Blended Retirement System, 60099-60106 [2017-27304]
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60099
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 82, No. 242
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents.
FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT
INVESTMENT BOARD
5 CFR Parts 1600, 1601, 1603, 1605,
1650, 1651 and 1690
Blended Retirement System
Federal Retirement Thrift
Investment Board.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Retirement Thrift
Investment Board (‘‘FRTIB’’) is
amending its regulations to implement
changes to the uniformed services’
retirement system that are mandated by
the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016.
DATES: This rule is effective January 1,
2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brandon Ford, Attorney-Advisor,
Federal Retirement Thrift Investment
Board, Office of General Counsel, 77 K
Street NE, Suite 1000, Washington, DC
20002, 202–864–8734, Brandon.Ford@
tsp.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
FRTIB administers the Thrift Savings
Plan (TSP), which was established by
the Federal Employees’ Retirement
System Act of 1986 (FERSA), Public
Law 99–335, 100 Stat. 514. The TSP
provisions of FERSA are codified, as
amended, largely at 5 U.S.C. 8351 and
8401–79. The TSP is a tax-deferred
retirement savings plan for Federal
civilian employees and members of the
uniformed services. The TSP is similar
to cash or deferred arrangements
established for private-sector employees
under section 401(k) of the Internal
Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 401(k)).
The National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (NDAA), Public
Law 114–92, signed into law November
25, 2015, changed the uniformed
services’ retirement plan from one that
relied primarily on a cliff-vested defined
benefit to one that blends a reduced
defined benefit with enhanced TSP
benefits, continuation pay, and lump-
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SUMMARY:
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sum options. The new retirement
system is known as the Blended
Retirement System (BRS).
On September 11, 2017, the Agency
published a proposed rule with request
for comments in the Federal Register
(82 FR 42613). The Agency received one
or more comments from four
individuals and a Federal Agency.
One individual provided suggestions
for improving the Department of
Defense (DoD) calculator. Although this
comment does not affect these
regulations, the comment was
forwarded to DoD for its review.
Another individual commented
supporting the implementation of BRS.
One individual noted that
contributing continuation pay to the
TSP may potentially limit the amount of
Service Matching Contributions
available if doing so causes the
individual to exceed the IRC section
402(g) elective deferral limit. The
commenter suggested that continuation
pay not count towards that limit. The
TSP is subject to the same elective
deferral limits as private-sector 401(k)
plans. Therefore, the Agency is bound
by the Internal Revenue Code and
Treasury Regulations which state that
elective deferrals from bonuses (such as
continuation pay) are included in the
overall limit along with contributions
made from basic pay.
One individual along with the
Department of Defense requested that
affirmative (voluntary) contribution
elections made by members of the
uniformed services who first join a
service on or after January 1, 2018 be
effective immediately. The proposed
regulations had a 60 day delay in
automatic enrollment along with a 60
day delay for contributions made by an
affirmative election. This design made
sense because the underlying purpose of
automatic enrollment in retirement
plans is to have employees contributing
as soon as they are eligible to
participate, and DoD requested that
automatic enrollment occur 60 days
after the service member’s Pay Entry
Base Date (PEBD). Additionally, these
service members would not be eligible
to receive the Service Automatic (1%)
Contributions until after they have
reached 60 days of service.
The comment from DoD presented
different positions as to why affirmative
contribution elections in the first 60
days of service should be effective
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immediately and automatic enrollment
should remain delayed until the first
pay period after 60 days from the
member’s PEBD. In particular, DoD
noted that if automatic enrollment
begins immediately upon accession,
some service members may not be given
ample opportunity to request a refund
because they will still be in basic
training. However, in the view of DoD,
this is not a concern with contributions
made through an affirmative election.
DoD posits that because the ability to
request a refund is unique to automatic
enrollment and not contributions made
through an affirmative election, it is
permissible to delay automatic
enrollment for 60 days while allowing
for contributions made by affirmative
election to be effective immediately,
even if made within the first 60 days of
service. DoD further suggests that doing
so would be beneficial to those service
members who make an affirmative
contribution election within the first 60
days of service.
The Agency supports the position put
forth by DoD. Therefore, in this final
rule, the amendments made to section
1600.12 in the proposed rule are
deleted. However, the Board is
publishing the remaining provisions of
the proposed rule as final without
modification.
BRS Eligibility
BRS covers service members who first
enter a uniformed service on or after
January 1, 2018. It also covers service
members who (1) have completed fewer
than 12 years of service (or, if in the
reserve component, have fewer than
4,320 retirement points) as of December
31, 2017, and (2) elect, within a certain
timeframe, to transfer from the legacy
retirement system to BRS (this process
is also known as electing to ‘‘opt-in’’ to
BRS). The employing services are
responsible for making BRS eligibility
determinations and reporting each
service member’s retirement coverage
status to the TSP.
Service Automatic (1%) Contributions
Timing Restrictions
The NDAA placed timing restrictions
on the receipt of Service Automatic 1%
Contributions to a service member’s TSP
account. Service members who first
enter duty on or after January 1, 2018
cannot receive any Service Automatic
(1%) Contributions until the first full
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pay period following the date that is 60
days after the member’s Pay Entry Base
Date (PEBD).1 For members who elect to
transfer to the BRS, Service Automatic
(1%) Contributions will begin the first
full pay period following their election
to transfer.
Service Automatic (1%) Contributions
must stop the first full pay period that
is 26 years after the service member’s
PEBD. This rule applies to all BRS
participants whether they entered duty
on or after January 1, 2018, or they
elected to transfer to BRS. For example,
a member who has served six years
before electing to transfer to BRS can
receive matching contributions for only
20 years.
Vesting
The NDAA requires each BRS
participant to complete 2 years of
military service before they are vested in
their Service Automatic (1%)
Contributions. A service member’s civil
service will not count toward the
completion of that two years. Therefore,
the FRTIB amends section 1603.1 to
have separate definitions for civilian
service and military service. The
definition for civilian service will
remain the same as it is today. Military
service will be defined as service that is
creditable under 37 U.S.C. 205, which is
the provision that defines years of
service for purposes of computing basic
pay. For service members who elect to
transfer to BRS, all military service
completed prior to the election will
count towards the vesting requirement.
For example, if a service member has
completed 3 years of service prior to
transferring to BRS, that member will be
immediately vested in the Service
Automatic (1%) Contributions made to
his or her TSP account.
Enrollment and Member Contributions
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Automatic Enrollment
The NDAA requires employing
services to automatically enroll all
uniformed service members who first
enter service on or after January 1, 2018.
Employing services must also
automatically enroll all BRS
participants (whether they entered duty
on or after January 1, 2018, or
transferred to BRS) who separate from
service and later re-enter service.
Automatic Enrollment is deferred for
BRS participants until the first full pay
1 PEBD is the date that denotes how much service
a member has for the purpose of determining
longevity pay rates. The Navy and Marine Corps
refer to this as the pay entry base date, while the
Air Force calls it simply the pay date. DoD refers
to it as the basic pay date. The services are
responsible for determining each member’s PEBD
and providing each member’s PEBD to the TSP.
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period following the date that is 60 days
after the member’s PEBD because some
service members would be in basic
training for the entire refund period if
automatic enrollment were not delayed.
This delay will mitigate that concern
and place all automatically enrolled
service members on equal footing.
The Executive Director has the
statutory authority to select a default
contribution percentage rate for
automatically enrolled participants that
is no less than 2% and no more than
5%. The default percentage rate for BRS
participants is set at 3%. This is the
same contribution rate at which civilian
participants are automatically enrolled.
A participant who is automatically
enrolled may change the amount that he
or she is contributing by filing a
contribution election with his or her
payroll office.
Service members who elect to transfer
to BRS, absent a contribution election in
the alternative, will continue to make
contributions at the rate that they were
making contributions prior to their
election to transfer. They will not be
automatically enrolled. However, if a
member who transfers to BRS separates
from service and later re-enters service,
that member will be automatically
enrolled to contribute 3% of his or her
basic pay beginning the first full pay
period following the date that is 60 days
after the member’s PEBD.
Service members who are not covered
by BRS will not be automatically
enrolled even if they separate from
service and later re-enter service.
Annual Automatic Re-Enrollment
NDAA requires employing services to
automatically re-enroll, on January 1st
of each year, BRS participants who have
declined automatic enrollment for a
year. Accordingly, service members
subject to automatic enrollment who
terminate their contributions at any
point during the year and do not elect
to resume them by the last full pay
period of the year will be automatically
re-enrolled at a contribution rate of 3%
as of January 1st of the following year.
The employing services are responsible
for determining which BRS participants
are not making contributions in the last
full pay period of the year.
Automatic Enrollment Refunds
Service members who are
automatically enrolled in the TSP may
request a refund of the automatic
enrollment contributions deducted from
their basic pay (including associated
earnings) within the first 90 days of the
member’s first automatic enrollment
contribution. Members who stop making
contributions are not eligible for refunds
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of contributions deducted when they are
automatically re-enrolled on January 1st
because, under rules mandated by the
Internal Revenue Service, a new 90-day
refund period is not allowed unless one
full calendar year (January through
December) has passed since the
member’s last automatic enrollment
contribution.
There are very few participants who
will go an entire plan year without any
default employee contributions because
they will be subject to automatic reenrollment for each plan year. There are
significant programming limitations to
track the small number of members who
will go an entire plan year without any
default employee contributions. For
these reasons, the Board has decided to
disallow refunds of contributions
associated with automatic reenrollment.
Hardship Withdrawals and Automatic
Enrollment
Under existing IRS rules, a participant
who obtains a financial hardship inservice withdrawal may not contribute
to the TSP for a period of six months
after the withdrawal is processed. This
final rule provides that no BRS
participant will be automatically
enrolled or re-enrolled during a six
month non-contribution period. For
example, a service member who is in a
non-contribution period at the end of
the year will not be reenrolled in
January. However, if the member does
not resume contributions after the end
of the six month non-contribution
period and consequently is not making
contributions during the last full pay
period of the year, the member’s
employing service must automatically
enroll the member on January 1st of the
subsequent year.
