Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014; Partitions of Eligible Multiemployer Plans and Facilitated Mergers, 8712-8715 [2015-03434]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 32 / Wednesday, February 18, 2015 / Notices
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Belgium.
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY
CORPORATION
Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of
2014; Partitions of Eligible
Multiemployer Plans and Facilitated
Mergers
Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
ACTION: Request for Information.
AGENCY:
This document is a request for
information (RFI) to inform future PBGC
guidance under sections 4231 and 4233
of ERISA. PBGC is seeking comments
from all interested stakeholders,
including multiemployer plan
participants and beneficiaries,
organizations serving or representing
such individuals, multiemployer plan
sponsors and professional advisors,
contributing employers, unions, and
other interested parties.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 6, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the Web
site instructions for submitting
comments.
• Email: reg.comments@pbgc.gov.
• Fax: 202–326–4224.
• Mail or Hand Delivery: Regulatory
Affairs Group, Office of the General
Counsel, Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation, 1200 K Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20005–4026.
All materials submitted will be shared
with the Department of the Treasury
and the Department of Labor. Comments
received, including personal
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 32 / Wednesday, February 18, 2015 / Notices
information provided, will be posted to
www.pbgc.gov. Copies of comments may
also be obtained by writing to
Disclosure Division, Office of the
General Counsel, Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20005–4026 or
calling 202–326–4040 during normal
business hours. (TTY and TDD users
may call the Federal relay service tollfree at 1–800–877–8339 and ask to be
connected to 202–326–4040.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph J. Shelton (shelton.joseph@
pbgc.gov), Office of the General Counsel,
at 202–326–4000, ext. 6559, or
Constance Markakis
(markakis.constance@pbgc.gov), Office
of Negotiations and Restructuring, at
202–326–4000, ext. 6779; (TTY/TDD
users may call the Federal relay service
toll-free at 1–800–877–8339 and ask to
be connected to 202–326–4024.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Background
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC) is a Federal
corporation created under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) to guarantee the payment of
pension benefits earned by more than 41
million American workers and retirees
in nearly 24,000 private-sector defined
benefit pension plans. PBGC
administers two insurance programs—
one for single-employer defined benefit
pension plans and a second for
multiemployer defined benefit pension
plans.
The multiemployer program protects
benefits of approximately 10 million
workers and retirees in approximately
1,400 plans. A multiemployer plan is a
collectively bargained pension
arrangement involving two or more
unrelated employers, usually in a
common industry, such as construction
or trucking, where workers may move
from employer to employer on a regular
basis.
Under PBGC’s multiemployer
program, when a plan becomes
insolvent, PBGC provides financial
assistance directly to the insolvent plan
sufficient to pay guaranteed benefits to
participants and beneficiaries, and the
reasonable and necessary administrative
expenses of the insolvent plan.
The focus of this RFI is on two new
statutory provisions regarding
multiemployer partitions and mergers
that apply only to multiemployer
pension plans. The provisions were
enacted on December 16, 2014, as part
of the Multiemployer Pension Reform
Act of 2014, Division O of the
Consolidated and Further Continuing
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Appropriations Act, 2015, Public Law
113–235 (MPRA). The first is section
122 of MPRA, which replaced the
multiemployer partition rules under
section 4233 of ERISA with new rules.
The second is section 121 of MPRA,
which added a new provision to the
multiemployer merger rules under
section 4231 of ERISA. Below is a
summary of those rules.
Partitions of Eligible Multiemployer
Plans Under MPRA
Before MPRA, PBGC could partition a
multiemployer plan likely to become
insolvent on its own accord or upon
application by a plan sponsor. In either
case, however, partition was only
available in certain limited
circumstances involving employer
bankruptcies, and the liabilities
transferred were those directly
attributable to service with bankrupt
employers. Under the partition order,
those liabilities and an equitable share
of assets were transferred to a new plan
created by the partition (which was both
a terminated plan and a successor plan
under Title IV of ERISA), at which point
the original plan was no longer
responsible for the transferred
liabilities.1 Section 122 of MPRA
replaced this framework with new rules
under section 4233 of ERISA.
Section 4233(a)(1), as amended by
MPRA, provides that upon the
application by the plan sponsor of an
‘‘eligible multiemployer plan,’’ PBGC
may order a partition. The statute
requires PBGC to make a determination
on an application for partition not later
than 270 days after the date the
application was filed (or, if later, the
date the application was completed) in
accordance with regulations to be
promulgated by PBGC. Under section
4233(a)(2), the plan sponsor must
provide notice of the application for
partition to participants and
beneficiaries (in the form and manner
prescribed by regulation) not later than
30 days after submitting an application.
