Methods for Computing Withdrawal Liability, Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014, 1256-1278 [2020-28866]
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Correction
In rule document 2020–28563
beginning on page 810 in the issue of
Wednesday, January 6, 2021, make the
following correction:
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[FR Doc. C1–2020–28653 Filed 1–6–21; 1:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 1301–00–D
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY
CORPORATION
29 CFR Parts 4001, 4204, 4206, 4207,
4211, 4219
RIN 1212–AB36
Methods for Computing Withdrawal
Liability, Multiemployer Pension
Reform Act of 2014
Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation is amending its regulations
on Allocating Unfunded Vested Benefits
to Withdrawing Employers and Notice,
Collection, and Redetermination of
Withdrawal Liability. The amendments
implement statutory provisions affecting
the determination of a withdrawing
employer’s liability under a
multiemployer plan and annual
withdrawal liability payment amount
when the plan has had benefit
reductions, benefit suspensions,
surcharges, or contribution increases
that must be disregarded. The
amendments also provide simplified
withdrawal liability calculation
methods.
DATES: Effective date: This rule is
effective February 8, 2021.
Applicability date: This rule applies
to employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan
years beginning on or after February 8,
2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Hilary Duke (duke.hilary@pbgc.gov),
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SUMMARY:
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Purpose of Regulatory Action
This rulemaking is needed to
implement statutory changes affecting
the determination of an employer’s
withdrawal liability and annual
withdrawal liability payment amount
when the employer withdraws from a
multiemployer plan. The final
regulation provides simplified methods
for determining withdrawal liability and
annual payment amounts, which a
multiemployer plan sponsor can adopt
to satisfy the statutory requirements and
to reduce administrative burden. In this
final rule, PBGC adopts its proposed
changes implementing statutory changes
and providing simplified methods, with
some modifications in response to
public comments.
PBGC’s legal authority for this action
is based on section 4002(b)(3) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA), which authorizes
PBGC to issue regulations to carry out
the purposes of title IV of ERISA;
section 305(g) 1 of ERISA, which
provides the statutory requirements for
changes to withdrawal liability; section
4001 of ERISA (Definitions); section
4204 of ERISA (Sale of Assets); section
4206 of ERISA (Adjustment for Partial
Withdrawal); section 4207 (Reduction or
Waiver of Complete Withdrawal
Liability); section 4211 of ERISA
(Methods for Computing Withdrawal
Liability); and section 4219 of ERISA
(Notice, Collection, Etc., of Withdrawal
Liability). Section 305(g)(5) of ERISA
directs PBGC to provide simplified
methods for multiemployer plan
sponsors to use in determining
withdrawal liability and annual
payment amounts.
Major Provisions of the Regulatory
Action
This final regulation amends PBGC’s
regulations on Allocating Unfunded
Vested Benefits to Withdrawing
Employers (29 CFR part 4211) and
Notice, Collection, and Redetermination
of Withdrawal Liability (29 CFR part
4219). The changes implement statutory
changes affecting the determination of
an employer’s withdrawal liability and
annual withdrawal liability payment
1 Section 305(g) of ERISA and section 432(g) of
the Internal Revenue Code (Code) are parallel
provisions in ERISA and the Code.
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amount and provide simplified methods
for a plan sponsor to—
• Disregard reductions and
suspensions of nonforfeitable benefits in
determining the plan’s unfunded vested
benefits for purposes of calculating
withdrawal liability.
• Disregard certain contribution
increases if the plan is using the
presumptive, modified presumptive, or
rolling-5 method for purposes of
determining the allocation of unfunded
vested benefits to an employer.
• Disregard certain contribution
increases for purposes of determining an
employer’s annual withdrawal liability
payment.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Discussion of Final Regulation and Public
Comments
III. Regulatory Changes To Reflect Benefit
Decreases
A. Requirement To Disregard Adjustable
Benefit Reductions and Benefit
Suspensions (§ 4211.6)
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding
Adjustable Benefit Reductions and
Benefit Suspensions (§ 4211.16)
1. Employer’s Proportional Share of the
Value of an Adjustable Benefit Reduction
2. Employer’s Proportional Share of the
Value of a Benefit Suspension
3. Chart of Simplified Methods To
Determine Employer’s Proportional
Share of the Value of a Benefit
Suspension and an Adjustable Benefit
Reduction
IV. Regulatory Changes To Reflect Surcharges
and Contribution Increases
A. Requirement to Disregard Surcharges
and Certain Contribution Increases in
Determining the Allocation of Unfunded
Vested Benefits to an Employer
(§ 4211.4) and the Annual Withdrawal
Liability Payment Amount (§ 4219.3)
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding
Certain Contribution Increases in the
Allocation Fraction (§ 4211.14)
1. Determining the Numerator Using the
Employer’s Plan Year 2014 Contribution
Rate
2. Determining the Denominator Using
Each Employer’s Plan Year 2014
Contribution Rate
3. Determining the Denominator Using the
Proxy Group Method
C. Simplified Methods After Plan Is No
Longer in Endangered or Critical Status
1. Including Contribution Increases in
Determining the Allocation of Unfunded
Vested Benefits (§ 4211.15)
2. Continuing to Disregard Contribution
Increases in Determining the Highest
Contribution Rate (§ 4219.3)
V. Compliance With Rulemaking Guidelines
I. Background
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC) administers two
insurance programs for private-sector
defined benefit pension plans under
title IV of the Employee Retirement
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Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA): A
single-employer plan termination
insurance program and a multiemployer
plan insolvency insurance program. In
general, a multiemployer pension plan
is a collectively bargained plan
involving two or more unrelated
employers. This final rule deals with
multiemployer plans.
Under sections 4201 through 4225 of
ERISA, when a contributing employer
withdraws from an underfunded
multiemployer plan, the plan sponsor
assesses withdrawal liability against the
employer. Withdrawal liability
represents a withdrawing employer’s
proportionate share of the plan’s
unfunded benefit obligations. To assess
withdrawal liability, the plan sponsor
must determine the withdrawing
employer’s: (1) Allocable share of the
plan’s unfunded vested benefits (the
value of nonforfeitable benefits that
exceeds the value of plan assets) as
provided under section 4211, and (2)
annual withdrawal liability payment as
provided under section 4219.
There are four statutory allocation
methods for determining a withdrawing
employer’s allocable share of the plan’s
unfunded vested benefits under section
4211 of ERISA: The presumptive
method, the modified presumptive
method, the rolling-5 method, and the
direct attribution method. Under the
first three methods, the basic formula
for an employer’s withdrawal liability is
one or more pools of unfunded vested
benefits times the withdrawing
employer’s allocation fraction—
The withdrawing employer’s
allocation fraction is generally equal to
the withdrawing employer’s required
contributions over all employers’
contributions over the 5 years preceding
the relevant period or periods. Under
the fourth method, the direct attribution
method, an employer’s withdrawal
liability is based on the benefits and
assets attributed directly to the
employer’s participants’ service, and a
portion of the unfunded benefit
obligations not attributable to any
present employer.
PBGC’s regulation on Allocating
Unfunded Vested Benefits to
Withdrawing Employers (29 CFR part
4211) provides modifications to the
allocation methods that plan sponsors
may adopt. Part 4211 also provides a
process that plan sponsors may use to
request approval of other methods.
A withdrawn employer makes annual
withdrawal liability payments at a set
rate over the number of years necessary
to amortize its withdrawal liability,
generally limited to a period of 20 years.
If any of an employer’s withdrawal
liability remains unpaid under the
payment schedule after 20 years, the
unpaid amount may be allocated to
other employers in addition to their
basic withdrawal liability.
Annual withdrawal liability payments
are designed to approximate the
employer’s annual contributions before
its withdrawal. The basic formula for
the annual withdrawal liability payment
under section 4219(c) of ERISA is a
contribution rate multiplied by a
contribution base. Specifically, the
annual withdrawal liability payment is
determined as follows—
As the basic formulas show,
withdrawal liability and an employer’s
annual withdrawal liability payment
depend, among other things, on the
value of unfunded vested benefits and
the amount of contributions.
In response to financial difficulties
faced by some multiemployer plans,
Congress made statutory changes in
2006 and 2014 that affect benefits and
contributions under these plans. The
four types of changes provided for are
shown in the following table:
2 Under ERISA sections 4211(b) and (c), the
presumptive method provides for 20 distinct yearby-year liability pools (each pool represents the
year in which the unfunded liability arose), the
modified presumptive method provides for two
liability pools, and the rolling-5 method provides
for a single liability pool computed as of the end
of the plan year preceding the plan year when the
withdrawal occurs.
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Adjustable benefit reductions .............................
Benefit Suspensions ...........................................
Surcharges ..........................................................
Contribution Increases ........................................
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While each of the changes has its own
requirements, they generally are all
required to be ‘‘disregarded’’ by the plan
sponsor in determining an employer’s
withdrawal liability. The statutory
‘‘disregard’’ rules require in effect that
all computations in determining and
assessing withdrawal liability be made
using values that do not reflect the
lowering of benefits or raising of
contributions required to be
disregarded.
The Pension Protection Act of 2006,
Public Law 109–280 (PPA 2006),
amended ERISA’s withdrawal liability
rules to require a plan sponsor to
disregard the adjustable benefits
reductions in section 305(e)(8) of ERISA
and the elimination of accelerated forms
of distribution in section 305(f) of
ERISA (which, for purposes of this
preamble are referred to as adjustable
benefit reductions) in determining a
plan’s unfunded vested benefits. PPA
2006 also requires a plan sponsor to
disregard the contribution surcharges in
section 305(e)(7) of ERISA in
determining the allocation of unfunded
vested benefits.
PBGC issued a final rule in December
2008 (73 FR 79628) implementing these
PPA 2006 ‘‘disregard’’ rules by
3 Section 305(e)(8) and (f) of ERISA and section
432(e)(8) and (f) of the Code.
4 Section 305(e)(9) of ERISA and section 432(e)(9)
of the Code. The Department of the Treasury must
approve an application for a benefit suspension, in
consultation with PBGC and the Department of
Labor, upon finding that the plan is eligible for the
suspension and has satisfied the criteria specified
by the Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014,
Public Law 113–235 (MPRA). The Department of
the Treasury has jurisdiction over benefit
suspensions and issued a final rule implementing
the MPRA provisions on April 28, 2016 (81 FR
25539).
5 Under section 305(e)(7) of ERISA and section
432(e)(7) of the Code, each employer otherwise
obligated to make contributions for the initial plan
year and any subsequent plan year that a plan is
in critical status must pay a surcharge to the plan
for such plan year, until the effective date of a
collective bargaining agreement (or other agreement
pursuant to which the employer contributes) that
includes terms consistent with the rehabilitation
plan adopted by the plan sponsor.
6 The plan sponsor of a plan in endangered status
for a plan year must adopt a funding improvement
plan under section 305(c) of ERISA and section
432(c) of the Code. The plan sponsor of a plan in
critical status for a plan year must adopt a
rehabilitation plan under section 305(e) of ERISA
and section 432(e) of the Code.
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Reductions in adjustable benefits (e.g., post-retirement death benefits, early retirement benefits) and reductions arising from a restriction on lump sums and other benefits.3
Temporary or permanent suspension of any current or future payment obligation of the plan to
any participant or beneficiary under the plan, whether or not in pay status at the time of the
benefit suspension.4
Surcharges, calculated as a percentage of required contributions, that certain underfunded
plans are required to impose on contributing employers.5
Contribution increases that plan trustees may require under a funding improvement or rehabilitation plan.6
modifying the definition of
‘‘nonforfeitable benefit’’ for purposes of
PBGC’s regulations on Allocating
Unfunded Vested Benefits to
Withdrawing Employers (29 CFR part
4211) and on Notice, Collection, and
Redetermination of Withdrawal
Liability (29 CFR part 4219). PBGC
provided simplified methods to
determine withdrawal liability for plan
sponsors required to disregard
adjustable benefit reductions in
Technical Update 10–3 (July 15, 2010).
The 2008 final rule also excluded the
employer surcharge from the numerator
and denominator of the allocation
fractions used under section 4211 of
ERISA. The preamble included an
example of the application of the
exclusion of surcharge amounts from
contributions in the allocation fraction.
The Multiemployer Pension Reform
Act of 2014, Public Law 113–235
(MPRA), made further amendments to
the withdrawal liability rules and
consolidated them with the PPA 2006
changes. The additional MPRA
amendments require a plan sponsor to
disregard benefit suspensions in
determining the plan’s unfunded vested
benefits for a period of 10 years after the
effective date of a benefit suspension.
MPRA also requires a plan sponsor to
disregard certain contribution increases
in determining the allocation of
unfunded vested benefits. A plan
sponsor must also disregard surcharges
and those contribution increases in
determining an employer’s annual
withdrawal liability payment under
section 4219 of ERISA. The MPRA
amendments apply to benefit
suspensions and contribution increases
that go into effect during plan years
beginning after December 31, 2014, and
to surcharges for which the obligation
accrues on or after December 31, 2014.
Congress also authorized PBGC to
create simplified methods for applying
the ‘‘disregard’’ rules.
Proposed Regulation
On February 6, 2019 (at 84 FR 2075),
PBGC published a proposed rule to
explain the PPA 2006 and MPRA
‘‘disregard’’ requirements and PBGC’s
simplified methods. Each simplified
method provided applies to one or more
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specific aspects of the process of
determining and assessing withdrawal
liability.
PBGC provided a 60-day comment
period and received eight comment
letters from: Actuarial consulting firms;
associations representing multiemployer
plans, pension practitioners, and
contributing employers; and a
practitioner. To address the comments,
PBGC is making modifications and
clarifications, adding examples, and
providing additional simplified
methods. The public comments, PBGC’s
responses, and the provisions of this
final rule are discussed below.
II. Discussion of Final Regulation and
Public Comments
Overview
This final rule, like the proposed,
implements the PPA 2006 and MPRA
requirements to disregard adjustable
benefit reductions, benefit suspensions,
surcharges, and contribution increases.