Service Matching Contributions
Timing Restrictions
Service Matching Contributions begin
the first full pay period that is 2 years
after the service member’s PEBD. For
members who elect to transfer to the
BRS, Service Matching Contributions
begin the first full pay period following
their election to transfer. For example,
a member who has served 1 year before
electing to transfer to BRS will receive
Service Matching Contributions
beginning the first full pay period
following their election even though 2
years have not passed since their PEBD.
Service Matching Contributions must
stop at the same time Service Automatic
(1%) Contributions stop, which is the
first full pay period that is 26 years after
the service member’s PEBD. This is true
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regardless of how the service member
became covered by BRS.
Vesting
All BRS participants will immediately
vest in their Service Matching
Contributions.
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Repeal of Existing Matching Program for
Critical Specialties
The NDAA repeals the service
matching program described in 37
U.S.C. 211(d) as of January 1, 2018.
There are no service members currently
participating in the program. Therefore,
this final rule deletes all references to 37
U.S.C. 211(d).
Default Investment Fund
A member who first enters service on
or after January 1, 2018, will have his
or her contributions invested in an ageappropriate L Fund by default until the
member makes an affirmative
contribution allocation that directs
incoming contributions into a different
fund or combination of funds. Likewise,
if a service member who elects to
transfer to BRS has not made either an
affirmative contribution allocation or an
interfund transfer, then any
contributions made after becoming
covered by BRS will be invested in an
age-appropriate L Fund.
If a service member who elects to
transfer to BRS has made an interfund
transfer in the past but not a
contribution allocation, then any
contributions made after becoming
covered by BRS will be invested in the
G Fund. If a service member who elects
to transfer to BRS has made an
affirmative contribution allocation in
the past, then any contributions made
after becoming covered by BRS will be
invested in accordance with the
member’s contribution allocation.
However, if a member elects to transfer
to BRS and has a zero account balance,
contributions will be invested in an ageappropriate L Fund regardless of any
past contribution allocation or interfund
transfer. The investment of
contributions made prior to becoming
covered by BRS will remain unchanged.
Uniformed service members who are not
covered by BRS will continue to have
their contributions defaulted into the G
Fund.
When an employing agency
automatically re-enrolls a participant
because they were not making
contributions in the last full pay period
of the year, the participant’s
contributions will be invested in the
same manner as they were prior to reenrollment (regardless of whether it was
an affirmative contribution allocation or
a default investment). Likewise,
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contributions of a rehired service
member will be invested in the fund(s)
to which they were being invested prior
to being rehired (regardless of whether
the fund(s) were an affirmative
contribution allocation or a default
investment and regardless of how much
time has passed since the rehired
service member separated from service).
However, if a re-enrolled or re-hired
service member has a zero account
balance, future contributions will be
defaulted to an age-appropriate L Fund.
The first time a BRS participant’s
employing agency automatically enrolls
him or her, or when he or she first
transfers to BRS, or as soon as
practicable thereafter, the TSP will
provide each BRS participant who is
subject to default investment in an ageappropriate L Fund with a notification
concerning the risk of investing.
Correction of Administrative Errors
BRS introduces new potential errors
that are not currently addressed in
regulations. Specifically, employing
services may classify members of the
uniformed services in the wrong
retirement system (i.e., legacy instead of
BRS and vice versa). If this error occurs,
it is possible that service members will
not be automatically enrolled and not
receive service contributions.
Additionally, if this error were to occur,
service member contributions may be
invested in the wrong default
investment fund which would require
breakage calculations. Therefore, the
FRTIB amends Part 1605 to provide the
necessary mechanisms to correct errors
related to BRS.
If a BRS participant is misclassified
by an employing agency as a non-BRS
participant, when the misclassification
is corrected, the participant may, under
the rules of § 1605.11, elect to make up
contributions that he or she would have
been eligible to make as a BRS
participant during the period of
misclassification. In addition, the
employing service must, under the rules
of § 1605.11, make up Service
Automatic (1%) Contributions and
Service Matching Contributions on
employee contributions.
If a non-BRS participant is
misclassified by an employing service as
a BRS participant, employee
contributions may remain in the
participant’s account when the
misclassification is corrected. If the
participant requests a refund of
employee contributions, the employing
service must submit a negative
adjustment record to remove the funds
under the procedure described in
§ 1605.12. The TSP will forfeit all
service contributions that were made to
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60101
a non-BRS participant’s account, except
that an employing service may submit a
negative adjustment record to request
the return of an erroneous contribution
that has been in the participant’s
account for less than one year.
The TSP will charge the employing
service for any positive breakage that
results from an incorrect default
investment. To initiate a breakage
calculation for the uniformed service
member, the employing service must
notify the TSP that the participant is
entitled to breakage. Notification from
the employing service to the TSP that
the participant has been misclassified
will not itself trigger the TSP to take
corrective action other than to update
the participant’s retirement system
coverage.
Finally, the FRTIB amends section
1605.31 to reduce makeup civilian
agency contributions by any Service
Automatic (1%) Contributions the
participant receives while in military
service. Currently, USERRA requires
civilian agencies to makeup automatic
(1%) and matching contributions
missed while a member was separated
or in a non-pay status for military
service. The regulations currently
reduce the agency makeup matching
contributions by any matching
contributions received while performing
military service. These amendments
will extend that reduction to include
Service Automatic (1%) Contributions
received while performing military
service. The amendments also provide
that breakage on agency or service
contributions will be based on the
contribution allocation(s) on file for the
participant during the period of military
service.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that this regulation will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
This regulation will affect Federal
employees and members of the
uniformed services who participate in
the TSP.
Paperwork Reduction Act
I certify that these regulations do not
require additional reporting under the
criteria of the Paperwork Reduction Act.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Pursuant to the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 602, 632,
653, and 1501–1571, the effects of this
regulation on state, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector have
been assessed. This regulation will not
compel the expenditure in any one year
of $100 million or more by state, local,
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and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector. Therefore, a
statement under 2 U.S.C. 1532 is not
required.
§ 1600.14
by BRS.
Effect of election to be covered
5 CFR Part 1603
(a) If a uniformed service member
elects to be covered by BRS, the member
may make a contribution election at any
time.
(b) Eligibility to make employee
contributions, and therefore to have
Agency Matching Contributions made
on the member’s behalf, is subject to the
restrictions on making employee
contributions after receipt of a financial
hardship in-service withdrawal
described at 5 CFR part 1650.
(c) If the member had elected to make
TSP contributions while not covered by
BRS, the election remains effective until
the member makes a new election.
(d) Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions for all members covered
under this section and, if applicable,
Agency Matching Contributions
attributable to employee contributions
must begin the first full pay period that
the transfer to BRS becomes effective.
■ 3. Amend § 1600.19 to revise
paragraphs (a), (b)(1) introductory text,
(b)(2) and (c) to read as follows:
Government employees, Pensions,
Retirement.
§ 1600.19 Employing agency
contributions.
5 CFR Part 1605
(a) Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions. Each pay period, subject
to the limitations in paragraph (d) of
this section, any agency that employs an
individual covered by FERS or BRS
must make a contribution to that
employee’s tax-deferred balance for the
benefit of the individual equal to 1% of
the basic pay paid to such employee for
service performed during that pay
period. The employing agency must
make Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions without regard to whether
the employee elects to make employee
contributions.
(b) Agency Matching Contributions.
(1) Subject to the limitations in
paragraph (d) of this section, any agency
that employs an individual covered by
FERS or BRS must make a contribution
to the employee’s tax-deferred balance
for the benefit of the employee equal to
the sum of:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) A uniformed service member is
not entitled to matching contributions
for contributions deducted from special
or incentive pay (including bonuses).
(c) Timing of employing agency
contributions. (1) An employee
appointed or reappointed to a position
covered by FERS is immediately eligible
to receive employing agency
contributions.
(2) A uniformed service member
covered by BRS will be eligible to
receive employing agency contributions
pursuant to the following rules:
Submission to Congress and the
General Accounting Office
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 810(a)(1)(A), the
Agency submitted a report containing
this rule and other required information
to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller
General of the United States before
publication of this rule in the Federal
Register. This rule is not a major rule as
defined at 5 U.S.C. 814(2).
List of Subjects
5 CFR Part 1600
Government employees, Pensions,
Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1601
Government employees, Pensions,
Retirement.
Claims, Government employees,
Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1650
Alimony, Claims, Government
employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1651
Claims, Government employees,
Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1690
Government employees, Pensions,
Retirement.
Ravindra Deo,
Executive Director, Federal Retirement Thrift
Investment Board.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the FRTIB amends 5 CFR
Chapter VI as follows:
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PART 1600—EMPLOYEE
CONTRIBUTION ELECTIONS,
CONTRIBUTION ALLOCATIONS, AND
AUTOMATIC ENROLLMENT
PROGRAM
1. The authority citation for part 1600
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432(a), 8432(b),
8432(c), 8432(j), 8432d, 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1),
and 8440e.
2. Add § 1600.14 to subpart B to read
as follows:
■
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(i) A uniformed service member who
first entered service on or after January
1, 2018 is entitled to:
(A) Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions beginning in the first full
pay period following the date that is 60
days after the uniformed service
member’s PEBD and ending in the first
full pay period following the date that
is 26 years after the uniformed service
member’s PEBD.
(B) Agency Matching Contributions
beginning in the first full pay period
following the date that is 2 years after
the uniformed service member’s PEBD
and ending in the first full pay period
following the date that is 26 years after
the uniformed service member’s PEBD.