Because regulations are required to
implement section 4233 of ERISA,
including the procedures for the plan
sponsor to submit an application for
partition, PBGC has determined that a
plan sponsor may submit an application
for partition only on or after a date to
be specified in regulations.
Section 4233(b) prescribes five
requirements that must be satisfied for
PBGC to determine that a plan is an
1 Upon plan insolvency, PBGC provided the
terminated plan with financial assistance to cover
the cost of PBGC-guaranteed benefits and
reasonable and necessary administrative expenses.
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8713
‘‘eligible multiemployer plan’’ for
purposes of section 4233 of ERISA:
1. Section 4233(b)(1) provides that the
plan must be in critical and declining
status as defined in section 305 of
ERISA (section 432 of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code)).
2. Under section 4233(b)(2), PBGC
must determine, after consultation with
the Participant and Plan Sponsor
Advocate selected under section 4004,
that the plan sponsor has taken (or is
taking concurrently with an application
for partition) all reasonable measures to
avoid insolvency, including the
maximum benefit suspensions under
section 305(e)(9) of ERISA (section
432(e)(9) of the Code), if applicable.
3. Under section 4233(b)(3), PBGC
must reasonably expect that: (A)
Partition will reduce PBGC’s expected
long-term loss with respect to the plan;
and (B) partition is necessary for the
plan to remain solvent.
4. Under section 4233(b)(4), PBGC
must certify to Congress that its ability
to meet existing financial assistance
obligations to other plans (including any
liabilities associated with
multiemployer plans that are insolvent
or that are projected to become
insolvent within 10 years) will not be
impaired by the partition.
5. Section 4233(b)(5) requires that the
cost of the partition to the PBGC arising
from the partition be paid exclusively
from PBGC’s multiemployer fund.
Upon approval by PBGC, section
4233(c) requires that the order of
partition provide for a transfer of the
minimum amount of liabilities
necessary for the transferring plan (i.e.,
the original plan) to remain solvent.
Under sections 4233(d)(1) and (2), the
benefits in the plan created by the
partition (the successor plan) are subject
to the multiemployer benefit guarantee
limits under section 4022A, and the
plan sponsor and administrator of the
original plan will also be the plan
sponsor and administrator of the
successor plan.
Section 4233(d)(3) prescribes special
withdrawal liability rules that apply for
10 years following the date of the
partition order. In the event an
employer withdraws from the plan that
was partitioned (the original plan)
within 10 years of the partition,
withdrawal liability is computed with
respect to the original plan and the plan
that was created by the partition order
(the successor plan). If the withdrawal
occurs more than 10 years after the date
of the partition order, withdrawal
liability is computed only with respect
to the original plan (and not with
respect to the successor plan).
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 32 / Wednesday, February 18, 2015 / Notices
Section 4233(e)(1) prescribes a
continuing payment obligation that
applies to the plan that was partitioned
(the original plan), which requires it to
pay a monthly benefit to each
participant and beneficiary whose
guaranteed benefit was transferred to
the successor plan in the amount by
which the benefit that would be paid
under the original plan’s terms (after
taking into account any benefit
suspensions under section 432(e)(9) of
the Code and any plan amendments
following the partition effective date)
exceeds the PBGC-guaranteed benefit
amount for that person.2
Section 4233(e)(3) sets forth a special
premium rule that applies to the plan
that was partitioned (the original plan),
which requires it to pay the premiums
for the participants whose benefits were
transferred to the successor plan for
each year during the 10-year period
following the partition effective date.
Finally, section 4233(f) provides notice
requirements that apply to PBGC (not
plan sponsors).
Facilitated Mergers and Financial
Assistance Under MPRA
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Section 121 of MPRA amends, but
does not replace, the existing
multiemployer merger rules under
section 4231. Specifically, it adds
section 4231(e), which gives PBGC new
statutory authority to facilitate the
merger of two or more multiemployer
plans if certain requirements are met. In
contrast to the partition rule discussed
above, a regulation is not required to
implement section 4231(e).
Nevertheless, PBGC is considering
issuing guidance under that section so
that applicants have advance notice of
the expected showing they must make
to demonstrate satisfaction of the new
statutory criteria.
Section 4231(e)(1) provides that when
requested to do so by the plan sponsors,
PBGC may take such actions as it deems
appropriate to promote and facilitate the
merger of two or more multiemployer
plans if it determines, after consultation
with the Participant and Plan Sponsor
Advocate, that the following conditions
are met:
• The transaction is in the interests of
the participants and beneficiaries of at
least one of the plans; and
2 In addition, under section 4233(e)(2), in the
event the original plan provides a benefit
improvement after the effective date of the
partition, the plan must pay to PBGC for each year
during the 10-year period following the partition,
an annual amount equal to the value of the increase
in benefit payments for such year attributable to the
benefit improvement (or, if less, the total benefit
payments from the plan created by the partition for
such year).