All of the commenters commented on
the provision in the proposed rule
implementing the exception to the
disregard rules for a contribution
increase that provides an increase in
benefits. The provision, comments, and
changes to the proposed rule in
response to the comments are discussed
in more detail in section IV.A. of the
preamble. Except for those changes, the
final rule is substantially the same as
the proposed rule.
The final rule, like the proposed rule,
provides: (1) Simplified methods for
disregarding adjustable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions; and
(2) simplified methods for disregarding
certain contribution increases in
determining the allocation of unfunded
vested benefits to an employer and the
annual withdrawal liability payment
amount. A plan sponsor may, but is not
required to, adopt any one or more of
the simplified methods to use in the
calculation of determining and assessing
withdrawal liability but must follow the
statutory withdrawal liability rules for
all other aspects. In response to
comments, PBGC made clarifications
and improvements to the simplified
methods, which are discussed below in
sections III and IV of the preamble.
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Because some of the commenters
found the examples illustrating
calculations using the simplified
methods helpful, PBGC is adding some
of the examples to the operative text and
to an appendix to part 4211. The final
rule also eliminates some language that
merely repeats statutory provisions and
makes other editorial changes.
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‘‘Safe Harbors’’
One commenter asked PBGC to clarify
that the simplified methods are ‘‘safe
harbor’’ methods, but that alternate
simplified methods could be
appropriate. The commenter requested
that PBGC consider providing plan
sponsors with the opportunity to seek
approval for an alternative simplified
method. Under the final rule, PBGC
clarifies that, similar to a safe harbor, a
plan sponsor that adopts one of the
simplified methods satisfies the
requirements of the applicable statutory
provision and regulations. Consistent
with the proposed rule, a plan sponsor
may choose to use an alternative
approach that satisfies the requirements
of the applicable statutory provisions
and regulations rather than any of the
simplified methods. While PBGC does
not approve alternative simplified
methods on a plan-by-plan basis, PBGC
welcomes informal consultations with
trustees and their advisors on whether
an alternative approach could satisfy the
requirements of the applicable statutory
provisions and regulations. In addition,
PBGC invited comments in the
proposed rule on other simplified
methods that a plan might use to satisfy
certain requirements in section 305(g) of
ERISA and incorporated changes in the
final rule in response to comments
received. PBGC encourages trustees and
their advisors to inform PBGC of
additional simplified methods to
consider for a future rulemaking.
Effective and Applicability Dates
Under the proposed rule, the changes
relating to simplified methods would be
applicable to employer withdrawals that
occur on or after the effective date of the
final rule. It further proposed that the
changes relating to MPRA benefit
suspensions and contribution increases
for determining an employer’s
withdrawal liability would apply to
plan years beginning after December 31,
2014, and to surcharges the obligation
for which occur on or after December
31, 2014. The proposed rule did not
provide an effective date.
Three commenters asked for
clarification of the effective date and
were concerned that the rule would
require retroactive application. Two
commenters were concerned that plans
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could be required to implement changes
at some time other than the beginning
or end of a specified plan year. The
commenters made specific
recommendations for an applicability
date. One commenter recommended
that the date be based on withdrawals
in plan years beginning on or after the
effective date of the final rule. A second
commenter recommended that the
regulation apply for withdrawals
beginning in the plan year that next
follows the plan year in which the rule
becomes effective with a transition
period in the event the next plan year
begins within 6 months following the
issuance of the final regulation. A third
commenter recommended a transition
period of at least 1 plan year to give
plans time to evaluate and consider the
methodologies included in the
regulation for contribution increases
that provide an increase in benefits.
PBGC did not adopt this suggested
transition period because the final rule
does not include the proposed rule’s
provision implementing the exception
under section 305(g)(3) of ERISA for
additional contributions used to provide
an increase in benefits. The provision is
discussed in section IV.A. of the
preamble.
In response to the comments about
the rule’s effective date, PBGC is
clarifying that the changes made by the
final rule apply to plans prospectively.
Accordingly, the final rule is effective
February 8, 2021 and applies to
employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan
years beginning on or after the effective
date. Just as before the final rule, plan
sponsors may apply their own
reasonable interpretations of the
statutory provisions to calculate an
employer’s withdrawal liability. Plan
sponsors may, but are not required to,
adopt the simplified methods provided
in the final rule. In addition, as
suggested by one commenter, PBGC
added effective dates in parts 4211 and
4219 for the new sections providing
simplified methods.
III. Regulatory Changes To Reflect
Benefit Decreases
A. Requirement To Disregard Adjustable
Benefit Reductions and Benefit
Suspensions (§ 4211.6)
Under the basic methodology
explained in section I above, a plan
sponsor must calculate the value of
unfunded vested benefits (the value of
nonforfeitable benefits that exceeds the
value of plan assets) 7 to determine a
7 The term ‘‘unfunded vested benefits’’ is defined
in section 4213(c) of ERISA. However, for purposes
of PBGC’s notice, collection, and redetermination of
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withdrawing employer’s liability. In
computing nonforfeitable benefits,
under section 305(g)(1) of ERISA, a plan
sponsor is required to disregard certain
adjustable benefit reductions and
benefit suspensions.
The final regulation, like the
proposed, adds a new § 4211.6 to
PBGC’s unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation to implement the
requirements that plan sponsors must
disregard adjustable benefit reductions
and benefit suspensions in allocating
unfunded vested benefits. Section
4211.6 replaces the approach previously
taken by PBGC to implement the PPA
2006 ‘‘disregard’’ rules by modifying the
definition of ‘‘nonforfeitable benefit.’’
The added MPRA ‘‘disregard’’ rules
made that prior approach difficult to
sustain. The final regulation, like the
proposed, eliminates the special
definition of ‘‘nonforfeitable benefit’’ in
PBGC’s unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation and notice,
collection, and redetermination of
withdrawal liability regulation.
MPRA limited the requirement for a
plan sponsor to disregard a benefit
suspension in determining an
employer’s withdrawal liability to 10
years. Under the final regulation, like
the proposed, the requirement to
disregard a benefit suspension applies
only for withdrawals that occur within
the 10 plan years after the end of the
plan year that includes the effective date
of the benefit suspension. To calculate
withdrawal liability during the 10-year
period, a plan sponsor disregards the
benefit suspension by including the
value of the suspended benefits in
determining the amount of unfunded
vested benefits allocable to an employer.
For example, if a plan has a benefit
suspension with an effective date within
the plan’s 2018 plan year, the plan
sponsor would include the value of the
suspended benefits in determining the
amount of unfunded vested benefits
allocable to an employer for any
withdrawal occurring in plan years 2019
through 2028. The plan sponsor would
not include the value of the suspended
benefits in determining the amount of
unfunded vested benefits allocable to an
employer for a withdrawal occurring
after the 2028 plan year.
In cases where a benefit suspension
ends and full benefit payments resume
during the 10-year period following a
suspension, the value of the suspended
withdrawal liability regulation (29 CFR part 4219),
the calculation of unfunded vested benefits, as used
in subpart B of the regulation, is modified to reflect
the value of certain claims. To avoid confusion,
PBGC proposes to add a specific definition of
‘‘unfunded vested benefits’’ in each part of its
multiemployer regulations that uses the term.
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benefits would continue to be included
when calculating withdrawal liability
until the end of the plan year in which
the resumption of full benefit payments
was required as determined under
Department of the Treasury guidance, or
otherwise occurs.
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding
Adjustable Benefit Reductions and
Benefit Suspensions (§ 4211.16)
Under section 305(g)(5) of ERISA,
PBGC is required to provide simplified
methods for a plan sponsor to determine
withdrawal liability when the plan has
adjustable benefit reductions or benefit
suspensions that are required to be
disregarded. The final regulation, like
the proposed, provides a simplified
framework for disregarding adjustable
benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions in § 4211.16 of PBGC’s
unfunded vested benefits allocation
regulation. A plan sponsor may adopt
the simplified framework in § 4211.16 to
satisfy the requirements of section
305(g)(1) of ERISA and § 4211.6 of
PBGC’s unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation, or may choose to
use an alternative approach to satisfy
the requirements of the statutory
provisions and regulation.
Under the simplified framework, if a
plan has adjustable benefit reductions or
benefit suspensions, the plan sponsor
first calculates an employer’s
withdrawal liability using the plan’s
withdrawal liability method reflecting
any adjustable benefit reduction and
benefit suspension (§ 4211.16(b)(1)). The
plan sponsor adds the employer’s
proportional share of the value of any
adjustable benefit reduction and any
benefit suspension (§ 4211.16(b)(2)). In
summary, withdrawal liability for a
withdrawing employer is based on the
sum of the following—
(1) The amount that would be the
employer’s allocable amount of
unfunded vested benefits determined in
accordance with section 4211 of ERISA
under the method in use by the plan
(based on the value of the plan’s
nonforfeitable benefits reflecting any
adjustable benefit reduction and any
benefit suspension),8 and
(2) The employer’s proportional share
of the value of any adjustable benefit
reduction and the employer’s
proportional share of the value of any
suspended benefits.
Consistent with the proposed rule,
under the final rule, this amount is
required to be calculated before
application of the adjustments required
8 The amount of unfunded vested benefits
allocable to an employer under section 4211 may
not be less than zero.
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by section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA,
including the de minimis reduction and
the 20-year cap on payments under
section 4219(c)(1)(B) of ERISA.
Two commenters asked for
clarification on how the rule for the
application of adjustments required by
section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA interacts
with guidance provided under
Technical Update 10–3 (July 15, 2010)
for plan sponsors required to disregard
adjustable benefit reductions. The
commenters stated that plans may have
interpreted Technical Update 10–3 to
adjust for the de minimis reduction
before adding the proportional share of
the adjustable benefit reduction. One
commenter stated that any clarification
of the method provided in Technical
Update 10–3 should be provided only
on a prospective basis and that the final
rule should provide a safe harbor for
plans that may have interpreted
Technical Update 10–3 differently.
PBGC agrees that Technical Update
10–3 did not specifically address how
adjustments for the de minimis
reduction and the 20-year cap on
payments should be applied. PBGC is
aware that some plans that adopted the
simplified method under Technical
Update 10–3 make separate calculations
of an employer’s liability under section
4211 of ERISA, subject to the
adjustments required under section
4201, and an employer’s liability for
adjustable benefit reductions.
In reviewing the issue in the context
of benefit suspensions, PBGC concluded
that the ‘‘allocable amount of unfunded
vested benefits’’ under section
4201(b)(1) of ERISA, which is calculated
before adjustments are made, should
include the employer’s proportional
share of the value of benefit suspensions
required to be disregarded. For purposes
of providing a simplified framework for
adjustable benefit reductions and
benefit suspensions, PBGC provided in
the proposed rule that the adjustments
required by section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA
are made after adding the amount that
would be the employer’s allocable
amount of unfunded vested benefits
determined in accordance with section
4211 of ERISA and the employer’s
proportional share of the value of each
of the benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions required to be disregarded.
Section 4211.16(b) of the final rule is
unchanged from the proposed rule with
respect to the application of the
adjustments in section 4201(b)(1) of
ERISA. In consideration of the
comments received, PBGC is clarifying
that the simplified framework in the
final rule applies prospectively only and
is applicable for withdrawals that occur
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in plan years beginning after the
effective date of the final rule.
One commenter suggested that if the
employer’s allocable amount
determined under § 4211.16(a) results in
a negative value, a plan sponsor should
be able to use the negative value to
offset the employer’s allocable share of
the value of the adjustable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions
under § 4211.16(b). The preamble to the
proposed rule stated that under the
simplified framework, the amount of
unfunded vested benefits allocable to an
employer under section 4211 of ERISA
may not be less than zero. PBGC
acknowledges that in some cases where
precise actuarial calculations are being
made (i.e., calculations made not using
a simplified method), it might be
appropriate to offset an interim negative
value of allocable unfunded vested
benefits calculated under section 4211
of ERISA against a positive allocable
value of benefit reductions or benefit
suspensions. However, because the
value of the employer’s allocable share
of the value of adjustable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions
under the simplified framework are
approximations that may be less than
the value that would be allocated under
a non-simplified actuarial calculation,
PBGC did not allow for an offset of a
negative number. In the final rule, a
sentence is added to the basic rule for
the simplified framework in
§ 4211.16(b) to make it clear that the
amount determined under paragraph
(b)(1) may not be a negative number to
be used as an offset to the employer’s
allocable share of the value of the
adjustable benefit reductions and
benefit suspensions.
The same commenter stated that
construction-industry plans that have
no unfunded vested benefits under
section 4211 of ERISA should be
permitted to elect a fresh start for that
plan year, even if the plan continues to
have liability for adjusted benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions.
PBGC agrees with the comment and that
a plan sponsor’s decision to implement
a fresh start does not affect the value of
adjustable benefit reductions and
benefit suspensions in calculating
withdrawal liability. In the final rule,
PBGC is clarifying in new
§ 4211.12(d)(3) that in the case of a plan
that primarily covers employees in the
building and construction industry, the
plan year designated by a plan
amendment to implement a fresh start
must be a plan year for which the plan
has no unfunded vested benefits
determined in accordance with section
4211 of ERISA without regard to
§ 4211.6.
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The commenter also suggested that to
the extent adjustable benefit reductions
are restored, plan sponsors should be
able to treat the liability for the
adjustable benefit reductions as if it had
been reduced or eliminated. PBGC
agrees that, in this circumstance, a plan
sponsor can offset the present value of
restored adjustable benefits against the
unamortized balance of the adjustable
benefit reduction under § 4211.16(b)(2).
The present value of the restored
adjustable benefits would be included
in the calculation of the allocable
amount of unfunded vested benefits
determined under § 4211.16(b)(1).
