joined and will continue to join with the Committee's outside
auditors in auditing the calculation of the true-up in connection with
the Defined Contribution Plan.
RHAC also administers the provision of dental coverage to eligible
retirees by the DC VEBA. For the plan year beginning in July 2006 and
for January and February of 2007, Ford provided dental coverage for
UAW-Ford retirees and surviving spouses and their dependents, and the
DC VEBA reimbursed Ford for the claims and premiums attributable to
this group. From and after March 1, 2007, dental benefits are provided
by the DC VEBA to eligible groups separate and apart from Ford, without
Mitigation or reimbursement arrangement of any kind. The DC VEBA has
contracted directly with carriers for dental services and has paid the
applicable claims and premiums directly. Claims processing is
contracted out to Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. Maintaining
eligibility records is contracted to Ford's National Employee Service
Center which also provides a call center to respond to participant
needs. RHAC pays the bills, negotiates and monitors outside vendor
contracts, audits claims and eligibility, coordinates the activities of
outside professionals, and provides for certain other needs of the
Committee with respect to the provision of dental benefits.
The Committee has retained George Johnson & Company as its outside
auditor responsible for the audit of the financial statements for the
DC VEBA and the Defined Contribution Plan, including preparation of
certain annual form filings. The Committee has also retained Plante &
Morgan, L.L.P. (Plante) as its outside auditor responsible for
assisting the staff of the Committee with the review of differences
between estimated and actual Mitigation amounts. As such, Plante has
audited the calculation of the true-up and has made and will continue
to make, such information available to Ford.
The Committee has retained Milliman, Inc. (Milliman), as its
actuary. The Committee and Milliman have reviewed and approved the
estimation process which results in the monthly Mitigation amounts paid
to Ford and will continue to do so.
7. As of December 31, 2006, the DC VEBA had cash of approximately
$119 million. The DC VEBA uses its assets to mitigate the cost sharing
requirements imposed on the retirees by the Settlement Agreement.
Initial levels of Mitigation are set forth in the Settlement Agreement,
and may be modified later by the Committee in accordance with the terms
of the Settlement Agreement and the Trust Agreement.
8. The initial Mitigation levels provide for Mitigation of monthly
retiree contributions down to $10 per individual and $21 per family
(from $50 per individual, and $105 per family). Deductibles will be
mitigated down to an annual maximum of $150 per individual (from $300
per individual) and $300 per family (from $600 per family). The out-of-
pocket maximum will be mitigated so that it is capped for in-network
benefits at $250 per individual per year (from $500 per individual) and
$500 per family per year (from $1,000 per family), and capped for out-
of-network benefits at $500 per individual (from $1,000 per individual)
and $1,000 per family (from $2,000 per family). It is represented that
the Mitigation provided by the Defined Contribution Plan through the DC
VEBA provides a significant benefit to participants who would otherwise
be
[[Page 30639]]
required to make these payments out of their own pockets.
In addition, dental benefits were provided from July 2006 through
February 2007, pursuant to a reimbursement arrangement with Ford. Since
March 1, 2007, however, the DC VEBA has been the sole source of dental
benefits for eligible groups.
9. In order to reduce the administrative burden on the DC VEBA, and
avoid having participants initially pay the costs and subsequently
request reimbursement upon submission of documentation, the Settlement
Agreement contemplates having Ford act as the conduit through which the
DC VEBA will make Mitigation. Specifically, Ford will make certain
payments that hourly retirees and their enrolled dependents would
otherwise be required to make out of their own pockets. Ford will then
accept Mitigation payments from the DC VEBA and apply such payments in
accordance with the direction and instruction of the Committee for the
benefit of the participants in the Defined Contribution Plan.
This reimbursement process anticipates monthly advance payments to
Ford from the DC VEBA of the actuarially anticipated cost of the
initial Mitigation amounts, with a true-up no later than December 23 of
the following calendar year.
Specifically, the Mitigation process will work as follows:
Annually, no later than May 1 of the preceding year, the Committee will
inform Ford of the Mitigation levels for the following calendar year.