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19:32 Feb 17, 2015
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• The transaction is not reasonably
expected to be adverse to the overall
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries of any of the plans.
For purposes of section 4231(e),
‘‘facilitation’’ may include training,
technical assistance, mediation,
communication with stakeholders, and
support with related requests to other
government agencies.
Section 4231(e)(2) prescribes four
requirements that must be satisfied for
PBGC to provide financial assistance.
Specifically, the statute provides that to
facilitate a merger that PBGC determines
is necessary to enable one or more of the
plans involved to avoid or postpone
insolvency, PBGC may provide financial
assistance only if the following
conditions are met:
• One or more of the multiemployer
plans participating in the merger is in
critical and declining status as defined
in section 305 of ERISA (section 432 of
the Code);
• PBGC reasonably expects that: (i)
Such financial assistance will reduce
the corporation’s expected long-term
loss with respect to the plans involved;
and (ii) such financial assistance is
necessary for the merged plan to become
or remain solvent;
• PBGC certifies that its ability to
meet existing financial assistance
obligations to other plans will not be
impaired by such financial assistance;
and
• PBGC financial assistance is paid
exclusively from its multiemployer
fund.
Request for Information
PBGC is requesting information from
stakeholders on a range of issues
regarding the application process for
partitions and facilitated mergers to
better inform its future guidance under
sections 121 and 122 of MPRA.
PBGC welcomes comments from all
interested stakeholders, including
participants and beneficiaries,
organizations serving or representing
such individuals, plan sponsors and
professional advisors to multiemployer
plans (including those in the actuarial
and legal communities), contributing
employers, unions, and other interested
parties. In responding, please provide as
much specificity and detail as possible,
as well as any supporting
documentation, including research and
analyses, to ensure that we have the
most helpful information for future
guidance. Recognizing the linkage
between MPRA’s partition rules and the
benefit suspension rules under section
432(e)(9) of the Code, and the possibility
that a plan sponsor may apply to PBGC
for a partition (or facilitated merger)
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Frm 00126
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
concurrently with an application for
benefit suspension to the Department of
the Treasury, comments relating to the
interaction between these provisions are
especially welcome. PBGC is not,
however, seeking comments on section
432(e)(9) of the Code or any other
provision of MPRA.
The Department of the Treasury is
issuing its own RFI seeking comments
on certain matters that may be
addressed in future guidance
implementing section 432(e)(9) of the
Code. PBGC and the Department of the
Treasury intend to coordinate on the
development of their processes as a
result of these RFIs.
Issues Affecting Both Partitions and
Facilitated Mergers
1. Application Process: With respect
to MPRA’s changes to the rules
governing mergers and partitions under
sections 4231 and 4233 of ERISA,
respectively, on which aspects of the
application process would guidance be
needed or helpful?
2. PBGC Determinations: With respect
to a PBGC determination under section
4233(b)(3) that a partition is necessary
for a plan to remain solvent, or in the
case of a facilitated merger involving
financial assistance under section
4231(e)(2)(B) that financial assistance is
necessary for a merged plan to become
or remain solvent:
• What types of actuarial and plan
administrative information and analysis
are available to demonstrate that a
partition or facilitated merger of the
plan is necessary to remain solvent?
• What issues arise in demonstrating
solvency over an extended duration?
3. Small Plans: What special concerns
do small multiemployer plans and their
sponsors have regarding partition and
facilitated mergers?
4. Participants and Beneficiaries:
What special concerns do participants
and beneficiaries in multiemployer
plans have regarding the process for
considering applications for partition
and facilitated mergers?
Issues Affecting Partitions Only
5. Notice: With respect to the
requirement under section 4233(a)(2) to
provide notice to participants and
beneficiaries not later than 30 days after
submitting the application for partition:
• How can PBGC reduce the burden
of providing the notice under current
law, while still providing important
information to participants and
beneficiaries? Should PBGC consider
issuing a model notice in future
guidance?
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 32 / Wednesday, February 18, 2015 / Notices
• What type(s) of information would
participants and beneficiaries find most
helpful?
• Given that the amount of liabilities
required to be transferred in a partition
may not be known at the time notice is
issued, how should the notice reflect the
requirements of section 4233(e)(1),
which ensure that affected participants
and beneficiaries will receive no less
than they would have received prior to
the partition (taking into account benefit
suspensions under section 305(e)(9) and
any plan amendments following the
partition effective date)?