The simplified framework provides
simplified methods for calculating the
employer’s proportional share of the
value of any adjustable benefit
reduction and the employer’s
proportional share of the value of any
suspended benefits. If a plan has
adjustable benefit reductions, the plan
sponsor may adopt the simplified
method discussed below to determine
the value of the adjustable benefit
reductions. If a plan has a benefit
suspension, the plan sponsor may adopt
either the static value method or
adjusted value method to determine the
value of the suspended benefits (also
discussed below). The contributions for
the allocation fractions for each of the
simplified methods are determined in
accordance with the rules for
disregarding contribution increases
under § 4211.4 of PBGC’s unfunded
vested benefits allocation regulation
(and permissible modifications and
simplifications under §§ 4211.12–
4211.15 of PBGC’s unfunded vested
benefits allocation regulation).
Under the simplified framework, a
plan sponsor must include liabilities for
benefits that have been reduced or
suspended in the value of vested
benefits. But the simplified framework
does not require a plan sponsor to
calculate what plan assets would have
been if benefit payments had been
higher. One commenter asked for the
final regulation to clarify that, regardless
of whether plan sponsors adopt
simplified methods for disregarding
adjustable benefit reductions or benefit
suspensions, plans are not required to
track what plan assets would have been
absent those reductions or suspensions.
PBGC believes that generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices
accommodate the adoption of
assumptions about quantities (like the
amount of such an asset reduction) that
may not have a material effect on the
results of the computation. Thus, the
issue raised by the commenter is one for
resolution by the plan actuary.
The value of the adjustable benefit
reductions is determined using the same
assumptions used to determine
unfunded vested benefits for purposes
of section 4211 of ERISA. The
unamortized balance as of a plan year is
the value as of the end of the year in
which the reductions took effect (base
year), reduced as if that amount were
being fully amortized in level annual
installments over 15 years, at the plan’s
valuation interest rate, beginning with
the first plan year after the base year.
The withdrawing employer’s
allocation fraction is the amount of the
employer’s required contributions over
a 5-year period divided by the amount
of all employers’ contributions over the
same 5-year period.
The 5-year period for computing the
allocation fraction is the most recent 5
plan years ending before the employer’s
withdrawal. For purposes of
determining the allocation fraction, the
denominator is increased by any
employer contributions owed with
respect to earlier periods that were
collected in the 5 plan years and
decreased by any amount contributed by
an employer that withdrew from the
plan during those plan years, or,
alternatively, adjusted as permitted
under § 4211.12.
For calculating the value of adjustable
benefit reductions, Technical Update
10–3 provides an adjustment if the plan
uses the rolling-5 method. The value is
reduced by outstanding claims for
withdrawal liability that can reasonably
be expected to be collected from
employers that withdrew as of the end
of the plan year before the employer’s
withdrawal. PBGC is not including this
adjustment in this final rule. The
requirement to reduce the unfunded
vested benefits by the present value of
future withdrawal liability payments for
previously withdrawn employers is part
of the rolling-5 calculation, and PBGC
believes that excluding this adjustment
avoids some ambiguity that might have
led to additional unnecessary
calculations and recordkeeping.
One commenter asked for the final
regulation to provide an additional
option for allocating the value of
adjustable benefit reductions for plans
using the presumptive method based on
the 5 consecutive plan years ending
before the plan year in which the
adjustable benefit reduction takes effect.
The commenter stated that the option
would produce an allocation that is
more consistent with the amount that
would be allocated to an employer if the
plan did not use a simplified allocation
method. PBGC considered the comment
and has determined that the option
could be useful for plans using any
withdrawal liability method under
section 4211 of ERISA. Accordingly,
PBGC has added this option to the
simplified framework in § 4211.16(d).
Under the added option, the 5-year
period for computing the allocation
fraction is the most recent 5 plan years
ending before the plan year in which the
adjustable benefit reduction takes effect.
For purposes of determining the
allocation fraction, the denominator is
increased by any employer
contributions owed with respect to
earlier periods that were collected in the
5 plan years and decreased by any
amount contributed by an employer that
withdrew from the plan during those
plan years, or, alternatively, adjusted as
permitted under § 4211.12.
For the additional option, the
regulation requires an additional
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1. Employer’s Proportional Share of the
Value of an Adjustable Benefit
Reduction
Except as discussed in the preamble,
the final regulation, like the proposed,
incorporates the guidance provided in
PBGC Technical Update 10–3 for
disregarding the value of adjustable
benefit reductions. Technical Update
10–3 explains the simplified method for
determining an employer’s proportional
share of the value of adjustable benefit
reductions. The method applies for any
employer withdrawal that occurs in any
plan year following the plan year in
which an adjustable benefit reduction
takes effect and before the value of the
adjustable benefit reduction is fully
amortized. The method is summarized
in the chart in section III.B.3. below.
An employer’s proportional share of
the value of adjustable benefit
reductions is determined as of the end
of the plan year before withdrawal as
follows—
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adjustment to the denominator of the
allocation fraction for a plan using a
method other than the presumptive
method or a similar method. The
denominator after the first year of the 5year period is decreased by the
contributions of any employers that
withdrew and were unable to satisfy
their withdrawal liability claims in any
year before the employer’s withdrawal.
This adjustment is intended to
approximate how a withdrawn
employer’s withdrawal liability is
calculated under the rolling-5 and
modified presumptive methods by fully
allocating the present value of the
suspended benefits to solvent
employers. The adjustment is not
necessary under the presumptive
method, as that method has a specific
adjustment for previously allocated
withdrawal liabilities that are deemed
uncollectible.
Under the static value method, the
present value of the suspended benefits
as of a single calculation date is used for
all withdrawals in the 10-year period.
At the plan sponsor’s option, the
present value could be determined as of:
(1) The effective date of the benefit
suspension (as similar calculations are
required as of that date to obtain
approval of the benefit suspension); or
(2) the last day of the plan year
coincident with or following the date of
the benefit suspension (as calculations
are required as of that date for other
withdrawal liability purposes). The
present value is determined using the
amount of the benefit suspension as
authorized by the Department of the
Treasury under the plan’s application
for benefit suspension.
Under the adjusted value method, the
present value of the suspended benefits
for a withdrawal in the first year of the
10-year period is the same as under the
static value method. For withdrawals in
years 2–10 of the 10-year period, the
value of the suspended benefits is
determined as of the ‘‘revaluation date,’’
the last day of the plan year before the
employer’s withdrawal. The value of the
suspended benefits is equal to the
present value of the benefits not
expected to be paid in the year of
withdrawal or thereafter due to the
benefit suspension. For example,
assume that a calendar year
multiemployer plan receives final
authorization by the Secretary of the
Treasury for a benefit suspension,
effective January 1, 2018, and a
contributing employer withdraws
during the 2022 plan year. The
revaluation date is December 31, 2021.
The value of the suspended benefits is
the present value of the benefits not
expected to be paid after December 31,
2021, due to the benefit suspension.
For both methods, the withdrawing
employer’s allocation fraction is the
amount of the employer’s required
contributions over a 5-year period
divided by the amount of all employers’
contributions over the same 5-year
period.
For the static value method, the 5-year
period is determined based on the most
recent 5 plan years ending before the
plan year in which the benefit
suspension takes effect. For the adjusted
value method, the 5-year period is
determined based on the most recent 5
plan years ending before the employer’s
withdrawal (which is the same 5-year
period as is used for the simplified
method for adjustable benefit
reductions).
For both the static value method and
the adjusted value method, the
denominator of the allocation fraction is
increased by any employer
contributions owed with respect to
earlier periods that were collected in the
applicable 5-year period for the
allocation fraction and decreased by any
amount contributed by an employer that
withdrew from the plan during those
same 5 plan years, or, alternatively,
adjusted as permitted under § 4211.12
(the same adjustments are made using
the simplified method for adjustable
benefit reductions).
For the static value method, the
regulation requires an additional
adjustment in the denominator of the
allocation fraction for a plan using a
method other than the presumptive
method or similar method. The
denominator after the first year of the 5year period is decreased by the
contributions of any employers that
withdrew and were unable to satisfy
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2. Employer’s Proportional Share of the
Value of a Benefit Suspension
a. Static Value Method and Adjusted
Value Method
PBGC’s simplified framework
provides two simplified methods that a
plan sponsor may choose between to
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calculate a withdrawing employer’s
proportional share of the value of a
benefit suspension—the static value
method and the adjusted value method.
Both methods apply for any employer
withdrawal that occurs within the 10
plan years after the end of the plan year
that includes the effective date of the
benefit suspension (10-year period). A
chart including a comparison of the two
methods is in section III.B.3. below.
Under either method, an employer’s
proportional share of the value of a
benefit suspension is determined as
follows—
their withdrawal liability claims in any
year before the employer’s withdrawal.
This adjustment is intended to
approximate how a withdrawn
employer’s withdrawal liability is
calculated under the rolling-5 and
modified presumptive methods by fully
allocating the present value of the
suspended benefits to solvent
employers. The adjustment is not
necessary under the presumptive
method, as that method has a specific
adjustment for previously allocated
withdrawal liabilities that are deemed
uncollectible.
An example illustrating the simplified
framework using the static value
method for disregarding a benefit
suspension is provided in § 4211.16(e)
of PBGC’s unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation.
b. Temporary Benefit Suspension
If a benefit suspension is a temporary
suspension of the plan’s payment
obligations as authorized by the
Department of the Treasury, the present
value of the suspended benefits
includes the value of the suspended
benefits only through the ending period
of the benefit suspension.
For example, assume that a calendaryear plan has an approved benefit
suspension effective December 31, 2018,
for a 15-year period ending December
31, 2033. Effective January 1, 2034,
benefits are to be restored (prospectively
only) to levels not less than those
accrued as of December 30, 2018, plus
benefits accrued after December 31,
2018. Employer A withdraws in a
complete withdrawal during the 2022
plan year. The plan sponsor first
determines Employer A’s allocable
amount of unfunded vested benefits
under section 4211 of ERISA. That
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amount is the present value of vested
benefits as of December 31, 2021,
including the present value of the
vested benefits that are expected to be
restored effective January 1, 2034. The
plan sponsor then determines Employer
A’s proportional share of the value of
the suspended benefits. The plan uses
the static value method. The value of
the suspended benefits equals the
present value, as of December 31, 2018,
of the benefits accrued as of December
30, 2018, that would otherwise have
been expected to have been paid, but for
the benefit suspension, during the 15year period beginning December 31,
2018, and ending December 31, 2033.
The portion of this present value
allocable to Employer A is added to the
unfunded vested benefits allocable to
Employer A under section 4211 of
ERISA.
c. Partial Withdrawals
PBGC invited public comment on
whether the examples in the proposed
rule are helpful and whether there are
additional types of examples that would
help plan sponsors with these
calculations. Two commenters stated
that the provided examples are helpful
and suggested that PBGC provide
examples involving partial withdrawals.
One commenter asked for clarification
with examples of the simplified method
for adjustable benefit reductions as
applied to partial withdrawals. Section
4206 of ERISA and 29 CFR part 4206
provide rules for determining the
amount of an employer’s liability for a
partial withdrawal and, in the case of a
subsequent withdrawal, for determining
the amount of the reduction of the
employer’s liability for the prior partial
withdrawal. PBGC appreciates the
comments requesting examples
involving partial withdrawals and
provides the following example using
the simplified method in § 4211.16.
Example: Assume the following:
(1) The employer’s allocable amount
of unfunded vested benefits determined
under section 4211 of ERISA is
$1,000,000.
(2) The employer’s proportional share
of the value of the adjustable benefit
reduction is $100,000 (after 8 years of
amortization of the original amount).
(3) The employer’s proportional share
of the value of the benefit suspension is
1263
$250,000 (the employer’s partial
withdrawal occurs 3 years after the
effective date of the benefit suspension).
To calculate the employer’s
withdrawal liability amount, under
§ 4211.16(b), the amounts in (1) through
(3) above are added together for a sum
of $1,350,000. Based on the sum, a de
minimis reduction would not apply.
The sum is then adjusted in accordance
with the rules for adjustment of partial
withdrawal under section 4206 of
ERISA. Thus, in this example, the
employer’s proportional share of the
value of the adjustable benefit reduction
and proportional share of the value of
the benefit suspension are disregarded
in determining the withdrawn
employer’s partial withdrawal liability
assessment amount.
4. Chart of Simplified Methods To
Determine Employer’s Proportional
Share of the Value of a Benefit
Suspension and an Adjustable Benefit
Reduction
The following chart provides a
summary of the simplified methods
discussed above:
EMPLOYER’S PROPORTIONAL SHARE OF THE VALUE OF A BENEFIT SUSPENSION OR AN ADJUSTABLE BENEFIT REDUCTION
[Value of benefit × allocation fraction]
Benefit suspension
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Method
Adjustable benefit reduction
Static value method
Adjusted value method
Value of Benefit
Suspension or Adjustable Benefit
Reduction.
Withdrawals in years 1–10 after the
benefit suspension: Present value of
the suspended benefits as authorized by the Department of the
Treasury in accordance with section
305(e)(9) of ERISA calculated as of
the date of the benefit suspension or
the last day of the plan year coincident with or following the date of the
benefit suspension.
Withdrawals in year 1 after the suspension: Same as Static Value
Method.
Withdrawals in years 2–10 after the
suspension: The present value, determined as of the end of the plan
year before a withdrawal, of the benefits not expected to be paid in the
year of withdrawal or thereafter due
to the benefit suspension.
Allocation Fraction ..
For all three methods, the Allocation Fraction is the amount of the employer’s required contributions over a 5-year period
divided by the amount of all employers’ contributions over the same 5-year period. The Allocation Fraction is determined in accordance with rules to disregard contribution increases under § 4211.4 and permissible modifications and
simplifications under §§ 4211.12–15.
Five-Year Period for
the Allocation
Fraction.
Five consecutive plan years ending
before the plan year in which the
benefit suspension takes effect.
Five consecutive plan years ending
before the employer’s withdrawal.