(ii) A uniformed service member who
elects to enroll in BRS is entitled to:
(A) Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions beginning in the first full
pay period following the date the
uniformed service member enrolled in
BRS and ending in the first full pay
period following the date that is 26
years after the Uniformed service
member’s PEBD.
(B) Agency Matching Contributions
beginning in the first full pay period
following the date the uniformed service
member enrolled in BRS and ending in
the first full pay period following the
date that is 26 years after the uniformed
service member’s PEBD.
■ 4. Revise § 1600.34 to read as follows:
§ 1600.34
Automatic enrollment program.
(a) All newly hired civilian employees
who are eligible to participate in the
Thrift Savings Plan and those civilian
employees who are rehired after a
separation in service of 31 or more
calendar days and who are eligible to
participate in the TSP will
automatically have 3% of their basic
pay contributed to the employee’s
traditional TSP balance (default
employee contribution) unless, by the
end of the employee’s first pay period
(subject to the agency’s processing time
frames), they elect:
(1) To not contribute;
(2) To contribute at some other level;
or
(3) To make Roth contributions in
addition to, or in lieu of, traditional
contributions.
(b) All uniformed service members
who either enter service on or after
January 1, 2018 or re-enter service after
a separation in service of 31 or more
calendar days after having been covered
by BRS at the time of separation will
automatically have 3% of their basic
pay contributed to the member’s
traditional TSP balance (default
employee contribution) beginning the
first full pay period following the date
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that is 60 days after the member’s PEBD
unless they elect by the end of that 60
day period:
(1) To not contribute;
(2) To contribute at some other level;
or
(3) To make Roth contributions in
addition to, or in lieu of, traditional
contributions.
(c) If, for any calendar year, a
uniformed service member described in
paragraph (b) of this section does not
make a contribution in the final full pay
period of such calendar year due to the
member’s election to terminate
contributions prior to the final full pay
period, then that member will
automatically have 3% of his or her
basic pay contributed to his or her
traditional TSP balance beginning the
first full pay period of the following
calendar year unless he or she makes a
subsequent election by December 31st:
(1) To not contribute;
(2) To contribute at some other level;
(3) To make Roth contributions in
addition to, or in lieu of, traditional
contributions.
■ 5. Amend § 1600.35 by revising the
first sentence of paragraph (a) and
adding paragraph (f) to read as follows:
§ 1600.35 Refunds of default employee
contributions.
(a) Subject to the limitations in
paragraph (f) of this section, a
participant may request a refund of any
default employee contributions made on
his or her behalf (i.e., the contributions
made while under the automatic
enrollment program) provided the
request is received within 90 days after
the date that the first default employee
contribution was processed. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(f) A participant may not receive a
refund of default employee
contributions made pursuant to
§ 1600.34(c).
■ 6. Amend § 1600.37 by revising the
introductory text and paragraph (d) to
read as follows:
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§ 1600.37
Notice.
The Board shall furnish all new
employees and all rehired employees
covered by the automatic enrollment
program, and all employees described in
paragraph (c) of § 1600.34, covered by
the automatic enrollment program a
notice that accurately describes:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The employee’s ability (or
inability) to request a refund of any
default employee contributions
(adjusted for allocable gains and losses)
and the procedure to request such a
refund; and
*
*
*
*
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
Jkt 244001
PART 1601—PARTICIPANTS’
CHOICES OF TSP FUNDS
7. The authority citation for part 1601
continues to reads as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432d, 8438,
8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).
■
8. Revise § 1601.13 to read as follows:
§ 1601.13
Elections.
(a) Contribution allocation. Each
participant may indicate his or her
choice of TSP Funds for the allocation
of future deposits by using the TSP
website or the ThriftLine, or by
completing and filing the appropriate
paper TSP form with the TSP record
keeper in accordance with the form’s
instructions. The following rules apply
to contribution allocations:
(1) Contribution allocations must be
made in one percent increments. The
sum of the percentages elected for all of
the TSP Funds must equal 100 percent;
(2) The percentage elected by a
participant for investment of future
deposits in a TSP Fund will be applied
to all sources of contributions and
transfers (or rollovers) from traditional
IRAs and eligible employer plans. A
participant may not make different
percentage elections for different
sources of contributions;
(3) The following default investment
rules shall apply to civilian participants:
(i) All deposits made on behalf of a
civilian participant enrolled prior to
September 5, 2015 who does not have
a contribution allocation in effect will
be invested in the G Fund. A civilian
participant who is enrolled prior to
September 5, 2015 and subsequently
rehired on or after September 5, 2015
and has a positive account balance will
be considered enrolled prior to
September 5, 2015 for purposes of this
paragraph; and
(ii) All deposits made on behalf of a
civilian participant first enrolled on or
after September 5, 2015 who does not
have a contribution allocation in effect
will be invested in the age-appropriate
TSP Lifecycle Fund;
(iii) A civilian participant enrolled
prior to September 5, 2015 who elects
for the first time to invest in a TSP Fund
other than the G Fund must execute an
acknowledgement of risk in accordance
with § 1601.33;
(4) The following default investment
rules shall apply to uniformed services
participants:
(i) All deposits made on behalf of a
uniformed services participant who first
entered service prior to January 1, 2018,
has not elected to be covered by BRS,
and does not have a contribution
allocation in effect will be invested in
the G Fund;
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
60103
(ii) All deposits made on behalf of a
uniformed services participant who first
entered service on or after January 1,
2018 and who does not have a
contribution allocation in effect will be
invested in the age-appropriate TSP
Lifecycle Fund;
(iii) If a uniformed services
participant makes an election to be
covered by BRS as described in 5 CFR
1600.14 and does not have a
contribution allocation in effect at the
time of the election, then all deposits
made after the date of such election will
be invested in the age-appropriate TSP
Lifecycle Fund. Deposits made prior to
the date of the election will remain
invested in the G Fund.
(iv) A uniformed services participant
who first entered service prior to
January 1, 2018 and has not made an
election to be covered by the BRS who
elects for the first time to invest in a
TSP Fund other than the G Fund must
execute an acknowledgement of risk in
accordance with § 1601.33;
(5) Once a contribution allocation
becomes effective, it remains in effect
until it is superseded by a subsequent
contribution allocation or the
participant’s account balance is reduced
to zero. If a rehired participant has a
positive account balance and a
contribution allocation in effect, then
the participant’s contribution allocation
will remain in effect until a new
allocation is made. If, however, the
participant (other than a participant
described in paragraph (a)(4)(i) of this
section) has a zero account balance,
then the participant’s contributions will
be allocated to the age-appropriate TSP
Lifecycle Fund until a new allocation is
made.
(b) Effect of rejection of contribution
allocation. If a participant does not
correctly complete a contribution
allocation, the attempted allocation will
have no effect. The TSP will provide the
participant with a written statement of
the reason the transaction was rejected.
(c) Contribution elections. A
participant may designate the amount or
type of employee contributions he or
she wishes to make to the TSP or may
stop contributions only in accordance
with 5 CFR part 1600.
■ 9. Amend § 1601.33 by revising the
first sentence of paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
§ 1601.33
Acknowledgment of risk.
(a) Uniformed services participants
who first entered service prior to
January 1, 2018 and who have not
elected to be covered by BRS and
civilian participants who enrolled prior
to September 5, 2015 must execute an
acknowledgement of risk in order to
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 242 / Tuesday, December 19, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
invest in a TSP Fund other than the G
Fund. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1603—VESTING
10. The authority citation for part
1603 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8432(g), 8432b(h)(1),
8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).
11. Amend paragraph (b) of § 1603.1
as follows:
■ a. Amend the definition of ‘‘Service’’
by removing ‘‘Service means’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘Civilian service
means’’; and
■ b. Add a definition of ‘‘Military
service’’ in alphabetical order to read as
follows:
■
§ 1603.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Military service means service that is
creditable under 37 U.S.C. 205.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Revise § 1603.2 to read as follows:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
§ 1603.2
Service requirements.
(a) Except as provided under
paragraph (b) of this section, FERS
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
PART 1605—CORRECTION OF
ADMINISTRATIVE ERRORS
14. The authority citation for part
1605 continues to read as follows:
■
Basic vesting rules.
(a) All amounts in a CSRS employee’s
individual account are immediately
vested.
(b) Except as provided in paragraph
(c) of this section, all amounts in a FERS
employee’s or uniformed service
member’s individual account (including
all first conversion contributions) are
immediately vested.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph
(d) of this section, upon separation from
Government service without meeting
the applicable service requirements of
§ 1603.3, a FERS employee’s or a BRS
uniformed service member’s Agency
Automatic (1%) Contributions and
attributable earnings will be forfeited.
(d) If a FERS employee or uniformed
service member dies (or died) after
January 7, 1988, without meeting the
applicable service requirements set forth
in § 1603.3, the Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions and attributable earnings
in his or her individual account are
deemed vested and shall not be
forfeited. If a FERS employee died on or
before January 7, 1988, without meeting
those service requirements, his or her
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
and attributable earnings are forfeited to
the Thrift Savings Plan.
■ 13. Amend § 1603.3 by revising
paragraph (a) and the introductory text
of paragraph (b), and adding paragraph
(c) to read as follows:
§ 1603.3
employees will be vested in their
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
and attributable earnings upon
separating from Government only if, as
of their separation date, they have
completed three years of civilian
service.
(b) FERS employees will be vested in
their Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions and attributable earnings
upon separating from Government
service if, as of their separation date,
they have completed two years of
civilian service and they are serving in
one of the following positions:
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Uniformed service members who
are covered by BRS will be vested in
their Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions and attributable earnings
upon separation from the uniformed
services only if, as of their separation
date, they have completed two years of
military service.