6. PBGC Determination: For purposes
of the requirement under section
4233(b) that PBGC determine, in
consultation with the Participant and
Plan Sponsor Advocate, that the plan
sponsor has taken (or is taking
concurrently with an application for
partition), all reasonable measures to
avoid insolvency, including the
maximum benefit suspensions under
section 432(e)(9) of the Code:
• What actuarial, economic, industry,
or other information could a plan
sponsor provide to make such a
showing? What information or analysis
might be difficult to provide?
• With respect to the consultation
process under section 4233(b)(2), how
can the Participant and Plan Sponsor
Advocate best assist PBGC in making its
determination under this section?
7. Concurrent Applications: What
practical issues do plan sponsors and
their professional advisors anticipate
may arise in connection with a decision
to submit combined applications for
partition to PBGC under section 4233 of
ERISA, and suspension of benefits to the
Department of Treasury under section
432 of the Code? In responding to this
question, consider the following:
• Timing: With respect to an
application for partition, PBGC is
required to make a determination not
later than 270 days after the application
date (or, if later, the date such
application was completed). With
respect to an application for suspension
of benefits, the Treasury Secretary (in
consultation with PBGC and the
Secretary of Labor) is required to
approve or deny an application within
225 days after submission.
• Effective Date: With respect to a
concurrent application for partition and
suspensions of benefits, the suspension
of benefits may not take effect prior to
the effective date of such partition.
• Solvency: Under section 4233(c),
the amount to be transferred in a
partition is the minimum amount of the
plan’s liabilities necessary for the plan
to remain solvent. Section
432(e)(9)(D)(iv) of the Code provides
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19:32 Feb 17, 2015
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that any suspensions of benefits, in the
aggregate (and, if applicable, considered
in combination with a partition of the
plan under section 4233 of ERISA), shall
be reasonably estimated to achieve, but
not materially exceed, the level that is
necessary to avoid insolvency.
8. Transferred Liabilities: Prior to
MPRA, PBGC’s partition order would
provide for a transfer of no more than
the non-forfeitable benefits directly
attributable to service with the bankrupt
employer and an equitable share of
assets. In contrast, under section
4233(c), the partition order will provide
for a transfer of the minimum amount of
the plan’s liabilities necessary for the
plan to remain solvent. In addition,
section 4233(e)(1) prescribes a
continuing payment obligation that
applies to the plan that was partitioned
(the original plan).
• What types of actuarial and
administrative information and data do
multiemployer plans generally maintain
that would allow PBGC to determine the
minimum amount of the plan’s
liabilities necessary for the plan to
remain solvent?
• What administrative or operational
issues (e.g., recordkeeping, benefit
processing, allocation of expenses) arise
in connection with this change?
• Are there additional issues that
arise with respect to the transfer of the
plan’s liabilities for particular groups of
individuals?
9. Post-Partition: With respect to
issues that might arise post-partition:
• What kinds of administrative or
operational issues (e.g., recordkeeping,
benefit processing, allocation of
expenses, the original plan’s ongoing
payment obligations under section
4231(e)(1)) might arise post-partition for
plan sponsors?
• What issues or challenges do plan
sponsors and their professional advisors
anticipate in connection with the
special withdrawal liability rule under
section 4233(d)(3), which applies for a
10-year period following the partition
effective date?
• What issues or challenges do plan
sponsors and their professional advisors
anticipate in connection with the
special benefit improvement and
premium rules under sections 4233(e)(2)
and (3) of ERISA, which apply for a 10year period following the partition
effective date?
• Is there a need for additional postpartition oversight by PBGC to ensure
compliance with MPRA’s post-partition
requirements, and if so, in what areas?
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8715
Issues Affecting Facilitated Mergers
Only
10. Technical Assistance: MPRA
provides a non-exclusive list of the
types of non-financial assistance that
PBGC may provide in the context of a
facilitated merger (e.g., training,
technical assistance, mediation,
communication with stakeholders, and
support with related requests to other
government agencies). For purposes of a
facilitated merger, which of these types
of assistance would plan sponsors and
professional advisors find most helpful?
Are there other examples of nonfinancial technical advice that would
help facilitate multiemployer mergers?
11. PBGC Determination: For
purposes of the facilitated merger
requirement under section 4231(e)(1)
that PBGC determine, in consultation
with the Participant and Plan Sponsor
Advocate, that the transaction is in the
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries of at least one of the plans
and is not reasonably expected to be
adverse to the overall interests of the
participants and beneficiaries of the
plans:
• What actuarial, economic, industry,
or other information could the plan
sponsors of the plans involved in the
proposed merger provide to make such
a showing?
• With respect to the consultation
process under section 4231(e)(1), how
can the Participant and Plan Sponsor
Advocate best assist PBGC in making its
determination under this section?