Choice of 5 consecutive plan years
ending before the employer’s withdrawal or the plan year in which the
adjustable benefit reduction takes effect.
Adjustments to DeSame as Adjusted Value Method, but
nominator of the
using the 5-year period for the Static
Allocation Fraction.
Value Method. In addition, if a plan
uses a method other than the presumptive method, the denominator
after the first year of the 5-year period is decreased by the contributions of any employers that withdrew
from the plan and were unable to
satisfy their withdrawal liability
claims in any year before the employer’s withdrawal.
The denominator is increased by any
employer contributions owed with respect to earlier periods which were
collected in the 5-year period and
decreased by any amount contributed by an employer that withdrew
from the plan during the 5-year period, or, alternatively, adjusted as
permitted under § 4211.12.
Same as Adjusted Value Method if
using 5 consecutive plan years before the employer’s withdrawal.
If using alternative 5-year period, same
as Static Value Method, but using
the 5 consecutive plan years before
the plan year in which the adjustable
benefit reduction takes effect.
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Unamortized balance of the value of
the adjustable benefit reduction
using the same assumptions as for
UVBs for purposes of section 4211
of ERISA and amortization in level
annual installments over 15 years.
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IV. Regulatory Changes To Reflect
Surcharges and Contribution Increases
A. Requirement To Disregard
Surcharges and Certain Contribution
Increases in Determining the Allocation
of Unfunded Vested Benefits to an
Employer (§ 4211.4) and the Annual
Withdrawal Liability Payment Amount
(§ 4219.3)
Changes in contributions can affect
the calculation of an employer’s
withdrawal liability and annual
withdrawal liability payment amount.
For example, such changes can increase
or decrease the allocation fraction
(discussed above in section I) that is
used to calculate an employer’s
withdrawal liability. They can also
increase or decrease an employer’s
highest contribution rate used to
calculate the employer’s annual
withdrawal liability payment amount
(also discussed above in section I).
Required surcharges and certain
contribution increases would typically
result in an increase in an employer’s
withdrawal liability even though
unfunded vested benefits are being
reduced by the increased contributions.
Sections 305(g)(2) and (3) of ERISA
mitigate the effect on withdrawal
liability by providing that these
surcharges and contribution increases
that are required or made to enable the
plan to meet the requirements of the
funding improvement plan or
rehabilitation plan are disregarded in
determining contribution amounts used
for the allocation of unfunded vested
benefits and the annual payment
amount. These sections do not apply for
purposes of determining the unfunded
vested benefits attributable to an
employer by a plan using the direct
attribution method under section
4211(c)(4) of ERISA or a comparable
method.
Except as described below the final
regulation, like the proposed, amends
§ 4211.4 of PBGC’s unfunded vested
benefits allocation regulation and
§ 4219.3 of PBGC’s notice, collection,
and redetermination of withdrawal
liability regulation to incorporate the
requirements to disregard these
surcharges and contribution increases.
The final regulation also provides
simplified methods for disregarding
certain contribution increases in the
allocation fraction in § 4211.14 of
PBGC’s unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation (discussed below
in section IV.B.). The final rule
incorporates the disregard rules and
simplified methods for contribution
increases in the allocation methods for
merged multiemployer plans provided
in subpart D of part 4211. PBGC is not
providing a simplified method for
disregarding surcharges in the final rule
because we believe that plans have been
able to apply the statutory requirements
without the need for a simplified
method.
The provision regarding contribution
increases applies to increases in the
contribution rate or other required
contribution increases that go into effect
during plan years beginning after
December 31, 2014.9 A special rule
under section 305(g)(3)(B) of ERISA
provides that a contribution increase is
deemed to be required or made to
enable the plan to meet the requirement
of the funding improvement plan or
rehabilitation plan, such that the
contribution increase is disregarded.
However, the statute provides that this
deeming rule does not apply to
increases in contribution requirements
due to increases in levels of work,
employment, or periods for which
compensation is provided, or additional
contributions used to provide an
increase in benefits, including an
increase in future benefit accruals,
permitted by section 305(d)(1)(B) or
305(f)(1)(B). Accordingly, the final
regulation, with changes from the
proposed rule as discussed below,
provides that these increases are
included as contribution increases for
purposes of determining the allocation
fraction and the highest contribution
rate. In addition, under section 305(g)(4)
of ERISA, contribution increases are not
treated as necessary to satisfy the
requirement of the funding
improvement plan or rehabilitation plan
after the plan has emerged from critical
or endangered status. This exception
applies only to the determination of the
allocation fraction. The table below
summarizes the statutory exceptions to
the rule to disregard a contribution
increase under section 305(g)(3) and (4)
of ERISA.
EXCEPTIONS TO DISREGARDING A CONTRIBUTION INCREASE
Allocation fraction and highest contribution rate exceptions (simplified
methods for these exceptions are explained in III.B. of the preamble).
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Allocation fraction exception (simplified methods for this exception are
explained in III.C. of the preamble).
(1) Increases in contribution requirements associated with increased
levels of work, employment, or periods for which compensation is
provided.
(2) Additional contributions used to provide an increase in benefits, including an increase in future benefit accruals, permitted by section
305(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of ERISA.
(3) The withdrawal occurs on or after the expiration date of the employer’s collective bargaining agreement in effect in the plan year the
plan is no longer in endangered or critical status, or, if earlier, the
date as of which the employer renegotiates a contribution rate effective after the plan year the plan is no longer in endangered or critical
status.
Sections 4211.4(b)(2)(ii) and
4219.3(a)(2)(ii) of the proposed rule
reflected an interpretation of the
exception under section 305(g)(3) of
ERISA for additional contributions used
to provide an increase in benefits. Those
sections provided, ‘‘The contribution
increase provides an increase in
benefits, including an increase in future
benefit accruals, permitted by sections
305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA or
sections 432(d)(1)(B) or section
432(f)(1)(B) of the Code, and an increase
in benefit accruals as an integral part of
the benefit formula.’’ The proposed rule
required the portion of such
contribution increase that is attributable
to an increase in benefit accruals to be
determined actuarially and for those
contribution increases to be included in
the calculation of a withdrawn
employer’s withdrawal liability and
annual withdrawal liability payment
amount.
Three commenters disagreed with the
interpretation provided in the proposed
rule. They said that the only narrow
exception to include contribution
increases that are used to provide an
increase in benefits in the calculation of
9 The requirement to disregard surcharges for
purposes of determining an employer’s annual
withdrawal liability payment is effective for
surcharges the obligation for which accrues on or
after December 31, 2014.
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 5 / Friday, January 8, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
withdrawal liability is for increases
specifically referred to in sections
305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA.
These commenters noted that plans
have excluded all contribution increases
under a funding improvement plan or
rehabilitation plan that became effective
in plan years beginning after December
31, 2014 from the calculation of
withdrawal liability. In contrast, two
commenters noted that some plans have
included all contribution increases. One
commenter explained that some plans
use a benefit formula that makes it
nearly impossible to allocate between
what is and is not benefit bearing.
Commenters objected to the requirement
for the portion of the contribution
increase that is benefit bearing to be
determined actuarially. They stated that
this would cause an increase in
administrative costs and that plans have
used other methods to differentiate
between benefit bearing and non-benefit
bearing portions of contribution
increases. For example, some plan
sponsors classify contribution increases
as either benefit-bearing (i.e., included
in a benefit formula that bases accruals
on contributions) or supplemental (i.e.,
excluded from the benefit accrual
formula). Finally, one commenter asked
whether certifications under sections
305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA are
required in the case of a plan with a
percentage of contribution formula and
a contribution increase required by a
funding improvement plan or
rehabilitation plan.
The final rule modifies proposed
§ 4211.4(b)(2)(ii) and § 4219.3(a)(2)(ii) to
provide the exception to the disregard
rules for a contribution increase that
provides an increase in benefits by
simply referring to section 305(g)(3) of
ERISA. Specifically, § 4211.4(b)(2)(ii)
and § 4219.3(a)(2)(ii) in the final rule
describe the exception as applying to
contribution increases ‘‘used to provide
an increase in benefits, including an
increase in future benefit accruals,
permitted by section (d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B)
of ERISA.’’ A plan sponsor is required
to include such contribution increases
in the calculation of a withdrawn
employer’s withdrawal liability and
annual withdrawal liability payment
amount. The final rule does not provide
further interpretation. Commenters
raised interpretive issues about sections
305(g)(3), 305(d)(1)(B), and 305(f)(1)(B)
of ERISA that are under the jurisdiction
of the Department of the Treasury as
well as plan benefit design issues that
require further study. PBGC is
continuing to examine these issues with
the Department of the Treasury and, if
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appropriate, will issue additional
guidance.
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding
Certain Contribution Increases in the
Allocation Fraction (§ 4211.14)
The allocation fraction that is used in
the presumptive, modified presumptive,
and rolling-5 methods to determine an
employer’s proportional share of
unfunded vested benefits is discussed
above in section I. The final regulation
adds a new § 4211.14 to the unfunded
vested benefits allocation regulation to
provide a choice of one simplified
method for the numerator and two
simplified methods for the denominator
of the allocation fraction. A plan
sponsor may adopt the simplified
methods in § 4211.14 to satisfy the
requirements of section 305(g)(3) of
ERISA and § 4211.4(b)(2) to disregard
contribution increases in determining
the allocation of unfunded vested
benefits, or may choose an alternative
approach that satisfies the requirements
of the statutory provisions and
regulations. A plan amended to use one
or more of the simplified methods in
this section must also apply the rules to
disregard surcharges under new
§ 4211.4.
One commenter asked that the final
regulation allow plans using the direct
attribution method to use the simplified
methods for contribution increases if
use of such methods is otherwise
reasonable. The disregard rules for
contribution increases under section
305(g)(3)(A) of ERISA do not apply for
purposes of determining the unfunded
vested benefits attributable to an
employer by a plan using the direct
attribution method under section
4211(c)(4) of ERISA or a comparable
method. PBGC’s authority to provide
simplified methods under section
305(g)(5) of ERISA is limited to methods
for applying the disregard rules in
determining withdrawal liability and
payment amounts. PBGC therefore did
not incorporate the commenter’s
requested change in the final rule.
1. Determining the Numerator Using the
Employer’s Plan Year 2014 Contribution
Rate
Under the simplified method for
determining the numerator of the
allocation fraction, a plan sponsor bases
the calculation on an employer’s
contribution rate as of the last day of
each plan year (rather than applying a
separate calculation for contribution
increases that occur in the middle of a
plan year). The plan sponsor starts with
the employer’s contribution rate as of
the ‘‘employer freeze date.’’ The
employer freeze date is the date that is
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the later of the last day of the first plan
year that ends on or after December 31,
2014 (December 31, 2014 for a calendar
year plan) and the last day of the plan
year the employer first contributes to
the plan. If, after the employer freeze
date, the plan has a contribution rate
increase that provides an increase in
benefits so that the contribution
increase is included, that rate increase
is added to the contribution rate for
each target year for which the rate
increase is effective. Under the method,
the product of the employer freeze date
contribution rate (increased in
accordance with the prior sentence, if
applicable) and the withdrawn
employer’s contribution base units in
each plan year (‘‘target year’’) are used
for the numerator and the comparable
amount determined for each employer is
included in the denominator (described
in B.2 below), unless the plan sponsor
uses the proxy group method for
determining the denominator (described
in B.3 below). If there is more than one
contribution rate or basis for calculating
contribution base units, the calculations
can be performed separately for each
contribution rate or contribution base
sub-group and then summed. An
example illustrating the simplified
method for disregarding certain
contributions in determining the
numerator using the employer’s plan
year 2014 contribution rate is provided
in the appendix to part 4211.
2. Determining the Denominator Using
Each Employer’s Plan Year 2014
Contribution Rate
Under the first simplified method for
determining the denominator of the
allocation fraction, a plan sponsor
applies the same principles as for the
simplified method above for
determining the numerator of the
allocation fraction. The plan sponsor
holds steady each employer’s
contribution rate as of the employer
freeze date, except for contribution
increases that provide benefit increases
as described above. For each employer,
the plan sponsor multiplies this rate by
each employer’s contribution base units
in each target year.
3. Determining the Denominator Using
the Proxy Group Method
Plans frequently offer multiple
contribution schedules under a funding
improvement plan or rehabilitation
plan, which may have varying
contribution rate increases. Under these
and other circumstances, it could be
administratively burdensome for plans
to determine the exact amount of an
employer’s contributions—excluding
contributions required to be disregarded
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in determining withdrawal liability—to
include in the denominator of the
allocation fraction. Accordingly, the
regulation provides a second simplified
method for determining contributions in
the denominator. This method, called
the proxy group method, is available for
plans that are amended to provide for
use of the method. The method permits
the contributions included in the
denominator of the allocation fraction
for a plan year to be based on an amount
calculated for ‘‘proxy’’ representatives
of the plan’s contributing employers.
A commenter noted that different
schedules and rate increases may apply
to different categories of employees of a
single employer—for example, because
different collective bargaining
agreements apply to different categories
of the employer’s employees. In
response, the final regulation permits a
single employer whose employees have
highly dissimilar contribution histories
to be treated as two or more employers
with more uniform contribution
histories in applying the proxy group
method.
Under the proxy group method,
employers are grouped in rate history
groups, based on similarity of
contribution histories (or same
percentage increases in contributions
from year to year). (Notwithstanding the
diversity of contribution histories, rate
history groups may be limited to 10.)
Representative employers, representing
at least 10 percent of active plan
participants, are drawn from rate history
groups to form the proxy group.
‘‘Adjusted contributions’’—excluding
contribution rate increases that must be
disregarded for withdrawal liability
purposes—are determined for
Column 1
Row 1 ...............................................................................................................
Row 2 ...............................................................................................................
Row 3 ...............................................................................................................
The rehabilitation plan requires
increases of $0.50 per hour per year for
employers in Row 1, $0.75 per hour per
year for those in Row 2, and $1.00 per
hour per year for those in Row 3. All
collective bargaining agreements are
amended by the beginning of 2015, and
the increases are effective as of the
Row 1 ...............................................................................................................