Jkt 244001
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432a, 8432d,
8474(b)(5) and (c)(1). Subpart B also issued
under section 1043(b) of Public Law 104–
106, 110 Stat. 186 and § 7202(m)(2) of Public
Law 101–508, 104 Stat. 1388.
15. Amend paragraph (b) of § 1605.1
by adding definitions of ‘‘BRS
participant’’ and ‘‘Non-BRS participant’’
in alphabetical order to read as follows:
■
§ 1605.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
BRS participant means any member of
the Uniformed Services described in 5
U.S.C. 8440e(e)(1).
*
*
*
*
*
Non-BRS participant means any
member of the Uniformed Services not
described in 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(1).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. Amend § 1605.3 by adding
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 1605.3 Calculating, posting, and
charging breakage on errors involving
investment in the wrong fund.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) If a uniformed services
participant’s retirement system is
misclassified and the error results in
default investment in the wrong fund,
when the error is corrected pursuant to
§ 1605.14(f)–(g), the TSP will charge the
employing agency for any positive
breakage that results from the incorrect
default investment. The retirement
misclassification correction received
from an employing agency will not
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
trigger corrective action other than to
update the participant’s retirement
system coverage. To initiate a breakage
calculation for the uniformed service
member, the employing agency must
notify the TSP that the participant is
entitled to breakage.
■ 17. Amend § 1605.11 by revising the
introductory text of paragraph (b) to
read as follows:
§ 1605.11 Makeup of missed or insufficient
contributions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Employer makeup contributions. If
an employing agency has failed to make
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
that are required under 5 U.S.C.
8432(c)(1)(A) and 5 U.S.C.
8440e(e)(3)(A), or Agency Matching
Contributions that are required under
section 8432(c)(2) and 5 U.S.C.
8440e(e)(3)(B), the following rules
apply:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 18. Amend § 1605.14 by adding
paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as follows:
§ 1605.14 Misclassified retirement system
coverage.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) If a BRS participant is misclassified
by an employing agency as a non-BRS
participant, when the misclassification
is corrected:
(1) The participant may not elect to
have the contributions made while
classified as non-BRS removed from his
or her account;
(2) The participant may, under the
rules of § 1605.11, elect to make up
contributions that he or she would have
been eligible to make as a BRS
participant during the period of
misclassification;
(3) The employing agency must,
under the rules of § 1605.11, make
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
and Agency Matching Contributions on
employee contributions that were made
while the participant was misclassified;
and
(4) The employing agency must
submit makeup employee contributions
on current payment records and service
makeup contributions may be submitted
on either current or late payment
records.
(g) If a non-BRS participant is
misclassified by an employing agency as
a BRS participant, when the
misclassification is corrected:
(1) Employee contributions may
remain in the participant’s account. If
the participant requests a refund of
employee contributions, the employing
agency must submit a negative
adjustment record to remove these
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funds under the procedure described in
§ 1605.12.
(2) The TSP will forfeit all agency
contributions that were made to a nonBRS participant’s account. An
employing service may submit a
negative adjustment record to request
the return of an erroneous contribution
that has been in the participant’s
account for less than one year.
■ 19. Amend § 1605.31 by revising
paragraph (c)(1), adding paragraph
(c)(5), and revising paragraph (d) to read
as follows:
§ 1605.31 Contributions missed as a result
of military service.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) The employee is entitled to receive
the Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions that he or she would have
received had he or she remained in
civilian service or pay status. Within 60
days of the employee’s reemployment or
restoration to pay status, the employing
agency must calculate the Agency
Automatic (1%) makeup contributions
and report those contributions to the
record keeper, subject to any reduction
in Automatic (1%) Contributions
required by paragraph (c)(5) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(5) If the employee received
uniformed services Automatic (1%)
Contributions, the Agency Automatic
(1%) Contributions will be reduced by
the amount of the uniformed services
Automatic (1%) Contributions.
(d) Breakage. The employee is
entitled to breakage on agency
contributions made under paragraph (c)
of this section. Breakage will be
calculated based on the contribution
allocation(s) on file for the participant
during the period of military service.
20. The authority citation for part
1650 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432d, 8433,
8434, 8435, 8474(b)(5) and 8474(c)(1).
21. Amend § 1650.33 by revising the
second sentence of paragraph (b) to read
as follows:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
■
§ 1650.33 Contributing to the TSP after an
in-service withdrawal.
*
*
*
*
(b) * * * Therefore, the participant’s
employing agency will discontinue his
or her contributions (and any applicable
Agency Matching Contributions) for six
months after the agency is notified by
the TSP; in the case of a FERS or BRS
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
Jkt 244001
PART 1651—DEATH BENEFITS
22. The authority citation for part
1651 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8424(d), 8432d, 8432(j),
8433(e), 8435(c)(2), 8474(b)(5) and 8474(c)(1).
23. Amend § 1651.3 by revising
paragraph (c)(3) to read as follows:
■
§ 1651.3
Designation of beneficiary.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) Be signed and properly dated by
the participant and signed and properly
dated by one witness;
(i) The participant must either sign
the form in the presence of the witness
or acknowledge his or her signature on
the form to the witness;
(ii) All submitted and attached pages
of the form must be signed and dated by
the participant;
(iii) All submitted and attached pages
of the form must be signed and dated by
the same witness;
(iv) A witness must be age 21 or older;
and
(v) A witness designated as a
beneficiary will not be entitled to
receive a death benefit payment; if a
witness is the only named beneficiary,
the designation of the beneficiary is
invalid. If more than one beneficiary is
named, the share of the witness
beneficiary will be allocated among the
remaining beneficiaries pro rata.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1690—THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN
24. The authority citation for part
1690 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8474.
25. Amend § 1690.1 as follows:
a. Revise the definitions of Agency
Automatic (1%) Contributions, Agency
Matching Contributions, and Bonus
contributions.
■ b. Add definitions of BRS and BRS
participant in alphabetical order.
■ c. Revise the definition of Civilian
employee.
■ d. Revise the definitions of Employer
contributions and Employing agency.
■ e. Add a definition of PEBD in
alphabetical order.
■ f. Revise the definitions of Uniformed
service member and Uniformed services.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
PART 1650—METHODS OF
WITHDRAWING FUNDS FROM THE
THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN
*
participant, Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions will continue. * * *
§ 1690.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
means any contributions made under 5
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
60105
U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) and (c)(3). It also
includes service automatic (1%)
contributions made under 5 U.S.C.
8440e(e)(3)(A).
Agency Matching Contributions
means any contributions made under 5
U.S.C. 8432(c)(2). It also includes
service matching contributions under 5
U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(B).
*
*
*
*
*
Bonus contributions means
contributions made by a participant
from any part of any special or incentive
pay that the participant receives under
chapter 5 of title 37.
BRS means the blended retirement
system as established by the National
Defense Authorization Act for FY 2016,
Public Law 114–92, secs. 631–635
(2015).
BRS participant means a TSP
participant covered by BRS.
*
*
*
*
*
Civilian employee or civilian
participant means a TSP participant
covered by the Federal Employees’
Retirement System, the Civil Service
Retirement System, or equivalent
retirement plan.
*
*
*
*
*
Employer contributions means
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1), 8432(c)(3), or
5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(A) and Agency
Matching Contributions under 5 U.S.C.
8432(c)(2) or 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(B).
Employing agency means the
organization (or the payroll office that
services the organization) that employs
an individual eligible to contribute to
the TSP and that has authority to make
personnel compensation decisions for
the individual. It includes the
employing service for members of the
uniformed services.
*
*
*
*
*
PEBD means the pay entry base date
(or pay entry basic date for some
services), which is determined by each
uniformed service and is used to
calculate how much time in service a
member has for the purpose of
determining longevity pay rates.
*
*
*
*
*
Uniformed service member or
uniformed services participant means a
TSP participant who is a member of the
uniformed services on active duty or a
member of the Ready Reserve in any pay
status.
Uniformed services means the Army,
Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast
Guard, Public Health Service
Commissioned Corps, and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
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Administration Commissioned Officer
Corps.
*
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[FR Doc. 2017–27304 Filed 12–18–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6760–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2017–0660; Product
Identifier 2017–NE–21–AD; Amendment 39–
19132; AD 2017–26–01]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; General
Electric Company Turbofan Engines
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for certain
General Electric Company (GE) GEnx–
1B64/P2, –1B67/P2, –1B70/P2, –1B70/
75/P2, –1B70C/P2, and –1B74/75/P2
turbofan engines. This AD was
prompted by a report of the failure of
the high-pressure turbine (HPT) stage 1
blade retainer and subsequent in-flight
shutdown of the engine. This AD
requires inspection of the HPT stage 1
blade retainer. We are issuing this AD
to address the unsafe condition on these
products.
DATES: This AD is effective January 23,
2018.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of a certain publication listed in this AD
as of January 23, 2018.
ADDRESSES: For service information
identified in this final rule, contact
General Electric Company, GE-Aviation,
Room 285, 1 Neumann Way, Cincinnati,
OH 45215, phone: 513–552–3272; fax:
513–552–3329; email: geae.aoc@ge.com.
You may view this service information
at the FAA, Engine and Propeller
Standards Branch, 1200 District
Avenue, Burlington, MA. It is also
available on the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2017–
0660.
SUMMARY:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2017–
0660; or in person at the Docket
Management Facility between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The AD docket
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
Jkt 244001
contains this final rule, the regulatory
evaluation, any comments received, and
other information. The address for the
Docket Office (phone: 800–647–5527) is
Document Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, Docket
Operations, M–30, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christopher McGuire, Aerospace
Engineer, ECO Branch, FAA, 1200
District Avenue, Burlington, MA 01803;
phone: 781–238–7120; fax: 781–238–
7199; email: chris.mcguire@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Discussion
We issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) to amend 14 CFR
part 39 by adding an AD that would
apply to certain GE GEnx–1B64/P2,
–1B67/P2, –1B70/P2, –1B70/75/P2,
–1B70C/P2, and –1B74/75/P2 turbofan
engines. The NPRM published in the
Federal Register on September 1, 2017
(82 FR 41577). The NPRM was
prompted by a report of the failure of
the HPT stage 1 blade retainer and
subsequent in-flight shutdown of the
engine. The NPRM proposed to require
inspection of the HPT stage 1 blade
retainer. We are issuing this AD to
correct the unsafe condition on these
products.