12. Concurrent Applications: What
procedural issues do plan sponsors and
their professional advisors anticipate in
connection with a decision to request
assistance from PBGC for a facilitated
merger under section 4231(e) of ERISA,
concurrently with an application for
suspension of benefits from the
Department of Treasury under section
432(e)(9) of the Code?
Although PBGC is specifically
requesting comments on the issues and
questions discussed above, PBGC also
invites comment on any other issue
relating to the application process for
partitions and facilitated mergers under
sections 121 and 122 of MPRA.
Issued in Washington, DC, this 13th day of
February 2015.
Alice C. Maroni,
Acting Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2015–03434 Filed 2–17–15; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 32 (Wednesday, February 18, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 8712-8715]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-03434]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY CORPORATION
Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014; Partitions of Eligible
Multiemployer Plans and Facilitated Mergers
AGENCY: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
ACTION: Request for Information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document is a request for information (RFI) to inform
future PBGC guidance under sections 4231 and 4233 of ERISA. PBGC is
seeking comments from all interested stakeholders, including
multiemployer plan participants and beneficiaries, organizations
serving or representing such individuals, multiemployer plan sponsors
and professional advisors, contributing employers, unions, and other
interested parties.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before April 6, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the Web site instructions for submitting comments.
Email: reg.comments@pbgc.gov.
Fax: 202-326-4224.
Mail or Hand Delivery: Regulatory Affairs Group, Office of
the General Counsel, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K
Street NW., Washington, DC 20005-4026.
All materials submitted will be shared with the Department of the
Treasury and the Department of Labor. Comments received, including
personal
[[Page 8713]]
information provided, will be posted to www.pbgc.gov. Copies of
comments may also be obtained by writing to Disclosure Division, Office
of the General Counsel, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005-4026 or calling 202-326-4040 during
normal business hours. (TTY and TDD users may call the Federal relay
service toll-free at 1-800-877-8339 and ask to be connected to 202-326-
4040.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joseph J. Shelton
(shelton.joseph@pbgc.gov), Office of the General Counsel, at 202-326-
4000, ext. 6559, or Constance Markakis (markakis.constance@pbgc.gov),
Office of Negotiations and Restructuring, at 202-326-4000, ext. 6779;
(TTY/TDD users may call the Federal relay service toll-free at 1-800-
877-8339 and ask to be connected to 202-326-4024.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) is a Federal
corporation created under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974 (ERISA) to guarantee the payment of pension benefits earned by
more than 41 million American workers and retirees in nearly 24,000
private-sector defined benefit pension plans. PBGC administers two
insurance programs--one for single-employer defined benefit pension
plans and a second for multiemployer defined benefit pension plans.
The multiemployer program protects benefits of approximately 10
million workers and retirees in approximately 1,400 plans. A
multiemployer plan is a collectively bargained pension arrangement
involving two or more unrelated employers, usually in a common
industry, such as construction or trucking, where workers may move from
employer to employer on a regular basis.
Under PBGC's multiemployer program, when a plan becomes insolvent,
PBGC provides financial assistance directly to the insolvent plan
sufficient to pay guaranteed benefits to participants and
beneficiaries, and the reasonable and necessary administrative expenses
of the insolvent plan.
The focus of this RFI is on two new statutory provisions regarding
multiemployer partitions and mergers that apply only to multiemployer
pension plans. The provisions were enacted on December 16, 2014, as
part of the Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014, Division O of the
Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015, Public
Law 113-235 (MPRA). The first is section 122 of MPRA, which replaced
the multiemployer partition rules under section 4233 of ERISA with new
rules. The second is section 121 of MPRA, which added a new provision
to the multiemployer merger rules under section 4231 of ERISA. Below is
a summary of those rules.
Partitions of Eligible Multiemployer Plans Under MPRA
Before MPRA, PBGC could partition a multiemployer plan likely to
become insolvent on its own accord or upon application by a plan
sponsor. In either case, however, partition was only available in
certain limited circumstances involving employer bankruptcies, and the
liabilities transferred were those directly attributable to service
with bankrupt employers. Under the partition order, those liabilities
and an equitable share of assets were transferred to a new plan created
by the partition (which was both a terminated plan and a successor plan
under Title IV of ERISA), at which point the original plan was no
longer responsible for the transferred liabilities.\1\ Section 122 of
MPRA replaced this framework with new rules under section 4233 of
ERISA.
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\1\ Upon plan insolvency, PBGC provided the terminated plan with
financial assistance to cover the cost of PBGC-guaranteed benefits
and reasonable and necessary administrative expenses.