Row 2 ...............................................................................................................
Row 3 ...............................................................................................................
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$2.25
3.25
4.25
Column 3
$2.50
3.50
4.50
Column 2
(percent)
22.22
23.08
23.53
Column 3
(percent)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
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18.18
20.00
21.05
occurring in 2010); 55 percent in 2011
for employers in Category B (defaults
occurring in 2011); and 60 percent in
2012 for employers in Category C
(defaults occurring in 2012). For
employers in Category D through Y,
which have negotiated new collective
bargaining agreements, increases are as
shown in the following table:
Annual percentage
increase thereafter
through 2021
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
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$2.75
3.75
4.75
Column 4
(percent)
20.00
21.43
22.22
First increase
(year and quarter)
2010
2010
2010
2010
2011
2011
2011
2011
2012
2012
2012
2012
2013
Column 4
beginning of 2015. The following table
shows the percentage rates of increase
in contribution rates at year-end 2015
compared with year-end 2014:
25.00
25.00
25.00
2; and employers in Columns 3 and 4
of Row 3 could be grouped together
with those in Column 3 of Row 2.
Example 2. Plan B has many
employers and many contribution rate
schedules. Contributions change
between 2010 and 2021 as follows:
Under the default schedule, there are
one-time increases of 50 percent in 2010
for employers in Category A (defaults
Category
D ...................
E ...................
F ...................
G ..................
H ...................
I ....................
J ...................
K ...................
L ...................
M ..................
N ...................
O ..................
P ...................
Column 2
$2.00
3.00
4.00
Column 1
(percent)
Since the increase rates for employers
in Column 1 are the same, the plan can
put those employers in one rate group.
Similarly, employers in Column 2 have
relatively uniform rates and can be
grouped together, and likewise for those
in Columns 3 and those in Column 4.
Alternatively, employers in Columns 3
and 4 of Row 1 could be grouped
together with those in Column 4 of Row
employers in the proxy group; then for
rate history groups, based on the
adjusted contributions of employers in
each rate history group; and finally for
the plan, based on the adjusted
contributions of rate history groups
represented in the proxy group. The
plan’s adjusted contributions form the
denominator of the withdrawal liability
allocation fraction.
As with other simplified methods,
only contribution rates in effect at year
end need be considered.
The process of forming rate history
groups may be illustrated by the
following examples.
Example 1. Employers in Plan A had
twelve different contribution rates at the
start of the rehabilitation period, as
shown in the following table:
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4.1
4.3
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5.5
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Q ..................
R ...................
S ...................
T ...................
U ...................
V ...................
W ..................
X ...................
Y ...................
2013
2013
2013
2014
2014
2014
2014
2015
2015
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
and later .............................................................................................................................................
The annual percentage increases for
employers in Category D through Y are
cumulative. Thus, if an employer’s
contribution rate for the second quarter
of 2010 in Category F was $100.00, its
contributions for 2010, 2011, and 2012
would be $104.00, $108.16, and $112.49
(based on rates in effect at year-end).
Appropriate rate history groups for
2015 through 2021 could be as follows:
Rate history group
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1 .............................................
2 .............................................
3 .............................................
4 .............................................
5 .............................................
6 .............................................
7 .............................................
8 .............................................
9 .............................................
10 ...........................................
Employer
categories in
group
A, B, C.
D, E, F, G.
H, I, J, K.
L, M, N, O.
P, Q.
R, S.
T, U.
V, W.
X.
Y.
These groupings take advantage of the
provision that no more than ten rate
history groups need be provided for.
In response to a comment requesting
more flexibility in the determination of
proxy groups, the final regulation omits
the requirement that the proxy group
employers be named in the plan.
However, the regulation requires that
there be consistency from year to year
in the composition of both the proxy
group and rate history groups, with
certain exceptions. The intent is to keep
these groups generally unchanged but to
permit changes in their make-up to
accommodate changes in circumstances
such as contribution histories and
employer withdrawals.
Employers contributing under the
same rate schedule would typically be
in the same rate history group, and a
change in the rate schedule would
typically not change the composition of
the rate history group, because the rate
histories of all employers in the group
would be similarly affected. For
example, suppose all the employers
under a rate schedule are in the same
rate history group, and the rate schedule
changes. This would typically not
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Annual percentage
increase thereafter
through 2021
First increase
(year and quarter)
Category
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change the composition of the rate
history group, because the rate histories
of all employers in the group would be
similarly affected.
In the same vein, employers with
disparate rate histories would typically
be in different rate history groups, and
the fact that they became covered by the
same rate schedule would not typically
place them in the same rate history
group because their rate histories would
remain different. For example, suppose
two employers with disparate rate
histories are in different rate history
groups and become covered by the same
rate schedule. This would not typically
place them in the same rate history
group because their rate histories would
remain different.
On the other hand, if two employers
in a rate history group moved to a
different rate schedule, their rate
histories would no longer match those
of the other employers in the group.
Depending on circumstances, this
change might result in the formation of
a new rate history group that (if it
represented more than 5 percent of
active participants) would require
representation in the proxy group.
For proxy group employers, adjusted
contributions for the plan year are
determined by multiplying each
employer’s contribution base units for
the plan year by what would have been
the employer’s contribution rate
excluding contribution rate increases
that are required to be disregarded in
determining withdrawal liability.
Determining adjusted contributions
for rate history groups is a two-step
process. First, an adjustment factor is
determined for the plan year for each
rate history group represented in the
proxy group of employers. This
adjustment factor equals the sum of the
adjusted contributions for the plan year
for all employers in the rate history
group that are in the proxy group,
divided by the sum of those employers’
actual total contributions for the plan
year. Second, the adjustment factor for
the year for each rate history group is
multiplied by the contributions for the
year of all employers in the rate history
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6.7
7.1
7.5
8.0
8.5
9.0
9.5
10.3
11.0
group (both proxy group members and
non-members) to determine the adjusted
contributions for the rate history group
for the year.
Finally, the same steps are performed
to determine adjusted contributions at
the plan level. The sum of the adjusted
contributions for all the rate history
groups represented in the proxy group
is divided by the sum of the actual
contributions for the employers in those
rate history groups, and the resulting
adjustment factor for the plan is
multiplied by the plan’s total
contributions for the plan year,
including contributions by employers in
small rate history groups not
represented in the proxy group. The
result—the adjusted contributions for
the whole plan—is the amount of
contributions for the plan year that may
be used to determine the denominator
for the allocation fraction under the
proxy group method.
This process weights contributors by
the size of their contributions. Heavy
contributors’ rates have a greater impact
on the adjusted contributions than light
contributors’ rates.
A commenter asked that relief be
provided for cases where information
needed to determine adjusted
contributions is unavailable. In
response, PBGC has added a provision
addressing situations where total
contributions for a rate history group or
a plan are unavailable to calculate
adjusted contributions. In such
situations, total contributions may be
estimated by multiplying each
contribution rate times the relevant
projected contribution base units and
adding all the results.
An example illustrating the simplified
method for disregarding certain
contributions in determining the
denominator of the allocation fraction
using the proxy group method is
provided in the appendix to part 4211.
C. Simplified Methods After Plan Is No
Longer in Endangered or Critical Status
As noted above in section IV.A.,
changes in contributions can affect the
calculation of an employer’s withdrawal
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liability and annual withdrawal liability
payment amount. Once a plan is no
longer in endangered or critical status,
the ‘‘disregard’’ rules for contribution
increases change. Under section
305(g)(4) of ERISA, plan sponsors are
required to: (1) Include contribution
increases in determining the allocation
fraction used to calculate withdrawal
liability under section 4211 of ERISA;
and (2) continue to disregard
contribution increases in determining
the highest contribution rate used to
calculate the annual withdrawal
liability payment amount under section
4219(c) of ERISA, as follows:
PLANS NO LONGER IN ENDANGERED OR CRITICAL STATUS
Allocation Fraction (section 4211 of
ERISA).
Highest Contribution Rate (section
4219(c) of ERISA).
A plan sponsor is required to include contribution increases (previously disregarded) as of the expiration
date of the collective bargaining agreement in effect when a plan is no longer in endangered or critical
status.
A plan sponsor is required to continue disregarding contribution increases that applied for plan years during which the plan was in endangered or critical status.
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The final regulation, like the
proposed, amends § 4211.4 of PBGC’s
unfunded vested benefits allocation
regulation and § 4219.3 of PBGC’s
notice, collection, and redetermination
of withdrawal liability regulation to
incorporate the requirements for
contribution increases when a plan is no
longer in endangered or critical status.
The final regulation also provides
simplified methods required by section
305(g)(5) of ERISA that a plan sponsor
could adopt to satisfy the requirements
of section 305(g)(4).
1. Including Contribution Increases in
Determining the Allocation of Unfunded
Vested Benefits (§ 4211.15)
The rule to begin including
contribution increases for purposes of
determining withdrawal liability is
based, in part, on when a plan’s
collective bargaining agreements expire.
Because plans may operate under
numerous collective bargaining
agreements with varying expiration
dates, it could be burdensome for a plan
sponsor to calculate the amount
contributed by employers over the 5year periods used for the denominators
of the plan’s allocation method. The
plan sponsor would have to make a
year-by-year determination of whether
contribution increases should be
included or disregarded in the
denominators relative to collective
bargaining agreements expiring in each
applicable year. The final regulation
adds a new § 4211.15 to PBGC’s
unfunded vested benefits allocation
regulation to provide two alternative
simplified methods that a plan sponsor
could adopt for determining the
denominators in the allocation fractions
when the plan is no longer in
endangered or critical status.
Under the first simplified method, a
plan sponsor could adopt a rule that
contribution increases previously
disregarded are included in the
allocation fraction as of the expiration
date of the first collective bargaining
agreement requiring contributions that
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expires after the plan’s emergence from
endangered or critical status. If the plan
sponsor adopts this rule, then for any
withdrawals after the applicable
expiration date, the plan sponsor would
include the total amount contributed by
employers for plan years included in the
denominator of the allocation fraction
determined in accordance with section
4211 of ERISA under the method in use
by the plan. This would relieve plan
sponsors of the burden of a year-by-year
determination of whether contribution
increases should be included or
disregarded in the denominator under
the plan’s allocation method relative to
collective bargaining agreements
expiring in that year. An example
illustrating this simplified method is
provided in § 4211.15(c) of PBGC’s
unfunded vested benefits allocation
regulation.
Under the second simplified method,
a plan sponsor could adopt a rule that
contribution increases previously
disregarded are included in calculating
withdrawal liability for any employer
withdrawal that occurs after the first full
plan year after a plan is no longer in
endangered or critical status, or if later,
the plan year including the expiration
date of the first collective bargaining
agreement requiring plan contributions
that expires after the plan’s emergence
from endangered or critical status.
The final regulation also provides
that, for purposes of these simplified
methods, an ‘‘evergreen contract’’ that
continues until the collective bargaining
parties elect to terminate the agreement
has a termination date that is the earlier
of—
(1) The termination of the agreement
by decision of the parties.
(2) The beginning of the third plan
year following the plan year in which
the plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status.
PBGC invited public comment on
other simplified methods that a plan
operating under numerous collective
bargaining agreements with varying
expiration dates might use to satisfy the
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requirement in section 305(g)(4) of
ERISA that, as of the expiration date of
the first collective bargaining agreement
requiring plan contributions that expires
after a plan is no longer in endangered
or critical status, the allocation fraction
must include contribution increases that
were previously disregarded. Two
commenters supported PBGC’s
proposed simplified method as a
reasonable way to satisfy the
requirements of section 305(g)(4) of
ERISA.
2. Continuing To Disregard Contribution
Increases in Determining the Highest
Contribution Rate (§ 4219.3)
The rule for determining the highest
contribution rate requires a plan
sponsor of a plan that is no longer in
endangered or critical status to continue
to disregard increases in the
contribution rate that applied for plan
years during which the plan was in
endangered or critical status. Because an
employer’s highest contribution rate is
determined over the 10 plan years
ending with the year of withdrawal,
applying the rule would require a yearby-year determination of whether
contribution increases should be
included or disregarded. The final
regulation adds a new § 4219.3 to
PBGC’s notice, collection, and
redetermination of withdrawal liability
regulation to provide a simplified
method that a plan sponsor could adopt
for determining the highest contribution
rate.
The simplified method provides that,
for a plan that is no longer in
endangered or critical status, the highest
contribution rate for purposes of section
4219(c) of ERISA is the greater of—
(1) The employer’s contribution rate
in effect, for a calendar year plan, as of
December 31, 2014, and for other plans,
the last day of the plan year that ends
on or after December 31, 2014, plus any
contribution increases occurring after
that date and before the employer’s
withdrawal that must be included in
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determining the highest contribution
rate under section 305(g)(3) of ERISA, or
(2) The highest contribution rate for
any plan year after the plan year that
includes the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement of the
withdrawing employer requiring plan
contributions that expires after the plan
is no longer in endangered or critical
status, or, if earlier, the date as of which
the withdrawing employer renegotiated
a contribution rate effective after a plan
is no longer in endangered or critical
status.
An example illustrating this
simplified method is provided in
§ 4219.3 of PBGC’s notice, collection,
and redetermination of withdrawal
liability regulation. PBGC received two
comments about the simplified method
provided in § 4219.3. One commenter
asked for clarification about the
contribution rate that should be
included in determining the highest
contribution rate if an employer
withdraws after its collective bargaining
agreement expires, but before a new
collective bargaining agreement is
adopted. Another commenter stated that
under the simplified method, if the plan
year ends soon after the expiration date
of the collective bargaining agreement, a
higher contribution rate could be
imposed on an employer than the plan’s
later negotiated contribution rate. PBGC
agrees that this could occur under the
simplified method if the bargaining
parties do not reach agreement by the
plan year after the plan year that
includes the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement of the
withdrawing employer requiring plan
contributions that expires after the plan
is no longer in endangered or critical
status.