Thereafter, no later than September 1 of the year preceding the
forthcoming Mitigation year, Ford will provide the Committee with a
preliminary estimate of the annual mitigation amount for the following
calendar year. On December 1 of the preceding year, Ford will provide
the Committee with the actuarially-determined, final estimated annual
mitigation amount. Both the preliminary and final estimated mitigation
amounts need to be agreed to by the Committee. Then, as of the
beginning of the calendar year of Mitigation, the DC VEBA will pay to
Ford on a monthly basis an amount equal to \1/12\ of the final
estimated annual mitigation amount.
No later than December 1 following the calendar year in which the
monthly estimated mitigation payments have been made, Ford and the DC
VEBA will engage in a true-up process. Ford will provide the Committee
an actuarial report that determines the actual annual Mitigation amount
and compares it to the estimated annual Mitigation payments that Ford
received during the prior year. No later than December 23 of the year
following the year being trued-up, a true-up payment either will be
paid by the DC VEBA to Ford, or by Ford back to the DC VEBA. Interest
for any late payments, or for any true-up payment (whether from Ford
back to the DC VEBA or from the DC VEBA to Ford) will be paid at the
interest rate \8\ for Other Post-Employment Benefits (the OPEB), as
defined in section III(i) of this exemption. In addition, Ford is
required to provide detailed quarterly reports to the Committee
detailing retiree health claims experience, and the Committee shall
have the right to request a reasonable audit of Ford's books and
records with respect to Mitigation payments made to Ford by the DC
VEBA. The amount of any true-up payment will need to be approved by the
Committee. If there is a dispute as to the true-up report or the amount
of the true-up payment, undisputed amounts will be paid and the parties
will enter into an arbitration dispute process, as set forth in the
Settlement Agreement, which involves independent decision-makers who
will resolve any true-up dispute.
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\8\ The OPEB interest rate, as defined in section 13(D) of the
Settlement Agreement, is the discount rate used by Ford's health
care actuaries in accordance with the Financial Accounting Standard
106 (FAS 106) actuarial valuation for the applicable period. Ford
has also represented that the OPEB interest rate is the discount
rate that a company uses to value ``Other Post-Retirement Employee
Benefits'' for FAS 106 accounting reporting. The discount rate is
based on market yields, as of a plan's annual measurement date, on
high quality fixed income securities of duration similar to the
benefit obligation. For purposes of Ford's retiree health
obligation, its OPEB interest rate is developed each year in
consultation with its outside accountants. Ford used an OPEB
interest rate of 5.75% in 2005, of 5.75% in 2004, and of 6.25% in
2003 relating to retiree health.
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10. It is represented that the DC VEBA has made estimated
Mitigation payments for health care to Ford for every month beginning
with August 2006 and continuing to the present. The DC VEBA has
separately reimbursed Ford for dental claims and premiums that Ford
paid on behalf of the participants in the DC VEBA for the period from
July 14, 2006, through February 28, 2007. As stated previously in this
proposed exemption, beginning March 1, 2007, the DC VEBA has contracted
directly for dental services for its participants. It is represented
that the amount of the dental reimbursement payments for 2006 and 2007
do not include the monthly administrative fee paid to Ford for
maintaining eligibility records and providing a call center to respond
to participant needs.\9\ For the period July 2006, through December
2006, the DC VEBA made total Mitigation reimbursement payments to Ford
for health care and dental benefits of approximately $30,755,460 and
$16,141,185, respectively. For the period January 2007, through
December 2007, the DC VEBA made total Mitigation reimbursement payments
to Ford for health care and dental benefits of approximately
$83,900,004 and $14,891,491, respectively. For the period January 2008,
through March 2008, the DC VEBA made total Mitigation reimbursement
payments to Ford solely for health care benefits of approximately
$22,375,000. For the period April 2008, through April 2009, the DC VEBA
made total Mitigation reimbursement payments to Ford solely for health
care benefits of approximately $30,873,428.
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\9\ Ford relies on the relief provided by the statutory
exemption, pursuant to section 408(b)(2) of the Act, in connection
with Ford's providing the DC VEBA wit