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Section 4233(a)(1), as amended by MPRA, provides that upon the
application by the plan sponsor of an ``eligible multiemployer plan,''
PBGC may order a partition. The statute requires PBGC to make a
determination on an application for partition not later than 270 days
after the date the application was filed (or, if later, the date the
application was completed) in accordance with regulations to be
promulgated by PBGC. Under section 4233(a)(2), the plan sponsor must
provide notice of the application for partition to participants and
beneficiaries (in the form and manner prescribed by regulation) not
later than 30 days after submitting an application. Because regulations
are required to implement section 4233 of ERISA, including the
procedures for the plan sponsor to submit an application for partition,
PBGC has determined that a plan sponsor may submit an application for
partition only on or after a date to be specified in regulations.
Section 4233(b) prescribes five requirements that must be satisfied
for PBGC to determine that a plan is an ``eligible multiemployer plan''
for purposes of section 4233 of ERISA:
1. Section 4233(b)(1) provides that the plan must be in critical
and declining status as defined in section 305 of ERISA (section 432 of
the Internal Revenue Code (Code)).
2. Under section 4233(b)(2), PBGC must determine, after
consultation with the Participant and Plan Sponsor Advocate selected
under section 4004, that the plan sponsor has taken (or is taking
concurrently with an application for partition) all reasonable measures
to avoid insolvency, including the maximum benefit suspensions under
section 305(e)(9) of ERISA (section 432(e)(9) of the Code), if
applicable.
3. Under section 4233(b)(3), PBGC must reasonably expect that: (A)
Partition will reduce PBGC's expected long-term loss with respect to
the plan; and (B) partition is necessary for the plan to remain
solvent.
4. Under section 4233(b)(4), PBGC must certify to Congress that its
ability to meet existing financial assistance obligations to other
plans (including any liabilities associated with multiemployer plans
that are insolvent or that are projected to become insolvent within 10
years) will not be impaired by the partition.
5. Section 4233(b)(5) requires that the cost of the partition to
the PBGC arising from the partition be paid exclusively from PBGC's
multiemployer fund.
Upon approval by PBGC, section 4233(c) requires that the order of
partition provide for a transfer of the minimum amount of liabilities
necessary for the transferring plan (i.e., the original plan) to remain
solvent. Under sections 4233(d)(1) and (2), the benefits in the plan
created by the partition (the successor plan) are subject to the
multiemployer benefit guarantee limits under section 4022A, and the
plan sponsor and administrator of the original plan will also be the
plan sponsor and administrator of the successor plan.
Section 4233(d)(3) prescribes special withdrawal liability rules
that apply for 10 years following the date of the partition order. In
the event an employer withdraws from the plan that was partitioned (the
original plan) within 10 years of the partition, withdrawal liability
is computed with respect to the original plan and the plan that was
created by the partition order (the successor plan). If the withdrawal
occurs more than 10 years after the date of the partition order,
withdrawal liability is computed only with respect to the original plan
(and not with respect to the successor plan).
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Section 4233(e)(1) prescribes a continuing payment obligation that
applies to the plan that was partitioned (the original plan), which
requires it to pay a monthly benefit to each participant and
beneficiary whose guaranteed benefit was transferred to the successor
plan in the amount by which the benefit that would be paid under the
original plan's terms (after taking into account any benefit
suspensions under section 432(e)(9) of the Code and any plan amendments
following the partition effective date) exceeds the PBGC-guaranteed
benefit amount for that person.\2\
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\2\ In addition, under section 4233(e)(2), in the event the
original plan provides a benefit improvement after the effective
date of the partition, the plan must pay to PBGC for each year
during the 10-year period following the partition, an annual amount
equal to the value of the increase in benefit payments for such year
attributable to the benefit improvement (or, if less, the total
benefit payments from the plan created by the partition for such
year).
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Section 4233(e)(3) sets forth a special premium rule that applies
to the plan that was partitioned (the original plan), which requires it
to pay the premiums for the participants whose benefits were
transferred to the successor plan for each year during the 10-year
period following the partition effective date. Finally, section 4233(f)
provides notice requirements that apply to PBGC (not plan sponsors).
Facilitated Mergers and Financial Assistance Under MPRA
Section 121 of MPRA amends, but does not replace, the existing
multiemployer merger rules under section 4231. Specifically, it adds
section 4231(e), which gives PBGC new statutory authority to facilitate
the merger of two or more multiemployer plans if certain requirements
are met. In contrast to the partition rule discussed above, a
regulation is not required to implement section 4231(e). Nevertheless,
PBGC is considering issuing guidance under that section so that
applicants have advance notice of the expected showing they must make
to demonstrate satisfaction of the new statutory criteria.
Section 4231(e)(1) provides that when requested to do so by the
plan sponsors, PBGC may take such actions as it deems appropriate to
promote and facilitate the merger of two or more multiemployer plans if
it determines, after consultation with the Participant and Plan Sponsor
Advocate, that the following conditions are met:
The transaction is in the interests of the participants
and beneficiaries of at least one of the plans; and
The transaction is not reasonably expected to be adverse
to the overall interests of the participants and beneficiaries of any
of the plans.