A commenter suggested that a grace
period could be provided after the
expiration date of the collective
bargaining agreement, such as 180 days,
during which the higher rate would not
apply if it had not been agreed to in
collective bargaining. While in many
cases collective bargaining agreements
are not renegotiated until after the
expiration date of the collective
bargaining agreement, PBGC believes
that the collective bargaining parties
will generally have time to resolve the
scenario described by the commenter
before a plan emerges from endangered
or critical status. In addition, PBGC’s
simplified method already extends the
disregard period beyond the highest
contribution rate ‘‘for plan years during
which the plan was in endangered or
critical status’’ to include the period
through the end of the plan year after
the plan year that includes the
expiration date of the first collective
bargaining agreement that expires after
the plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status. Therefore, PBGC did not
adopt the commenter’s suggestion to
change the simplified method in the
final rule.
V. Compliance With Rulemaking
Guidelines
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and
13771
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this
rulemaking is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under Executive
Order 12866 and Executive Order
13771. The rule provides simplified
methods, as required by section
305(g)(5) of ERISA, to determine
withdrawal liability and payment
amounts, which multiemployer plan
sponsors may choose, but are not
required, to adopt. Accordingly, this
final rule is exempt from Executive
Order 13771 and OMB has not reviewed
the rule under Executive Order 12866.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, and public health and
safety effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). E.O. 13563 emphasizes
retrospective review of regulations,
harmonizing rules, and promoting
flexibility.
Although this is not a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866, PBGC has examined the
economic implications of this final rule
and has concluded that the amendments
providing simplified methods for plan
sponsors to comply with the statutory
requirements will reduce costs for
multiemployer plans by approximately
$1,476,000. Based on 2016 data, there
are about 450 plans that are in
endangered or critical status.10 PBGC
estimates that a portion of these plans
using the simplified methods under the
final rule will have administrative
savings, as follows:
Estimated
number
of plans
affected
Annual amounts
1269
Savings per
plan
Total savings
Savings on actuarial calculations using simplified methods and assuming an average hourly rate of $400
Disregarding benefit suspensions (Section III.B.2.) ....................................................................
Exceptions to disregarding contribution increases (Section IV.A.) .............................................
Allocation fraction numerator (Section IV.B.1.) ...........................................................................
Allocation fraction denominator using 2014 contribution rate (Section IV.B.2.) .........................
Allocation fraction denominator using proxy group of employers (Section IV.B.3.) ...................
5
40
200
160
40
$2,000
4,000
1,200
4,000
8,000
$10,000
160,000
240,000
640,000
320,000
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
Other estimated savings
Reduced plan valuation cost for plans that have a benefit suspension and use the static
value method ............................................................................................................................
Savings on potential withdrawal liability arbitration costs assuming an average hourly rate of
$400 .........................................................................................................................................
3
2,000
6,000
5
20,000
100,000
Total savings ........................................................................................................................
........................
........................
1,476,000
PBGC invited public comment on the
expected savings on actuarial
calculations and other costs using the
simplified methods. A commenter noted
that expected savings on actuarial
calculations and plan administration
10 https://www.pbgc.gov/sites/default/files/2017_
pension_data_tables.pdf, Table M–18.
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will vary greatly from plan to plan based
on the plan’s industry, benefit formula,
and other factors. Three commenters
stated that the requirement in the
proposed rule that the portion of
contribution increases that is funding an
increase in future benefit accruals be
determined actuarially would cause an
increase in administrative costs. As
discussed above in section IV.A. of the
preamble, the final rule does not adopt
this provision.
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
imposes certain requirements with
respect to rules that are subject to the
notice and comment requirements of
section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act and that are likely to
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Unless an agency determines that a rule
is not likely to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, section 604 of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act requires
that the agency present a final
regulatory flexibility analysis at the time
of the publication of the final regulation
describing the impact of the rule on
small entities and steps taken to
minimize the impact. Small entities
include small businesses, organizations,
and governmental jurisdictions.
For purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act requirements with
respect to this final rule, PBGC
considers a small entity to be a plan
with fewer than 100 participants. This
is substantially the same criterion PBGC
uses in other regulations 11 and is
consistent with certain requirements in
title I of ERISA 12 and the Code,13 as
well as the definition of a small entity
that the Department of Labor has used
for purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.14
Thus, PBGC believes that assessing
the impact of the proposed regulation
on small plans is an appropriate
substitute for evaluating the effect on
small entities. The definition of small
entity considered appropriate for this
purpose differs, however, from a
definition of small business based on
size standards promulgated by the Small
11 See, e.g., special rules for small plans under
part 4007 (Payment of Premiums).
12 See, e.g., section 104(a)(2) of ERISA, which
permits the Secretary of Labor to prescribe
simplified annual reports for pension plans that
cover fewer than 100 participants.
13 See, e.g., section 430(g)(2)(B) of the Code,
which permits plans with 100 or fewer participants
to use valuation dates other than the first day of the
plan year.
14 See, e.g., DOL’s final rule on Prohibited
Transaction Exemption Procedures, 76 FR 66637,
66644 (Oct. 27, 2011).
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Business Administration (13 CFR
121.201) pursuant to the Small Business
Act. PBGC therefore requested
comments on the appropriateness of the
size standard used in evaluating the
impact on small entities of the proposed
amendments. PBGC did not receive any
such comments.
On the basis of its definition of small
entity, PBGC certifies under section
605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) that the
amendments in this final rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Based on data for recent premium
filings, PBGC estimates that only 38
plans of the approximately 1,400 plans
covered by PBGC’s multiemployer
program are small plans, and that only
about 14 of those plans will be impacted
by this final rule. Furthermore, plan
sponsors may, but are not required to,
use the simplified methods under the
final rule. As shown above, plans that
use the simplified methods will have
administrative savings. The final rule
will not impose costs on plans.
Accordingly, as provided in section 605
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), sections 603 and 604
do not apply.
List of Subjects
20 CFR Part 4001
Business and industry, Employee
benefit plans, Pension insurance.
20 CFR Part 4204
Employee benefit plans, Pension
insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
20 CFR Part 4206
Employee benefit plans, Pension
insurance.
20 CFR Part 4207
Employee benefit plans, Pension
insurance.
29 CFR Part 4211
Employee benefit plans, Pension
insurance, Pensions, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
29 CFR Part 4219
Employee benefit plans, Pension
insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons given above, PBGC
amends 29 CFR parts 4001, 4204, 4206,
4207, 4211 and 4219 as follows:
PART 4001—TERMINOLOGY
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1301, 1302(b)(3).
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[Amended]
2. In § 4001.2, amend the definition of
‘‘Nonforfeitable benefit’’ by removing
‘‘will be considered forfeitable.’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘are considered
forfeitable.’’
■
PART 4204—VARIANCES FOR SALE
OF ASSETS
3. The authority citation for part 4204
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3), 1384(c).
4. In § 4204.2, add in alphabetical
order a definition for ‘‘Unfunded vested
benefits’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 4204.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Unfunded vested benefits means, as
described in section 4213(c) of ERISA,
the amount by which the value of
nonforfeitable benefits under the plan
exceeds the value of the assets of the
plan.
§ 4204.12
[Amended]
5. In § 4204.12:
a. Amend the first sentence by
removing ‘‘for the purposes of section’’
and adding in its place ‘‘for the
purposes of section 304(b)(3)(A) of
ERISA and section’’; and
■ b. Remove the second sentence.
■
■
PART 4206—ADJUSTMENT OF
LIABILITY FOR A WITHDRAWAL
SUBSEQUENT TO A PARTIAL
WITHDRAWAL
6. The authority citation for part 4206
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3) and
1386(b).
7. In § 4206.2, add in alphabetical
order a definition for ‘‘Unfunded vested
benefits’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 4206.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Unfunded vested benefits means, as
described in section 4213(c) of ERISA,
the amount by which the value of
nonforfeitable benefits under the plan
exceeds the value of the assets of the
plan.
PART 4207—REDUCTION OR WAIVER
OF COMPLETE WITHDRAWAL
LIABILITY
8. The authority citation for part 4207
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3), 1387.
1. The authority citation for part 4001
continues to read as follows:
■
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§ 4001.2
9. In § 4207.2, add in alphabetical
order a definition for ‘‘Unfunded vested
benefits’’ to read as follows:
■
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§ 4207.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Unfunded vested benefits means, as
described in section 4213(c) of ERISA,
the amount by which the value of
nonforfeitable benefits under the plan
exceeds the value of the assets of the
plan.
PART 4211—ALLOCATING UNFUNDED
VESTED BENEFITS TO WITHDRAWING
EMPLOYERS
10. The authority citation for part
4211 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3); 1391(c)(1),
(c)(2)(D), (c)(5)(A), (c)(5)(B), (c)(5)(D), and (f).
11. In § 4211.1, amend paragraph (a)
by removing the sixth, seventh, and
eighth sentences and adding two
sentences in their place to read as
follows:
■
§ 4211.1
Purpose and scope.
Definitions.
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
Unfunded vested benefits means, as
described in section 4213(c) of ERISA,
the amount by which the value of
nonforfeitable benefits under the plan
exceeds the value of the assets of the
plan.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Revise § 4211.3 to read as follows:
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(a) Construction plans. A plan that
primarily covers employees in the
building and construction industry must
use the presumptive method for
allocating unfunded vested benefits,
except as provided in §§ 4211.11(b) and
4211.21(b).
(b) Code section 404(c) plans. A plan
described in section 404(c) of the Code
or a continuation of such a plan must
use the rolling-5 method for allocating
unfunded vested benefits unless the
plan sponsor, by amendment, adopts an
alternative method or modification.
■ 14. Revise § 4211.4 to read as follows:
§ 4211.4 Contributions for purposes of the
numerator and denominator of the
allocation fractions.
(a) * * * Section 4211(c)(5) of ERISA
also permits certain modifications to the
statutory allocation methods that PBGC
may prescribe in a regulation. Subpart B
of this part contains the permissible
modifications to the statutory methods
that plan sponsors may adopt without
PBGC approval. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. In § 4211.2:
■ a. Amend the introductory text by
removing ‘‘multiemployer plan,’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘multiemployer
plan, nonforfeitable benefit,’’;
■ b. Amend the definition of ‘‘Initial
plan year’’ by removing ‘‘establishment’’
and adding in its place ‘‘effective date’’;
■ c. Remove the definition of
‘‘Nonforfeitable benefit’’;
■ d. Revise the definition of ‘‘Unfunded
vested benefits’’;
■ e. Amend the definition of
‘‘Withdrawing employer’’ by removing
‘‘for whom’’ and adding in its place ‘‘for
which’’;
■ f. Amend the definition of
‘‘Withdrawn employer’’ by removing
‘‘who, prior to the withdrawing
employer,’’ and adding in its place
‘‘that, in a plan year before the
withdrawing employer withdraws,’’;
The revision reads as follows:
§ 4211.2
§ 4211.3 Special rules for construction
industry and Code section 404(c) plans.
(a) In general. Subject to paragraph (b)
of this section, each of the allocation
fractions used in the presumptive,
modified presumptive and rolling-5
methods is based on contributions that
certain employers have made to the plan
for a 5-year period.
(1) The numerator of the allocation
fraction, with respect to a withdrawing
employer, is based on the ‘‘sum of the
contributions required to be made’’ or
the ‘‘total amount required to be
contributed’’ by the employer for the
specified period.
(2) The denominator of the allocation
fraction is based on contributions that
certain employers have made to the plan
for a specified period.
(b) Disregarding surcharges and
contribution increases. For each of the
allocation fractions used in the
presumptive, modified presumptive and
rolling-5 methods in determining the
allocation of unfunded vested benefits
to an employer, a plan in endangered or
critical status must disregard:
(1) Surcharge. Any surcharge under
section 305(e)(7) of ERISA and section
432(e)(7) of the Code.
(2) Contribution increase. Any
increase in the contribution rate or other
increase in contribution requirements
that goes into effect during plan years
beginning after December 31, 2014, so
that a plan may meet the requirements
of a funding improvement plan under
section 305(c) of ERISA and section
432(c) of the Code or a rehabilitation
plan under section 305(e) of ERISA and
432(e) of the Code, except to the extent
that one of the following exceptions
applies pursuant to section 305(g)(3) or
(4) of ERISA and section 432(g)(3) or (4)
of the Code:
(i) The increases in contribution
requirements are due to increased levels
of work, employment, or periods for
which compensation is provided.
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1271
(ii) The additional contributions are
used to provide an increase in benefits,
including an increase in future benefit
accruals, permitted by section
305(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of ERISA and
section 432(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of the
Code.
(iii) The withdrawal occurs on or after
the expiration date of the employer’s
collective bargaining agreement in effect
in the plan year the plan is no longer in
endangered or critical status, or, if
earlier, the date as of which the
employer renegotiates a contribution
rate effective after the plan year the plan
is no longer in endangered or critical
status.
(c) Simplified methods. See
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15 for simplified
methods of meeting the requirements of
this section.
■ 15. Add § 4211.6 to read as follows:
§ 4211.6 Disregarding benefit reductions
and benefit suspensions.
(a) In general. A plan must disregard
the following nonforfeitable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions in
determining a plan’s nonforfeitable
benefits for purposes of determining an
employer’s withdrawal liability under
section 4201 of ERISA:
(1) Adjustable benefit. A reduction to
adjustable benefits under section
305(e)(8) of ERISA and section 432(e)(8)
of the Code.
(2) Lump sum. A benefit reduction
arising from a restriction on lump sums
or other benefits under section 305(f) of
ERISA and section 432(f) of the Code.
(3) Benefit suspension. A benefit
suspension under section 305(e)(9) of
ERISA and section 432(e)(9) of the Code,
but only for withdrawals not more than
10 years after the end of the plan year
in which the benefit suspension takes
effect.