Comments
We gave the public the opportunity to
participate in developing this final rule.
The following presents the comments
received on the NPRM and the FAA’s
response to each comment.
Request To Revise Compliance Time
American Airlines (AA) requested
that we change the compliance time in
this AD to align with the compliance
schedule in GE GEnx–1B Service
Bulletin (SB) 72–0326 R02, revised
August 16, 2017. AA indicated the SB
identifies two populations of HPT stage
1 blade retainers, one that requires
inspection at the next shop visit and a
second that requires inspection when
the part is removed from the engine.
The proposed AD, however, proposed
inspection of all affected retainers at
next shop visit. Due to this discrepancy
between the proposed AD and the SB,
AA requested this AD require
inspections of the HPT stage 1 blade
retainers at next shop visit and at part
removal, as required by GEnx-1B SB 72–
0326 R02.
GE commented that, based on its
analysis, conducting the required
inspection of the HPT stage 1 blade
retainer at its next piece-part exposure
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
is sufficient. GE requested that this final
rule AD be changed to require
inspection of all affected parts at piecepart exposure rather than at the next
shop visit.
We partially agree. We disagree with
AA that requiring inspections of HPT
stage 1 blade retainers at next shop visit
and at part removal, per GE GEnx–1B
SB 72–0326 R02, revised August 16,
2017, is necessary. We agree with GE
that the risk assessment justifies waiting
until exposure of the part to perform the
inspection and the change clarifies the
compliance action. We revised the
compliance section of this AD to require
that the HPT stage 1 blade retainer be
inspected at its next piece-part
exposure.
Request To Align Compliance by Part
Population
Japan Airlines (JAL) requested that
the compliance be changed to two
populations of parts with two different
compliance intervals. JAL indicated this
change would align this AD with the
two populations of affected parts
identified in GE GEnx–1B SB 72–0326
R02, revised August 16, 2017.
We disagree. Although the SB
specifies certain part numbers be
inspected sooner than at piece-part
exposure, our risk assessment
determined that performing the
inspection for all affected parts at piecepart exposure addresses the safety
concern represented by failure of the
HPT stage 1 blade retainer. We did not
change this AD.
Request To Incorporate Required for
Compliance (RC) Label Into SB
AA requested that we incorporate the
RC label into GEnx–1B SB 72–0326 R02,
revised August 16, 2017. AA indicated
this change would clarify which
sections of the SB are required to
accomplish this AD. Using the RC label
in the SB would also be consistent with
FAA Advisory Circular (AC) 20–176A,
‘‘Service Bulletins Related to
Airworthiness Directives and Indicating
FAA Approval on Service Documents,’’
dated June 16, 2014, and FAA Order
8110.117A, ‘‘Service Bulletins Related
to Airworthiness Directives,’’ dated June
18, 2014.
We disagree. FAA Order 8110.117A
and AC 20–176A provide guidance,
respectively, to FAA aviation safety
engineers in the review of SBs and to
design approval holders (DAHs) in the
development and drafting of these SBs.
These documents do not require use of
the RC label by DAHs in drafting in SBs,
and GE is not required to use this label.
The paragraph from GE GEnx–1B SB
72–0326 R02, revised August 16, 2017,
E:\FR\FM\19DER1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 242 (Tuesday, December 19, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 60099-60106]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-27304]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 242 / Tuesday, December 19, 2017 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 60099]]
FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT INVESTMENT BOARD
5 CFR Parts 1600, 1601, 1603, 1605, 1650, 1651 and 1690
Blended Retirement System
AGENCY: Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (``FRTIB'') is
amending its regulations to implement changes to the uniformed
services' retirement system that are mandated by the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016.
DATES: This rule is effective January 1, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brandon Ford, Attorney-Advisor,
Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, Office of General Counsel,
77 K Street NE, Suite 1000, Washington, DC 20002, 202-864-8734,
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The FRTIB administers the Thrift Savings
Plan (TSP), which was established by the Federal Employees' Retirement
System Act of 1986 (FERSA), Public Law 99-335, 100 Stat. 514. The TSP
provisions of FERSA are codified, as amended, largely at 5 U.S.C. 8351
and 8401-79. The TSP is a tax-deferred retirement savings plan for
Federal civilian employees and members of the uniformed services. The
TSP is similar to cash or deferred arrangements established for
private-sector employees under section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue
Code (26 U.S.C. 401(k)).
The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (NDAA),
Public Law 114-92, signed into law November 25, 2015, changed the
uniformed services' retirement plan from one that relied primarily on a
cliff-vested defined benefit to one that blends a reduced defined
benefit with enhanced TSP benefits, continuation pay, and lump-sum
options. The new retirement system is known as the Blended Retirement
System (BRS).
On September 11, 2017, the Agency published a proposed rule with
request for comments in the Federal Register (82 FR 42613). The Agency
received one or more comments from four individuals and a Federal
Agency.
One individual provided suggestions for improving the Department of
Defense (DoD) calculator. Although this comment does not affect these
regulations, the comment was forwarded to DoD for its review. Another
individual commented supporting the implementation of BRS.
One individual noted that contributing continuation pay to the TSP
may potentially limit the amount of Service Matching Contributions
available if doing so causes the individual to exceed the IRC section
402(g) elective deferral limit. The commenter suggested that
continuation pay not count towards that limit. The TSP is subject to
the same elective deferral limits as private-sector 401(k) plans.
Therefore, the Agency is bound by the Internal Revenue Code and
Treasury Regulations which state that elective deferrals from bonuses
(such as continuation pay) are included in the overall limit along with
contributions made from basic pay.
One individual along with the Department of Defense requested that
affirmative (voluntary) contribution elections made by members of the
uniformed services who first join a service on or after January 1, 2018
be effective immediately. The proposed regulations had a 60 day delay
in automatic enrollment along with a 60 day delay for contributions
made by an affirmative election. This design made sense because the
underlying purpose of automatic enrollment in retirement plans is to
have employees contributing as soon as they are eligible to
participate, and DoD requested that automatic enrollment occur 60 days
after the service member's Pay Entry Base Date (PEBD). Additionally,
these service members would not be eligible to receive the Service
Automatic (1%) Contributions until after they have reached 60 days of
service.
The comment from DoD presented different positions as to why
affirmative contribution elections in the first 60 days of service
should be effective immediately and automatic enrollment should remain
delayed until the first pay period after 60 days from the member's
PEBD. In particular, DoD noted that if automatic enrollment begins
immediately upon accession, some service members may not be given ample
opportunity to request a refund because they will still be in basic
training. However, in the view of DoD, this is not a concern with
contributions made through an affirmative election. DoD posits that
because the ability to request a refund is unique to automatic
enrollment and not contributions made through an affirmative election,
it is permissible to delay automatic enrollment for 60 days while
allowing for contributions made by affirmative election to be effective
immediately, even if made within the first 60 days of service. DoD
further suggests that doing so would be beneficial to those service
members who make an affirmative contribution election within the first
60 days of service.
The Agency supports the position put forth by DoD. Therefore, in
this final rule, the amendments made to section 1600.12 in the proposed
rule are deleted. However, the Board is publishing the remaining
provisions of the proposed rule as final without modification.
BRS Eligibility
BRS covers service members who first enter a uniformed service on
or after January 1, 2018. It also covers service members who (1) have
completed fewer than 12 years of service (or, if in the reserve
component, have fewer than 4,320 retirement points) as of December 31,
2017, and (2) elect, within a certain timeframe, to transfer from the
legacy retirement system to BRS (this process is also known as electing
to ``opt-in'' to BRS). The employing services are responsible for
making BRS eligibility determinations and reporting each service
member's retirement coverage status to the TSP.
Service Automatic (1%) Contributions
Timing Restrictions
The NDAA placed timing restrictions on the receipt of Service
Automatic 1% Contributions to a service member's TSP account. Service
members who first enter duty on or after January 1, 2018 cannot receive
any Service Automatic (1%) Contributions until the first full
[[Page 60100]]
pay period following the date that is 60 days after the member's Pay
Entry Base Date (PEBD).\1\ For members who elect to transfer to the
BRS, Service Automatic (1%) Contributions will begin the first full pay
period following their election to transfer.
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\1\ PEBD is the date that denotes how much service a member has
for the purpose of determining longevity pay rates. The Navy and
Marine Corps refer to this as the pay entry base date, while the Air
Force calls it simply the pay date. DoD refers to it as the basic
pay date. The services are responsible for determining each member's
PEBD and providing each member's PEBD to the TSP.
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Service Automatic (1%) Contributions must stop the first full pay
period that is 26 years after the service member's PEBD. This rule
applies to all BRS participants whether they entered duty on or after
January 1, 2018, or they elected to transfer to BRS. For example, a
member who has served six years before electing to transfer to BRS can
receive matching contributions for only 20 years.
Vesting
The NDAA requires each BRS participant to complete 2 years of
military service before they are vested in their Service Automatic (1%)
Contributions. A service member's civil service will not count toward
the completion of that two years. Therefore, the FRTIB amends section
1603.1 to have separate definitions for civilian service and military
service. The definition for civilian service will remain the same as it
is today. Military service will be defined as service that is
creditable under 37 U.S.C. 205, which is the provision that defines
years of service for purposes of computing basic pay. For service
members who elect to transfer to BRS, all military service completed
prior to the election will count towards the vesting requirement. For
example, if a service member has completed 3 years of service prior to
transferring to BRS, that member will be immediately vested in the
Service Automatic (1%) Contributions made to his or her TSP account.