For purposes of section 4231(e), ``facilitation'' may include
training, technical assistance, mediation, communication with
stakeholders, and support with related requests to other government
agencies.
Section 4231(e)(2) prescribes four requirements that must be
satisfied for PBGC to provide financial assistance. Specifically, the
statute provides that to facilitate a merger that PBGC determines is
necessary to enable one or more of the plans involved to avoid or
postpone insolvency, PBGC may provide financial assistance only if the
following conditions are met:
One or more of the multiemployer plans participating in
the merger is in critical and declining status as defined in section
305 of ERISA (section 432 of the Code);
PBGC reasonably expects that: (i) Such financial
assistance will reduce the corporation's expected long-term loss with
respect to the plans involved; and (ii) such financial assistance is
necessary for the merged plan to become or remain solvent;
PBGC certifies that its ability to meet existing financial
assistance obligations to other plans will not be impaired by such
financial assistance; and
PBGC financial assistance is paid exclusively from its
multiemployer fund.
Request for Information
PBGC is requesting information from stakeholders on a range of
issues regarding the application process for partitions and facilitated
mergers to better inform its future guidance under sections 121 and 122
of MPRA.
PBGC welcomes comments from all interested stakeholders, including
participants and beneficiaries, organizations serving or representing
such individuals, plan sponsors and professional advisors to
multiemployer plans (including those in the actuarial and legal
communities), contributing employers, unions, and other interested
parties. In responding, please provide as much specificity and detail
as possible, as well as any supporting documentation, including
research and analyses, to ensure that we have the most helpful
information for future guidance. Recognizing the linkage between MPRA's
partition rules and the benefit suspension rules under section
432(e)(9) of the Code, and the possibility that a plan sponsor may
apply to PBGC for a partition (or facilitated merger) concurrently with
an application for benefit suspension to the Department of the
Treasury, comments relating to the interaction between these provisions
are especially welcome. PBGC is not, however, seeking comments on
section 432(e)(9) of the Code or any other provision of MPRA.
The Department of the Treasury is issuing its own RFI seeking
comments on certain matters that may be addressed in future guidance
implementing section 432(e)(9) of the Code. PBGC and the Department of
the Treasury intend to coordinate on the development of their processes
as a result of these RFIs.
Issues Affecting Both Partitions and Facilitated Mergers
1. Application Process: With respect to MPRA's changes to the rules
governing mergers and partitions under sections 4231 and 4233 of ERISA,
respectively, on which aspects of the application process would
guidance be needed or helpful?
2. PBGC Determinations: With respect to a PBGC determination under
section 4233(b)(3) that a partition is necessary for a plan to remain
solvent, or in the case of a facilitated merger involving financial
assistance under section 4231(e)(2)(B) that financial assistance is
necessary for a merged plan to become or remain solvent:
What types of actuarial and plan administrative
information and analysis are available to demonstrate that a partition
or facilitated merger of the plan is necessary to remain solvent?
What issues arise in demonstrating solvency over an
extended duration?
3. Small Plans: What special concerns do small multiemployer plans
and their sponsors have regarding partition and facilitated mergers?
4. Participants and Beneficiaries: What special concerns do
participants and beneficiaries in multiemployer plans have regarding
the process for considering applications for partition and facilitated
mergers?
Issues Affecting Partitions Only
5. Notice: With respect to the requirement under section 4233(a)(2)
to provide notice to participants and beneficiaries not later than 30
days after submitting the application for partition:
How can PBGC reduce the burden of providing the notice
under current law, while still providing important information to
participants and beneficiaries? Should PBGC consider issuing a model
notice in future guidance?
[[Page 8715]]
What type(s) of information would participants and
beneficiaries find most helpful?
Given that the amount of liabilities required to be
transferred in a partition may not be known at the time notice is
issued, how should the notice reflect the requirements of section
4233(e)(1), which ensure that affected participants and beneficiaries
will receive no less than they would have received prior to the
partition (taking into account benefit suspensions under section
305(e)(9) and any plan amendments following the partition effective
date)?
6. PBGC Determination: For purposes of the requirement under
section 4233(b) that PBGC determine, in consultation with the
Participant and Plan Sponsor Advocate, that the plan sponsor has taken
(or is taking concurrently with an application for partition), all
reasonable measures to avoid insolvency, including the maximum benefit
suspensions under section 432(e)(9) of the Code:
What actuarial, economic, industry, or other information
could a plan sponsor provide to make such a showing? What information
or analysis might be difficult to provide?