(b) Simplified methods. See § 4211.16
for simplified methods for meeting the
requirements of this section.
■ 16. Revise § 4211.11 to read as
follows:
§ 4211.11 Plan sponsor adoption of
modifications and simplified methods.
(a) General rule. A plan sponsor, other
than the sponsor of a plan that primarily
covers employees in the building and
construction industry, may adopt by
amendment, without the approval of
PBGC, any of the statutory allocation
methods and any of the modifications
and simplified methods set forth in
§§ 4211.12 through 4211.16.
(b) Building and construction industry
plans. The plan sponsor of a plan that
primarily covers employees in the
building and construction industry may
adopt by amendment, without the
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approval of PBGC, any of the
modifications to the presumptive rule
and simplified methods set forth in
§ 4211.12 and §§ 4211.14 through
4211.16.
■ 17. Revise § 4211.12 to read as
follows:
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
§ 4211.12 Modifications to the
presumptive, modified presumptive, and
rolling-5 methods.
(a) Disregarding certain contribution
increases. A plan amended to use the
modifications in this section must apply
the rules to disregard surcharges and
contribution increases under § 4211.4. A
plan sponsor may amend a plan to
incorporate the simplified methods in
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15 to fulfill the
requirements of § 4211.4 with the
modifications in this section if done
consistently from year to year.
(b) Changing the period for counting
contributions. A plan sponsor may
amend a plan to modify the
denominators in the presumptive,
modified presumptive and rolling-5
methods in accordance with one of the
alternatives described in this paragraph
(b). Any amendment adopted under this
paragraph (b) must be applied
consistently to all plan years.
Contributions counted for 1 plan year
may not be counted for any other plan
year. If a contribution is counted as part
of the ‘‘total amount contributed’’ for
any plan year used to determine a
denominator, that contribution may not
also be counted as a contribution owed
with respect to an earlier year used to
determine the same denominator,
regardless of when the plan collected
that contribution.
(1) A plan sponsor may amend a plan
to provide that ‘‘the sum of all
contributions made’’ or ‘‘total amount
contributed’’ for a plan year means the
amount of contributions that the plan
actually received during the plan year,
without regard to whether the
contributions are treated as made for
that plan year under section
304(b)(3)(A) of ERISA and section
431(b)(3)(A) of the Code.
(2) A plan sponsor may amend a plan
to provide that ‘‘the sum of all
contributions made’’ or ‘‘total amount
contributed’’ for a plan year means the
amount of contributions actually
received during the plan year, increased
by the amount of contributions received
during a specified period of time after
the close of the plan year not to exceed
the period described in section 304(c)(8)
of ERISA and section 431(c)(8) of the
Code and regulations thereunder.
(3) A plan sponsor may amend a plan
to provide that ‘‘the sum of all
contributions made’’ or ‘‘total amount
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contributed’’ for a plan year means the
amount of contributions actually
received during the plan year, increased
by the amount of contributions accrued
during the plan year and received
during a specified period of time after
the close of the plan year not to exceed
the period described in section 304(c)(8)
of ERISA and section 431(c)(8) of the
Code and regulations thereunder.
(c) Excluding contributions of
significant withdrawn employers.
Contributions of certain withdrawn
employers are excluded from the
denominator in each of the fractions
used to determine a withdrawing
employer’s share of unfunded vested
benefits under the presumptive,
modified presumptive and rolling-5
methods. Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section,
contributions of all employers that
permanently cease to have an obligation
to contribute to the plan or permanently
cease covered operations before the end
of the period of plan years used to
determine the fractions for allocating
unfunded vested benefits under each of
those methods (and contributions of all
employers that withdrew before
September 26, 1980) are excluded from
the denominators of the fractions.
(1) The plan sponsor of a plan using
the presumptive, modified presumptive
or rolling-5 method may amend the plan
to provide that only the contributions of
significant withdrawn employers are
excluded from the denominators of the
fractions used in those methods.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (c),
‘‘significant withdrawn employer’’
means—
(i) An employer to which the plan has
sent a notice of withdrawal liability
under section 4219 of ERISA; or
(ii) A withdrawn employer that in any
plan year used to determine the
denominator of a fraction contributed at
least $250,000 or, if less, 1 percent of all
contributions made by employers for
that year.
(3) If a group of employers withdraw
in a concerted withdrawal, the plan
sponsor must treat the group as a single
employer in determining whether the
members are significant withdrawn
employers under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section. A ‘‘concerted withdrawal’’
means a cessation of contributions to
the plan during a single plan year—
(i) By an employer association;
(ii) By all or substantially all of the
employers covered by a single collective
bargaining agreement; or
(iii) By all or substantially all of the
employers covered by agreements with
a single labor organization.
(d) ‘‘Fresh start’’ rules under
presumptive method. (1) The plan
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sponsor of a plan using the presumptive
method (including a plan that primarily
covers employees in the building and
construction industry) may amend the
plan to provide that—
(i) A designated plan year ending after
September 26, 1980, will substitute for
the plan year ending before September
26, 1980, in applying section
4211(b)(1)(B), section
4211(b)(2)(B)(ii)(I), section
4211(b)(2)(D), section 4211(b)(3), and
section 4211(b)(3)(B) of ERISA; and
(ii) Plan years ending after the end of
the designated plan year in paragraph
(d)(1)(i) of this section will substitute for
plan years ending after September 25,
1980, in applying section 4211(b)(1)(A),
section 4211(b)(2)(A), and section
4211(b)(2)(B)(ii)(II) of ERISA.
(2) A plan amendment made pursuant
to paragraph (d)(1) of this section must
provide that the plan’s unfunded vested
benefits for plan years ending after the
designated plan year are reduced by the
value of all outstanding claims for
withdrawal liability that can reasonably
be expected to be collected from
employers that had withdrawn from the
plan as of the end of the designated plan
year.
(3) In the case of a plan that primarily
covers employees in the building and
construction industry, the plan year
designated by a plan amendment
pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) of this
section must be a plan year for which
the plan has no unfunded vested
benefits determined in accordance with
section 4211 of ERISA without regard to
§ 4211.6.
(e) ‘‘Fresh start’’ rules under modified
presumptive method. (1) The plan
sponsor of a plan using the modified
presumptive method may amend the
plan to provide—
(i) A designated plan year ending after
September 26, 1980, will substitute for
the plan year ending before September
26, 1980, in applying section
4211(c)(2)(B)(i) and section
4211(c)(2)(B)(ii)(I) and (II) of ERISA; and
(ii) Plan years ending after the end of
the designated plan year will substitute
for plan years ending after September
25, 1980, in applying section
4211(c)(2)(B)(ii)(II) and section
4211(c)(2)(C)(i)(II) of ERISA.
(2) A plan amendment made pursuant
to paragraph (e)(1) of this section must
provide that the plan’s unfunded vested
benefits for plan years ending after the
designated plan year are reduced by the
value of all outstanding claims for
withdrawal liability that can reasonably
be expected to be collected from
employers that had withdrawn from the
plan as of the end of the designated plan
year.
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§ 4211.13
[Amended]
18. In § 4211.13:
a. Amend paragraph (a) by removing
‘‘shall’’ and adding in its place ‘‘must’’;
■ b. Amend paragraph (b) by removing
‘‘shall be’’ and adding in its place ‘‘is’’.
■ 19. Add § 4211.14 to read as follows:
■
■
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
§ 4211.14 Simplified methods for
disregarding certain contributions.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor may
amend a plan without PBGC approval to
adopt any of the simplified methods in
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this
section to fulfill the requirements of
section 305(g)(3) of ERISA and section
432(g)(3) of the Code and § 4211.4(b)(2)
in determining an allocation fraction.
Examples illustrating calculations using
the simplified methods in this section
are provided in the appendix to this
part.
(b) Simplified method for the
numerator—after 2014 plan year. A
plan sponsor may amend a plan to
provide that the withdrawing
employer’s required contributions for
each plan year (a ‘‘target year’’) after the
date that is the later of the last day of
the first plan year that ends on or after
December 31, 2014 and the last day of
the plan year the employer first
contributes to the plan (the ‘‘employer
freeze date’’) is the product of—
(1) The employer’s contribution rate
in effect on the employer freeze date,
plus any contribution increase in
§ 4211.4(b)(2)(ii) that is effective after
the employer freeze date but not later
than the last day of the target year; times
(2) The employer’s contribution base
units for the target year.
(c) Simplified method for the
denominator—after 2014 plan year. A
plan sponsor may amend a plan to
provide that the denominator for the
allocation fraction for each plan year
after the employer freeze date is
calculated using the same principles as
paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) Simplified method for the
denominator—proxy group averaging.
(1) A plan sponsor may amend a plan
to provide that, for purposes of
determining the denominator of the
unfunded vested benefits allocation
fraction, employer contributions for a
plan year beginning after the plan freeze
date described in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of
this section are calculated, in
accordance with this paragraph (d),
based on an average of representative
contribution rates that exclude
contribution increases that are required
to be disregarded in determining
withdrawal liability. The method
described in this paragraph (d) is
effective only for plan years to which
the amendment applies.
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(2) For purposes of this paragraph
(d) —
(i) Plan freeze date means the last day
of the first plan year that ends on or
after December 31, 2014.
(ii) Base year means the first plan year
beginning after the plan freeze date.
(iii) Contribution history for a plan
year means the history of total
contribution rates, and contribution
rates that are not required to be
disregarded in determining withdrawal
liability, from the plan freeze date up to
the end of the plan year.
(iv) Included employer with respect to
a plan for a plan year means an
employer that is a contributing
employer of the plan on at least 1 day
of the plan year and whose
contributions for the plan year are to be
taken into account under the plan in
determining the denominator of the
unfunded vested benefits allocation
fraction under section 4211 of ERISA. If
the contribution histories of different
categories of employees of an employer
are not substantially the same, the
employer may be treated as two or more
employers that have more uniform
contribution histories.
(v) Rate history group is defined in
paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
(vi) Proxy group is defined in
paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
(vii) Adjusted as applied to
contributions for an employer, a rate
history group, or a plan is defined in
paragraphs (d)(5), (6), and (7) of this
section.
(3) A rate history group of a plan for
a plan year is a group of included
employers satisfying all of the following
requirements:
(i) Each included employer of the
plan is in one and only one rate history
group.
(ii) The employers in the rate history
group have substantially the same
contribution history (or the same
percentage increases in contributions
from year to year), but there need not be
more than ten rate history groups.
(iii) There is consistency in the
composition of rate history groups from
year to year.
(4) The proxy group of a plan for a
plan year is a group of included
employers satisfying all of the following
requirements:
(i) On at least 1 day of the plan year,
the employers in the proxy group
represent at least 10 percent of active
plan participants.
(ii) There is at least one employer in
the proxy group from each rate history
group of the plan for the plan year that
represents, on at least 1 day of the plan
year, at least 5 percent of active plan
participants.
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1273
(iii) There is consistency in the
composition of the proxy group from
year to year.
(5) The adjusted contributions of an
employer under a plan for a plan year
are —
(i) The employer’s contribution base
units for the plan year; multiplied by
(ii) The employer’s contribution rate
per contribution base unit at the end of
the plan year, reduced by the sum of the
employer’s contribution rate increases
since the plan freeze date that are
required to be disregarded in
determining withdrawal liability.
(6) The adjusted contributions of a
rate history group that is represented in
the proxy group of a plan for a plan year
are the total contributions for the plan
year attributable to employers in the rate
history group, multiplied by the
adjustment factor for the rate history
group. The adjustment factor for the rate
history group is the quotient, for all
employers in the rate history group that
are also in the proxy group, of —
(i) Total adjusted contributions for the
plan year; divided by
(ii) Total contributions for the plan
year.
(7) The adjusted contributions of a
plan for a plan year are the plan’s total
contributions for the plan year by all
employers, multiplied by the
adjustment factor for the plan. For this
purpose, ‘‘the plan’s total contributions
for the plan year’’ means the total
unadjusted plan contributions for the
plan year that would otherwise be
included in the denominator of the
allocation fraction in the absence of
section 305(g)(1) of ERISA, including
any employer contributions owed with
respect to earlier periods that were
collected in that plan year, and
excluding any amounts contributed in
that plan year by an employer that
withdrew from the plan during that plan
year. The adjustment factor for the plan
is the quotient, for all rate history
groups that are represented in the proxy
group, of —
(i) Total adjusted contributions for the
plan year; divided by
(ii) Total contributions for the plan
year.
(8) Under this method, in determining
the denominator of a plan’s unfunded
vested benefits allocation fraction, the
contributions taken into account with
respect to any plan year (beginning with
the base year) are the plan’s adjusted
contributions for the plan year.
(9) Notwithstanding the foregoing
provisions of this paragraph (d), if total
contributions for a year for a rate history
group or for a plan are not timely and
reasonably available for calculating
adjusted contributions for that year,
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each relevant contribution rate for the
year may be multiplied by the projected
contribution base units for the year
corresponding to that rate and the sum,
for all rates, may be used in place of
total contributions for that year.
(e) Effective and applicability dates.
(1) Effective date. This section is
effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section
applies to employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan
years beginning on or after February 8,
2021.
■ 20. Add § 4211.15 to read as follows:
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
§ 4211.15 Simplified methods for
determining expiration date of a collective
bargaining agreement.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor may
amend a plan without PBGC approval to
adopt any of the simplified methods in
this section to fulfill the requirements of
section 305(g)(4) of ERISA and 432(g)(4)
of the Code and § 4211.4(b)(2)(iii) for a
withdrawal that occurs on or after the
plan’s reversion date.
(b) Reversion date. The reversion date
is either—
(1) The expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement
requiring plan contributions that expires
after the plan is no longer in endangered
or critical status, or
(2) The date that is the later of—
(i) The end of the first plan year
following the plan year in which the
plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status; or
(ii) The end of the plan year that
includes the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement
requiring plan contributions that expires
after the plan is no longer in endangered
or critical status.