Enrollment and Member Contributions
Automatic Enrollment
The NDAA requires employing services to automatically enroll all
uniformed service members who first enter service on or after January
1, 2018. Employing services must also automatically enroll all BRS
participants (whether they entered duty on or after January 1, 2018, or
transferred to BRS) who separate from service and later re-enter
service.
Automatic Enrollment is deferred for BRS participants until the
first full pay period following the date that is 60 days after the
member's PEBD because some service members would be in basic training
for the entire refund period if automatic enrollment were not delayed.
This delay will mitigate that concern and place all automatically
enrolled service members on equal footing.
The Executive Director has the statutory authority to select a
default contribution percentage rate for automatically enrolled
participants that is no less than 2% and no more than 5%. The default
percentage rate for BRS participants is set at 3%. This is the same
contribution rate at which civilian participants are automatically
enrolled. A participant who is automatically enrolled may change the
amount that he or she is contributing by filing a contribution election
with his or her payroll office.
Service members who elect to transfer to BRS, absent a contribution
election in the alternative, will continue to make contributions at the
rate that they were making contributions prior to their election to
transfer. They will not be automatically enrolled. However, if a member
who transfers to BRS separates from service and later re-enters
service, that member will be automatically enrolled to contribute 3% of
his or her basic pay beginning the first full pay period following the
date that is 60 days after the member's PEBD.
Service members who are not covered by BRS will not be
automatically enrolled even if they separate from service and later re-
enter service.
Annual Automatic Re-Enrollment
NDAA requires employing services to automatically re-enroll, on
January 1st of each year, BRS participants who have declined automatic
enrollment for a year. Accordingly, service members subject to
automatic enrollment who terminate their contributions at any point
during the year and do not elect to resume them by the last full pay
period of the year will be automatically re-enrolled at a contribution
rate of 3% as of January 1st of the following year. The employing
services are responsible for determining which BRS participants are not
making contributions in the last full pay period of the year.
Automatic Enrollment Refunds
Service members who are automatically enrolled in the TSP may
request a refund of the automatic enrollment contributions deducted
from their basic pay (including associated earnings) within the first
90 days of the member's first automatic enrollment contribution.
Members who stop making contributions are not eligible for refunds of
contributions deducted when they are automatically re-enrolled on
January 1st because, under rules mandated by the Internal Revenue
Service, a new 90-day refund period is not allowed unless one full
calendar year (January through December) has passed since the member's
last automatic enrollment contribution.
There are very few participants who will go an entire plan year
without any default employee contributions because they will be subject
to automatic re-enrollment for each plan year. There are significant
programming limitations to track the small number of members who will
go an entire plan year without any default employee contributions. For
these reasons, the Board has decided to disallow refunds of
contributions associated with automatic re-enrollment.
Hardship Withdrawals and Automatic Enrollment
Under existing IRS rules, a participant who obtains a financial
hardship in-service withdrawal may not contribute to the TSP for a
period of six months after the withdrawal is processed. This final rule
provides that no BRS participant will be automatically enrolled or re-
enrolled during a six month non-contribution period. For example, a
service member who is in a non-contribution period at the end of the
year will not be reenrolled in January. However, if the member does not
resume contributions after the end of the six month non-contribution
period and consequently is not making contributions during the last
full pay period of the year, the member's employing service must
automatically enroll the member on January 1st of the subsequent year.
Service Matching Contributions
Timing Restrictions
Service Matching Contributions begin the first full pay period that
is 2 years after the service member's PEBD. For members who elect to
transfer to the BRS, Service Matching Contributions begin the first
full pay period following their election to transfer. For example, a
member who has served 1 year before electing to transfer to BRS will
receive Service Matching Contributions beginning the first full pay
period following their election even though 2 years have not passed
since their PEBD.
Service Matching Contributions must stop at the same time Service
Automatic (1%) Contributions stop, which is the first full pay period
that is 26 years after the service member's PEBD. This is true
[[Page 60101]]
regardless of how the service member became covered by BRS.
Vesting
All BRS participants will immediately vest in their Service
Matching Contributions.
Repeal of Existing Matching Program for Critical Specialties
The NDAA repeals the service matching program described in 37
U.S.C. 211(d) as of January 1, 2018. There are no service members
currently participating in the program. Therefore, this final rule
deletes all references to 37 U.S.C. 211(d).
Default Investment Fund
A member who first enters service on or after January 1, 2018, will
have his or her contributions invested in an age-appropriate L Fund by
default until the member makes an affirmative contribution allocation
that directs incoming contributions into a different fund or
combination of funds. Likewise, if a service member who elects to
transfer to BRS has not made either an affirmative contribution
allocation or an interfund transfer, then any contributions made after
becoming covered by BRS will be invested in an age-appropriate L Fund.
If a service member who elects to transfer to BRS has made an
interfund transfer in the past but not a contribution allocation, then
any contributions made after becoming covered by BRS will be invested
in the G Fund. If a service member who elects to transfer to BRS has
made an affirmative contribution allocation in the past, then any
contributions made after becoming covered by BRS will be invested in
accordance with the member's contribution allocation. However, if a
member elects to transfer to BRS and has a zero account balance,
contributions will be invested in an age-appropriate L Fund regardless
of any past contribution allocation or interfund transfer. The
investment of contributions made prior to becoming covered by BRS will
remain unchanged. Uniformed service members who are not covered by BRS
will continue to have their contributions defaulted into the G Fund.
When an employing agency automatically re-enrolls a participant
because they were not making contributions in the last full pay period
of the year, the participant's contributions will be invested in the
same manner as they were prior to re-enrollment (regardless of whether
it was an affirmative contribution allocation or a default investment).
Likewise, contributions of a rehired service member will be invested in
the fund(s) to which they were being invested prior to being rehired
(regardless of whether the fund(s) were an affirmative contribution
allocation or a default investment and regardless of how much time has
passed since the rehired service member separated from service).
However, if a re-enrolled or re-hired service member has a zero account
balance, future contributions will be defaulted to an age-appropriate L
Fund.
The first time a BRS participant's employing agency automatically
enrolls him or her, or when he or she first transfers to BRS, or as
soon as practicable thereafter, the TSP will provide each BRS
participant who is subject to default investment in an age-appropriate
L Fund with a notification concerning the risk of investing.
Correction of Administrative Errors
BRS introduces new potential errors that are not currently
addressed in regulations. Specifically, employing services may classify
members of the uniformed services in the wrong retirement system (i.e.,
legacy instead of BRS and vice versa). If this error occurs, it is
possible that service members will not be automatically enrolled and
not receive service contributions. Additionally, if this error were to
occur, service member contributions may be invested in the wrong
default investment fund which would require breakage calculations.
Therefore, the FRTIB amends Part 1605 to provide the necessary
mechanisms to correct errors related to BRS.
If a BRS participant is misclassified by an employing agency as a
non-BRS participant, when the misclassification is corrected, the
participant may, under the rules of Sec. 1605.11, elect to make up
contributions that he or she would have been eligible to make as a BRS
participant during the period of misclassification. In addition, the
employing service must, under the rules of Sec. 1605.11, make up
Service Automatic (1%) Contributions and Service Matching Contributions
on employee contributions.
If a non-BRS participant is misclassified by an employing service
as a BRS participant, employee contributions may remain in the
participant's account when the misclassification is corrected. If the
participant requests a refund of employee contributions, the employing
service must submit a negative adjustment record to remove the funds
under the procedure described in Sec. 1605.12. The TSP will forfeit
all service contributions that were made to a non-BRS participant's
account, except that an employing service may submit a negative
adjustment record to request the return of an erroneous contribution
that has been in the participant's account for less than one year.
The TSP will charge the employing service for any positive breakage
that results from an incorrect default investment. To initiate a
breakage calculation for the uniformed service member, the employing
service must notify the TSP that the participant is entitled to
breakage. Notification from the employing service to the TSP that the
participant has been misclassified will not itself trigger the TSP to
take corrective action other than to update the participant's
retirement system coverage.
Finally, the FRTIB amends section 1605.31 to reduce makeup civilian
agency contributions by any Service Automatic (1%) Contributions the
participant receives while in military service. Currently, USERRA
requires civilian agencies to makeup automatic (1%) and matching
contributions missed while a member was separated or in a non-pay
status for military service. The regulations currently reduce the
agency makeup matching contributions by any matching contributions
received while performing military service. These amendments will
extend that reduction to include Service Automatic (1%) Contributions
received while performing military service. The amendments also provide
that breakage on agency or service contributions will be based on the
contribution allocation(s) on file for the participant during the
period of military service.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that this regulation will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. This regulation will
affect Federal employees and members of the uniformed services who
participate in the TSP.
Paperwork Reduction Act
I certify that these regulations do not require additional
reporting under the criteria of the Paperwork Reduction Act.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Pursuant to the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 602,
632, 653, and 1501-1571, the effects of this regulation on state,
local, and tribal governments and the private sector have been
assessed. This regulation will not compel the expenditure in any one
year of $100 million or more by state, local,
[[Page 60102]]
and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector.
Therefore, a statement under 2 U.S.C. 1532 is not required.
Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 810(a)(1)(A), the Agency submitted a report
containing this rule and other required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the
United States before publication of this rule in the Federal Register.
This rule is not a major rule as defined at 5 U.S.C. 814(2).
List of Subjects
5 CFR Part 1600
Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1601
Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1603
Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1605
Claims, Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1650
Alimony, Claims, Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1651
Claims, Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
5 CFR Part 1690
Government employees, Pensions, Retirement.