With respect to the consultation process under section
4233(b)(2), how can the Participant and Plan Sponsor Advocate best
assist PBGC in making its determination under this section?
7. Concurrent Applications: What practical issues do plan sponsors
and their professional advisors anticipate may arise in connection with
a decision to submit combined applications for partition to PBGC under
section 4233 of ERISA, and suspension of benefits to the Department of
Treasury under section 432 of the Code? In responding to this question,
consider the following:
Timing: With respect to an application for partition, PBGC
is required to make a determination not later than 270 days after the
application date (or, if later, the date such application was
completed). With respect to an application for suspension of benefits,
the Treasury Secretary (in consultation with PBGC and the Secretary of
Labor) is required to approve or deny an application within 225 days
after submission.
Effective Date: With respect to a concurrent application
for partition and suspensions of benefits, the suspension of benefits
may not take effect prior to the effective date of such partition.
Solvency: Under section 4233(c), the amount to be
transferred in a partition is the minimum amount of the plan's
liabilities necessary for the plan to remain solvent. Section
432(e)(9)(D)(iv) of the Code provides that any suspensions of benefits,
in the aggregate (and, if applicable, considered in combination with a
partition of the plan under section 4233 of ERISA), shall be reasonably
estimated to achieve, but not materially exceed, the level that is
necessary to avoid insolvency.
8. Transferred Liabilities: Prior to MPRA, PBGC's partition order
would provide for a transfer of no more than the non-forfeitable
benefits directly attributable to service with the bankrupt employer
and an equitable share of assets. In contrast, under section 4233(c),
the partition order will provide for a transfer of the minimum amount
of the plan's liabilities necessary for the plan to remain solvent. In
addition, section 4233(e)(1) prescribes a continuing payment obligation
that applies to the plan that was partitioned (the original plan).
What types of actuarial and administrative information and
data do multiemployer plans generally maintain that would allow PBGC to
determine the minimum amount of the plan's liabilities necessary for
the plan to remain solvent?
What administrative or operational issues (e.g.,
recordkeeping, benefit processing, allocation of expenses) arise in
connection with this change?
Are there additional issues that arise with respect to the
transfer of the plan's liabilities for particular groups of
individuals?
9. Post-Partition: With respect to issues that might arise post-
partition:
What kinds of administrative or operational issues (e.g.,
recordkeeping, benefit processing, allocation of expenses, the original
plan's ongoing payment obligations under section 4231(e)(1)) might
arise post-partition for plan sponsors?
What issues or challenges do plan sponsors and their
professional advisors anticipate in connection with the special
withdrawal liability rule under section 4233(d)(3), which applies for a
10-year period following the partition effective date?
What issues or challenges do plan sponsors and their
professional advisors anticipate in connection with the special benefit
improvement and premium rules under sections 4233(e)(2) and (3) of
ERISA, which apply for a 10-year period following the partition
effective date?
Is there a need for additional post-partition oversight by
PBGC to ensure compliance with MPRA's post-partition requirements, and
if so, in what areas?
Issues Affecting Facilitated Mergers Only
10. Technical Assistance: MPRA provides a non-exclusive list of the
types of non-financial assistance that PBGC may provide in the context
of a facilitated merger (e.g., training, technical assistance,
mediation, communication with stakeholders, and support with related
requests to other government agencies). For purposes of a facilitated
merger, which of these types of assistance would plan sponsors and
professional advisors find most helpful? Are there other examples of
non-financial technical advice that would help facilitate multiemployer
mergers?
11. PBGC Determination: For purposes of the facilitated merger
requirement under section 4231(e)(1) that PBGC determine, in
consultation with the Participant and Plan Sponsor Advocate, that the
transaction is in the interests of the participants and beneficiaries
of at least one of the plans and is not reasonably expected to be
adverse to the overall interests of the participants and beneficiaries
of the plans:
What actuarial, economic, industry, or other information
could the plan sponsors of the plans involved in the proposed merger
provide to make such a showing?
With respect to the consultation process under section
4231(e)(1), how can the Participant and Plan Sponsor Advocate best
assist PBGC in making its determination under this section?
12. Concurrent Applications: What procedural issues do plan
sponsors and their professional advisors anticipate in connection with
a decision to request assistance from PBGC for a facilitated merger
under section 4231(e) of ERISA, concurrently with an application for
suspension of benefits from the Department of Treasury under section
432(e)(9) of the Code?
Although PBGC is specifically requesting comments on the issues and
questions discussed above, PBGC also invites comment on any other issue
relating to the application process for partitions and facilitated
mergers under sections 121 and 122 of MPRA.
Issued in Washington, DC, this 13th day of February 2015.
Alice C. Maroni,
Acting Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2015-03434 Filed 2-17-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7709-02-P