Ravindra Deo,
Executive Director, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the FRTIB amends 5 CFR
Chapter VI as follows:
PART 1600--EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION ELECTIONS, CONTRIBUTION
ALLOCATIONS, AND AUTOMATIC ENROLLMENT PROGRAM
0
1. The authority citation for part 1600 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432(a), 8432(b), 8432(c), 8432(j),
8432d, 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1), and 8440e.
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2. Add Sec. 1600.14 to subpart B to read as follows:
Sec. 1600.14 Effect of election to be covered by BRS.
(a) If a uniformed service member elects to be covered by BRS, the
member may make a contribution election at any time.
(b) Eligibility to make employee contributions, and therefore to
have Agency Matching Contributions made on the member's behalf, is
subject to the restrictions on making employee contributions after
receipt of a financial hardship in-service withdrawal described at 5
CFR part 1650.
(c) If the member had elected to make TSP contributions while not
covered by BRS, the election remains effective until the member makes a
new election.
(d) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions for all members covered
under this section and, if applicable, Agency Matching Contributions
attributable to employee contributions must begin the first full pay
period that the transfer to BRS becomes effective.
0
3. Amend Sec. 1600.19 to revise paragraphs (a), (b)(1) introductory
text, (b)(2) and (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 1600.19 Employing agency contributions.
(a) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions. Each pay period, subject
to the limitations in paragraph (d) of this section, any agency that
employs an individual covered by FERS or BRS must make a contribution
to that employee's tax-deferred balance for the benefit of the
individual equal to 1% of the basic pay paid to such employee for
service performed during that pay period. The employing agency must
make Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions without regard to whether the
employee elects to make employee contributions.
(b) Agency Matching Contributions. (1) Subject to the limitations
in paragraph (d) of this section, any agency that employs an individual
covered by FERS or BRS must make a contribution to the employee's tax-
deferred balance for the benefit of the employee equal to the sum of:
* * * * *
(2) A uniformed service member is not entitled to matching
contributions for contributions deducted from special or incentive pay
(including bonuses).
(c) Timing of employing agency contributions. (1) An employee
appointed or reappointed to a position covered by FERS is immediately
eligible to receive employing agency contributions.
(2) A uniformed service member covered by BRS will be eligible to
receive employing agency contributions pursuant to the following rules:
(i) A uniformed service member who first entered service on or
after January 1, 2018 is entitled to:
(A) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions beginning in the first full
pay period following the date that is 60 days after the uniformed
service member's PEBD and ending in the first full pay period following
the date that is 26 years after the uniformed service member's PEBD.
(B) Agency Matching Contributions beginning in the first full pay
period following the date that is 2 years after the uniformed service
member's PEBD and ending in the first full pay period following the
date that is 26 years after the uniformed service member's PEBD.
(ii) A uniformed service member who elects to enroll in BRS is
entitled to:
(A) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions beginning in the first full
pay period following the date the uniformed service member enrolled in
BRS and ending in the first full pay period following the date that is
26 years after the Uniformed service member's PEBD.
(B) Agency Matching Contributions beginning in the first full pay
period following the date the uniformed service member enrolled in BRS
and ending in the first full pay period following the date that is 26
years after the uniformed service member's PEBD.
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4. Revise Sec. 1600.34 to read as follows:
Sec. 1600.34 Automatic enrollment program.
(a) All newly hired civilian employees who are eligible to
participate in the Thrift Savings Plan and those civilian employees who
are rehired after a separation in service of 31 or more calendar days
and who are eligible to participate in the TSP will automatically have
3% of their basic pay contributed to the employee's traditional TSP
balance (default employee contribution) unless, by the end of the
employee's first pay period (subject to the agency's processing time
frames), they elect:
(1) To not contribute;
(2) To contribute at some other level; or
(3) To make Roth contributions in addition to, or in lieu of,
traditional contributions.
(b) All uniformed service members who either enter service on or
after January 1, 2018 or re-enter service after a separation in service
of 31 or more calendar days after having been covered by BRS at the
time of separation will automatically have 3% of their basic pay
contributed to the member's traditional TSP balance (default employee
contribution) beginning the first full pay period following the date
[[Page 60103]]
that is 60 days after the member's PEBD unless they elect by the end of
that 60 day period:
(1) To not contribute;
(2) To contribute at some other level; or
(3) To make Roth contributions in addition to, or in lieu of,
traditional contributions.
(c) If, for any calendar year, a uniformed service member described
in paragraph (b) of this section does not make a contribution in the
final full pay period of such calendar year due to the member's
election to terminate contributions prior to the final full pay period,
then that member will automatically have 3% of his or her basic pay
contributed to his or her traditional TSP balance beginning the first
full pay period of the following calendar year unless he or she makes a
subsequent election by December 31st:
(1) To not contribute;
(2) To contribute at some other level;
(3) To make Roth contributions in addition to, or in lieu of,
traditional contributions.
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5. Amend Sec. 1600.35 by revising the first sentence of paragraph (a)
and adding paragraph (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 1600.35 Refunds of default employee contributions.
(a) Subject to the limitations in paragraph (f) of this section, a
participant may request a refund of any default employee contributions
made on his or her behalf (i.e., the contributions made while under the
automatic enrollment program) provided the request is received within
90 days after the date that the first default employee contribution was
processed. * * *
* * * * *
(f) A participant may not receive a refund of default employee
contributions made pursuant to Sec. 1600.34(c).
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6. Amend Sec. 1600.37 by revising the introductory text and paragraph
(d) to read as follows:
Sec. 1600.37 Notice.
The Board shall furnish all new employees and all rehired employees
covered by the automatic enrollment program, and all employees
described in paragraph (c) of Sec. 1600.34, covered by the automatic
enrollment program a notice that accurately describes:
* * * * *
(d) The employee's ability (or inability) to request a refund of
any default employee contributions (adjusted for allocable gains and
losses) and the procedure to request such a refund; and
* * * * *
PART 1601--PARTICIPANTS' CHOICES OF TSP FUNDS
0
7. The authority citation for part 1601 continues to reads as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432d, 8438, 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).
0
8. Revise Sec. 1601.13 to read as follows:
Sec. 1601.13 Elections.
(a) Contribution allocation. Each participant may indicate his or
her choice of TSP Funds for the allocation of future deposits by using
the TSP website or the ThriftLine, or by completing and filing the
appropriate paper TSP form with the TSP record keeper in accordance
with the form's instructions. The following rules apply to contribution
allocations:
(1) Contribution allocations must be made in one percent
increments. The sum of the percentages elected for all of the TSP Funds
must equal 100 percent;
(2) The percentage elected by a participant for investment of
future deposits in a TSP Fund will be applied to all sources of
contributions and transfers (or rollovers) from traditional IRAs and
eligible employer plans. A participant may not make different
percentage elections for different sources of contributions;
(3) The following default investment rules shall apply to civilian
participants:
(i) All deposits made on behalf of a civilian participant enrolled
prior to September 5, 2015 who does not have a contribution allocation
in effect will be invested in the G Fund. A civilian participant who is
enrolled prior to September 5, 2015 and subsequently rehired on or
after September 5, 2015 and has a positive account balance will be
considered enrolled prior to September 5, 2015 for purposes of this
paragraph; and
(ii) All deposits made on behalf of a civilian participant first
enrolled on or after September 5, 2015 who does not have a contribution
allocation in effect will be invested in the age-appropriate TSP
Lifecycle Fund;
(iii) A civilian participant enrolled prior to September 5, 2015
who elects for the first time to invest in a TSP Fund other than the G
Fund must execute an acknowledgement of risk in accordance with Sec.
1601.33;
(4) The following default investment rules shall apply to uniformed
services participants:
(i) All deposits made on behalf of a uniformed services participant
who first entered service prior to January 1, 2018, has not elected to
be covered by BRS, and does not have a contribution allocation in
effect will be invested in the G Fund;
(ii) All deposits made on behalf of a uniformed services
participant who first entered service on or after January 1, 2018 and
who does not have a contribution allocation in effect will be invested
in the age-appropriate TSP Lifecycle Fund;
(iii) If a uniformed services participant makes an election to be
covered by BRS as described in 5 CFR 1600.14 and does not have a
contribution allocation in effect at the time of the election, then all
deposits made after the date of such election will be invested in the
age-appropriate TSP Lifecycle Fund. Deposits made prior to the date of
the election will remain invested in the G Fund.
(iv) A uniformed services participant who first entered service
prior to January 1, 2018 and has not made an election to be covered by
the BRS who elects for the first time to invest in a TSP Fund other
than the G Fund must execute an acknowledgement of risk in accordance
with Sec. 1601.33;
(5) Once a contribution allocation becomes effective, it remains in
effect until it is superseded by a subsequent contribution allocation
or the participant's account balance is reduced to zero. If a rehired
participant has a positive account balance and a contribution
allocation in effect, then the participant's contribution allocation
will remain in effect until a new allocation is made. If, however, the
participant (other than a participant described in paragraph (a)(4)(i)
of this section) has a zero account balance, then the participant's
contributions will be allocated to the age-appropriate TSP Lifecycle
Fund until a new allocation is made.
(b) Effect of rejection of contribution allocation. If a
participant does not correctly complete a contribution allocation, the
attempted allocation will have no effect. The TSP will provide the
participant with a written statement of the reason the transaction was
rejected.
(c) Contribution elections. A participant may designate the amount
or type of employee contributions he or she wishes to make to the TSP
or may stop contributions only in accordance with 5 CFR part 1600.
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9. Amend Sec. 1601.33 by revising the first sentence of paragraph (a)
to read as follows:
Sec. 1601.33 Acknowledgment of risk.
(a) Uniformed services participants who first entered service prior
to January 1, 2018 and who have not elected to be covered by BRS and
civilian participants who enrolled prior to September 5, 2015 must
execute an acknowledgement of risk in order to
[[Page 60104]]
invest in a TSP Fund other than the G Fund. * * *
* * * * *
PART 1603--VESTING
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10. The authority citation for part 1603 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8432(g), 8432b(h)(1), 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).
0
11. Amend paragraph (b) of Sec. 1603.1 as follows:
0
a. Amend the definition of ``Service'' by removing ``Service means''
and adding in its place ``Civilian service means''; and
0
b. Add a definition of ``Military service'' in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
Sec. 1603.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
Military service means service that is creditable under 37 U.S.C.
205.
* * * * *
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12. Revise Sec. 1603.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 1603.2 Basic vesting rules.
(a) All amounts in a CSRS employee's individual account are
immediately vested.
(b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, all
amounts in a FERS employee's or uniformed service member's individual
account (including all first conversion contributions) are immediately
vested.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, upon
separation from Government service without meeting the applicable
service requirements of Sec. 1603.3, a FERS employee's or a BRS
uniformed service member's Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and
attributable earnings will be forfeited.
(d) If a FERS employee or uniformed service member dies (or died)
after January 7, 1988, without meeting the applicable service
requirements set forth in Sec. 1603.3, the Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions and attributable earnings in his or her individual
account are deemed vested and shall not be forfeited. If a FERS
employee died on or before January 7, 1988, without meeting those
service requirements, his or her Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
and attributable earnings are forfeited to the Thrift Savings Plan.
0
13. Amend Sec. 1603.3 by revising paragraph (a) and the introductory
text of paragraph (b), and adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 1603.3 Service requirements.
(a) Except as provided under paragraph (b) of this section, FERS
employees will be vested in their Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
and attributable earnings upon separating from Government only if, as
of their separation date, they have completed three years of civilian
service.
(b) FERS employees will be vested in their Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions and attributable earnings upon separating from Government
service if, as of their separation date, they have completed two years
of civilian service and they are serving in one of the following
positions:
* * * * *
(c) Uniformed service members who are covered by BRS will be vested
in their Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and attributable earnings
upon separation from the uniformed services only if, as of their
separation date, they have completed two years of military service.
PART 1605--CORRECTION OF ADMINISTRATIVE ERRORS
0
14. The authority citation for part 1605 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432a, 8432d, 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).
Subpart B also issued under section 1043(b) of Public Law 104-106,
110 Stat. 186 and Sec. 7202(m)(2) of Public Law 101-508, 104 Stat.
1388.
0
15. Amend paragraph (b) of Sec. 1605.1 by adding definitions of ``BRS
participant'' and ``Non-BRS participant'' in alphabetical order to read
as follows:
Sec. 1605.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
BRS participant means any member of the Uniformed Services
described in 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(1).
* * * * *
Non-BRS participant means any member of the Uniformed Services not
described in 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(1).
* * * * *
0
16. Amend Sec. 1605.3 by adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 1605.3 Calculating, posting, and charging breakage on errors
involving investment in the wrong fund.
* * * * *
(c) If a uniformed services participant's retirement system is
misclassified and the error results in default investment in the wrong
fund, when the error is corrected pursuant to Sec. 1605.14(f)-(g), the
TSP will charge the employing agency for any positive breakage that
results from the incorrect default investment. The retirement
misclassification correction received from an employing agency will not
trigger corrective action other than to update the participant's
retirement system coverage. To initiate a breakage calculation for the
uniformed service member, the employing agency must notify the TSP that
the participant is entitled to breakage.
0
17. Amend Sec. 1605.11 by revising the introductory text of paragraph
(b) to read as follows:
Sec. 1605.11 Makeup of missed or insufficient contributions.
* * * * *
(b) Employer makeup contributions. If an employing agency has
failed to make Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions that are required
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1)(A) and 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(A), or Agency
Matching Contributions that are required under section 8432(c)(2) and 5
U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(B), the following rules apply:
* * * * *
0
18. Amend Sec. 1605.14 by adding paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1605.14 Misclassified retirement system coverage.
* * * * *
(f) If a BRS participant is misclassified by an employing agency as
a non-BRS participant, when the misclassification is corrected:
(1) The participant may not elect to have the contributions made
while classified as non-BRS removed from his or her account;
(2) The participant may, under the rules of Sec. 1605.11, elect to
make up contributions that he or she would have been eligible to make
as a BRS participant during the period of misclassification;
(3) The employing agency must, under the rules of Sec. 1605.11,
make Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and Agency Matching
Contributions on employee contributions that were made while the
participant was misclassified; and
(4) The employing agency must submit makeup employee contributions
on current payment records and service makeup contributions may be
submitted on either current or late payment records.
(g) If a non-BRS participant is misclassified by an employing
agency as a BRS participant, when the misclassification is corrected:
(1) Employee contributions may remain in the participant's account.
If the participant requests a refund of employee contributions, the
employing agency must submit a negative adjustment record to remove
these
[[Page 60105]]
funds under the procedure described in Sec. 1605.12.
(2) The TSP will forfeit all agency contributions that were made to
a non-BRS participant's account. An employing service may submit a
negative adjustment record to request the return of an erroneous
contribution that has been in the participant's account for less than
one year.
0
19. Amend Sec. 1605.31 by revising paragraph (c)(1), adding paragraph
(c)(5), and revising paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 1605.31 Contributions missed as a result of military service.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) The employee is entitled to receive the Agency Automatic (1%)
Contributions that he or she would have received had he or she remained
in civilian service or pay status. Within 60 days of the employee's
reemployment or restoration to pay status, the employing agency must
calculate the Agency Automatic (1%) makeup contributions and report
those contributions to the record keeper, subject to any reduction in
Automatic (1%) Contributions required by paragraph (c)(5) of this
section.
* * * * *
(5) If the employee received uniformed services Automatic (1%)
Contributions, the Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions will be reduced
by the amount of the uniformed services Automatic (1%) Contributions.
(d) Breakage. The employee is entitled to breakage on agency
contributions made under paragraph (c) of this section. Breakage will
be calculated based on the contribution allocation(s) on file for the
participant during the period of military service.
PART 1650--METHODS OF WITHDRAWING FUNDS FROM THE THRIFT SAVINGS
PLAN
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20. The authority citation for part 1650 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432d, 8433, 8434, 8435, 8474(b)(5)
and 8474(c)(1).
0
21. Amend Sec. 1650.33 by revising the second sentence of paragraph
(b) to read as follows:
Sec. 1650.33 Contributing to the TSP after an in-service withdrawal.
* * * * *
(b) * * * Therefore, the participant's employing agency will
discontinue his or her contributions (and any applicable Agency
Matching Contributions) for six months after the agency is notified by
the TSP; in the case of a FERS or BRS participant, Agency Automatic
(1%) Contributions will continue. * * *
PART 1651--DEATH BENEFITS
0
22. The authority citation for part 1651 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8424(d), 8432d, 8432(j), 8433(e),
8435(c)(2), 8474(b)(5) and 8474(c)(1).
0
23. Amend Sec. 1651.3 by revising paragraph (c)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 1651.3 Designation of beneficiary.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) Be signed and properly dated by the participant and signed and
properly dated by one witness;
(i) The participant must either sign the form in the presence of
the witness or acknowledge his or her signature on the form to the
witness;
(ii) All submitted and attached pages of the form must be signed
and dated by the participant;
(iii) All submitted and attached pages of the form must be signed
and dated by the same witness;
(iv) A witness must be age 21 or older; and
(v) A witness designated as a beneficiary will not be entitled to
receive a death benefit payment; if a witness is the only named
beneficiary, the designation of the beneficiary is invalid. If more
than one beneficiary is named, the share of the witness beneficiary
will be allocated among the remaining beneficiaries pro rata.
* * * * *
PART 1690--THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN
0
24. The authority citation for part 1690 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8474.
0
25. Amend Sec. 1690.1 as follows:
0
a. Revise the definitions of Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions,
Agency Matching Contributions, and Bonus contributions.
0
b. Add definitions of BRS and BRS participant in alphabetical order.
0
c. Revise the definition of Civilian employee.
0
d. Revise the definitions of Employer contributions and Employing
agency.
0
e. Add a definition of PEBD in alphabetical order.
0
f. Revise the definitions of Uniformed service member and Uniformed
services.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1690.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions means any contributions made
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) and (c)(3). It also includes service
automatic (1%) contributions made under 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(A).
Agency Matching Contributions means any contributions made under 5
U.S.C. 8432(c)(2). It also includes service matching contributions
under 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(B).
* * * * *
Bonus contributions means contributions made by a participant from
any part of any special or incentive pay that the participant receives
under chapter 5 of title 37.
BRS means the blended retirement system as established by the
National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2016, Public Law 114-92,
secs. 631-635 (2015).
BRS participant means a TSP participant covered by BRS.
* * * * *
Civilian employee or civilian participant means a TSP participant
covered by the Federal Employees' Retirement System, the Civil Service
Retirement System, or equivalent retirement plan.
* * * * *
Employer contributions means Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1), 8432(c)(3), or 5 U.S.C. 8440e(e)(3)(A) and
Agency Matching Contributions under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2) or 5 U.S.C.
8440e(e)(3)(B).
Employing agency means the organization (or the payroll office that
services the organization) that employs an individual eligible to
contribute to the TSP and that has authority to make personnel
compensation decisions for the individual. It includes the employing
service for members of the uniformed services.
* * * * *
PEBD means the pay entry base date (or pay entry basic date for
some services), which is determined by each uniformed service and is
used to calculate how much time in service a member has for the purpose
of determining longevity pay rates.
* * * * *
Uniformed service member or uniformed services participant means a
TSP participant who is a member of the uniformed services on active
duty or a member of the Ready Reserve in any pay status.
Uniformed services means the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
Coast Guard, Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
[[Page 60106]]
Administration Commissioned Officer Corps.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2017-27304 Filed 12-18-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6760-01-P