(3) For purposes of paragraph (b)(2) of
this section, the expiration date of a
collective bargaining agreement that by
its terms remains in force until
terminated by the parties thereto is
considered to be the earlier of—
(i) The termination date agreed to by
the parties thereto; or
(ii) The first day of the third plan year
following the plan year in which the
plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status.
(c) Example. The simplified method
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section is
illustrated by the following example.
(1) Facts. A plan certifies that it is not
in endangered or critical status for the
plan year beginning January 1, 2021.
The plan operates under several
collective bargaining agreements. The
plan sponsor adopts a rule providing
that all contribution increases will be
included in the numerator and
denominator of the allocation fractions
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for withdrawals occurring after October
31, 2022, the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement
requiring plan contributions that expires
after January 1, 2021.
(2) Allocation fraction. A contributing
employer withdraws from the plan in
November 2022, after the date
designated by the plan sponsor for the
inclusion of all contribution rate
increases in the allocation fraction. The
allocation fraction used by the plan
sponsor to determine the employer’s
share of the plan’s unfunded vested
benefits includes all of the employer’s
required contributions in the numerator
and total contributions made by all
employers in the denominator,
including any amounts related to
contribution increases previously
disregarded.
(d) Effective and applicability dates.
(1) Effective date. This section is
effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section
applies to employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan
years beginning on or after February 8,
2021.
■ 21. Add § 4211.16 to read as follows:
§ 4211.16 Simplified methods for
disregarding benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor may
amend a plan without PBGC approval to
adopt the simplified methods in this
section to fulfill the requirements of
section 305(g)(1) of ERISA and section
432(g)(1) of the Code and § 4211.6 to
disregard benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions.
(b) Basic rule. The withdrawal
liability of a withdrawing employer is
the sum of paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of
this section, and then adjusted by
paragraphs (A)-(D) of section 4201(b)(1)
of ERISA. The amount determined
under paragraph (b)(1) may not be less
than zero.
(1) The amount that would be the
employer’s allocable amount of
unfunded vested benefits determined in
accordance with section 4211 of ERISA
under the method in use by the plan
without regard to § 4211.6 (but taking
into account § 4211.4); and
(2) The employer’s proportional share
of the value of each of the benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions
required to be disregarded under
§ 4211.6 determined in accordance with
this section.
(c) Benefit suspension. This paragraph
(c) applies to a benefit suspension under
§ 4211.6(a)(3).
(1) General. The employer’s
proportional share of the present value
of a benefit suspension as of the end of
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the plan year before the employer’s
withdrawal is determined by applying
paragraph (c)(2) or (3) of this section to
the present value of the suspended
benefits, as authorized by the
Department of the Treasury in
accordance with section 305(e)(9) of
ERISA, calculated either as of the date
of the benefit suspension or as of the
end of the plan year coincident with or
following the date of the benefit
suspension (the ‘‘authorized value’’).
(2) Static value method. A plan may
provide that the present value of the
suspended benefits as of the end of the
plan year in which the benefit
suspension takes effect and for each of
the succeeding 9 plan years is the
authorized value in paragraph (c)(1) of
this section. An employer’s proportional
share of the present value of a benefit
suspension to which this paragraph (c)
applies using the static value method is
determined by multiplying the present
value of the suspended benefits by a
fraction—
(i) The numerator is the sum of all
contributions required to be made by
the withdrawing employer for the 5
consecutive plan years ending before
the plan year in which the benefit
suspension takes effect; and
(ii) The denominator is the total of all
employers’ contributions for the 5
consecutive plan years ending before
the plan year in which the suspension
takes effect, increased by any employer
contributions owed with respect to
earlier periods which were collected in
those plan years, and decreased by any
amount contributed by an employer that
withdrew from the plan during those
plan years. If a plan uses an allocation
method other than the presumptive
method in section 4211(b) of ERISA or
similar method, the denominator after
the first year is decreased by the
contributions of any employers that
withdrew from the plan and were
unable to satisfy their withdrawal
liability claims in any year before the
employer’s withdrawal.
(iii) In determining the numerator and
the denominator in paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, the rules under § 4211.4
(and permissible modifications under
§ 4211.12 and simplified methods under
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
(3) Adjusted value method. A plan
may provide that the present value of
the suspended benefits as of the end of
the plan year in which the benefit
suspension takes effect is the authorized
value in paragraph (c)(1) of this section
and that the present value as of the end
of each of the succeeding nine plan
years (the ‘‘revaluation date’’) is the
present value, as of a revaluation date,
of the benefits not expected to be paid
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after the revaluation date due to the
benefit suspension. An employer’s
proportional share of the present value
of a benefit suspension to which this
paragraph (c) applies using the adjusted
value method is determined by
multiplying the present value of the
suspended benefits by a fraction—
(i) The numerator is the sum of all
contributions required to be made by
the withdrawing employer for the 5
consecutive plan years ending before
the employer’s withdrawal; and
(ii) The denominator is the total of all
employers’ contributions for the 5
consecutive plan years ending before
the employer’s withdrawal, increased by
any employer contributions owed with
respect to earlier periods which were
collected in those plan years, and
decreased by any amount contributed by
an employer that withdrew from the
plan during those plan years.
(iii) In determining the numerator and
the denominator in this paragraph (c)(3),
the rules under § 4211.4 (and
permissible modifications under
§ 4211.12 and simplified methods under
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
(iv) If a benefit suspension in
§ 4211.6(a)(3) is a temporary suspension
of the plan’s payment obligations as
authorized by the Department of the
Treasury, the present value of the
suspended benefits in this paragraph
(c)(3) includes only the value of the
suspended benefits through the ending
period of the benefit suspension.
(d) Benefit reductions. This paragraph
(d) applies to benefits reduced under
§ 4211.6(a)(1) or (2).
(1) Value of a benefit reduction. The
value of a benefit reduction is—
(i) The unamortized balance, as of the
end of the plan year before the
withdrawal, of;
(ii) The value of the benefit reduction
as of the end of the plan year in which
the reduction took effect; and
(iii) Determined using the same
assumptions as for unfunded vested
benefits and amortization in level
annual installments over a period of 15
years.
(2) Employer’s proportional share of a
benefit reduction. An employer’s
proportional share of the value of a
benefit reduction to which this
paragraph (d) applies is determined by
multiplying the value of the benefit
reduction by a fraction—
(i) The numerator is the sum of all
contributions required to be made by
the withdrawing employer for the 5
consecutive plan years ending before
the employer’s withdrawal; and
(ii) The denominator is the total of all
employers’ contributions for the 5
consecutive plan years ending before
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the employer’s withdrawal, increased by
any employer contributions owed with
respect to earlier periods which were
collected in those plan years, and
decreased by any amount contributed by
an employer that withdrew from the
plan during those plan years.
(iii) The 5 consecutive plan years
ending before the plan year in which the
adjustable benefit reduction takes effect
may be used in determining the
numerator and the denominator in this
paragraph (d). If such 5-year period is
used, in determining the denominator, if
a plan uses an allocation method other
than the presumptive method in section
4211(b) of ERISA or similar method, the
denominator after the first year is
decreased by the contributions of any
employers that withdrew from the plan
and were unable to satisfy their
withdrawal liability claims in any year
before the employer’s withdrawal.
(iv) In determining the numerator and
the denominator in this paragraph (d),
the rules under § 4211.4 (and
permissible modifications under
§ 4211.12 and simplified methods under
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
(e) Example. The simplified
framework using the static value
method under § 4211.16(c)(2) for
disregarding a benefit suspension is
illustrated by the following example.
(1) Facts. Assume that a calendar year
multiemployer plan receives final
authorization by the Secretary of the
Treasury for a benefit suspension,
effective January 1, 2018. The present
value, as of that date, of the benefit
suspension is $30 million. Employer A,
a contributing employer, withdraws
during the 2022 plan year. Employer A’s
proportional share of contributions for
the 5 plan years ending in 2017 (the
year before the benefit suspension takes
effect) is 10 percent. Employer A’s
proportional share of contributions for
the 5 plan years ending before Employer
A’s withdrawal in 2022 is 11 percent.
The plan uses the rolling-5 method for
allocating unfunded vested benefits to
withdrawn employers under section
4211 of ERISA. The plan sponsor has
adopted by amendment the static value
simplified method for disregarding
benefit suspensions in determining
unfunded vested benefits. Accordingly,
there is a one-time valuation of the
initial value of the suspended benefits
with respect to employer withdrawals
occurring during the 2019 through 2028
plan years, the first 10 years of the
benefit suspension.
(2) Unfunded vested benefits allocable
to Employer A. To determine the
amount of unfunded vested benefits
allocable to Employer A, the plan’s
actuary first determines the amount of
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1275
Employer A’s withdrawal liability as of
the end of 2021 assuming the benefit
suspensions remain in effect. Under the
rolling-5 method, if the plan’s unfunded
vested benefits as determined in the
plan’s 2021 plan year valuation were
$170 million (not including the present
value of the suspended benefits), the
share of these unfunded vested benefits
allocable to Employer A is equal to $170
million multiplied by Employer A’s
allocation fraction of 11 percent, or
$18.7 million. The plan’s actuary then
adds to this amount Employer A’s
proportional 10 percent share of the $30
million initial value of the suspended
benefits, or $3 million. Employer A’s
share of the plan’s unfunded vested
benefits for withdrawal liability
purposes is $21.7 million ($18.7 million
+ $3 million).
(3) Adjustment of allocation fraction.
If another significant contributing
employer—Employer B—had
withdrawn in 2019 and was unable to
satisfy its withdrawal liability claim, the
allocation fraction applicable to the
value of the suspended benefits is
adjusted. The contributions in the
denominator for the last 5 plan years
ending in 2017 is reduced by the
contributions that were made by
Employer B, thereby increasing
Employer A’s allocable share of the $30
million value of the suspended benefits.
(f) Effective and applicability dates.
(1) Effective date. This section is
effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section
applies to employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan
years beginning on or after February 8,
2021.
§ 4211.21
[Amended]
22. In § 4211.21, amend paragraph (b)
by removing ‘‘§ 4211.12’’ and adding in
its place ‘‘section 4211 of ERISA’’.
■
§ 4211.31
[Amended]
23. In § 4211.31, amend paragraph (b)
by removing ‘‘set forth in § 4211.12’’
and adding in its place ‘‘subpart B of
this part’’.
■ 24. Amend § 4211.32 by adding
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
■
§ 4211.32 Presumptive method for
withdrawals after the initial plan year.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) In determining the numerator and
the denominator in this paragraph (c),
the rules under § 4211.4 (and
permissible simplified methods under
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
*
*
*
*
*
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§ 4211.36 Modifications to the
determination of initial liabilities, the
amortization of initial liabilities, and the
allocation fraction.
25. Amend § 4211.33 by adding
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
■
§ 4211.33 Modified presumptive method
for withdrawals after the initial plan year.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) In determining the numerator and
the denominator in this paragraph (c),
the rules under § 4211.4 (and
permissible simplified methods under
§§ 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
26. In § 4211.36, amend paragraph (a)
by adding a sentence at the end of the
paragraph to read as follows:
■
(a) * * * In determining the
numerators and the denominators in
paragraph (d) of this section, the rules
under § 4211.4 (and permissible
simplified methods under §§ 4211.14
and 4211.15) apply.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 27. Add appendix to part 4211 to read
as follows:
APPENDIX TO PART 4211—
EXAMPLES
The examples in this appendix illustrate
simplified methods for disregarding certain
contribution increases in the allocation
fraction provided in § 4211.14 of this part.
Example 1. Determining the Numerator of
the Allocation Fraction Using the Employer’s
2014 PY
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
Employer A’s Contribution Rate ..............
Contribution Base Units ...........................
Contributions ............................................
$5.51
800,000
$4.41M
The plan sponsor makes a determination
pursuant to section 305(g)(3) of ERISA that
the annual 5 percent contribution rate
increases applicable to Employer A and other
employers in Plan X after the 2014 plan year
were required to enable the plan to meet the
requirement of its rehabilitation plan and
should be disregarded; benefits were not
increased after plan year 2014.
Applying the simplified method,
contribution rate increases that went into
effect during plan years beginning after
December 31, 2014 would be disregarded:
The $5.51 contribution rate in effect at the
end of plan year 2014 would be held steady
in computing Employer A’s required
contributions for the plan years included in
the numerator of the allocation fraction.
Based on 4.3 million contribution base units,
this results in total required contributions of
$23.7 million over 5 years. Absent section
305(g)(3) of ERISA, the sum of the
contributions required to be made by
Employer A would have been determined by
multiplying Employer A’s contribution rate
in effect for each plan year by the
contribution base units in that plan year,
producing total required contributions of
$28.96 million over 5 years.
Example 2. Determining the Denominator
of the Allocation Fraction Using the Proxy
Group Method (§ 4211.14(d)).
Assume a plan covers ten employers. For
2017, three small employers were in rate
history group X, representing less than 5
percent of active plan participants;
employers A and B and two other employers
were in rate history group Y; and employer
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2016 PY
n/a
800,000
$4.86M
2017 PY
2018 PY
n/a
800,000
$5.10M
n/a
900,000
$6.03M
C and two other employers were in rate
history group Z. For 2018, there were
changes in contribution rates for some of B’s
employees, and as a result, employer B is
being treated as two employers, B1 and B2.
B1 remained in rate history group Y because,
while B1 has a significantly lower
contribution rate than A, the contributions of
both are subject to the same percentage
increase each year. B2 was added to rate
history group X. X continues to represent less
than 5 percent of active plan participants,
and the plan continues to ignore it in forming
the proxy group. The plan forms a 2018
proxy group of three employers—A and B1
from rate history group Y and C from rate
history group Z—that together represent
more than 10 percent of active plan
participants.
Contributions for 2018 are $1,000,000:
$20,000 for rate history group X, $740,000 for
rate history group Y, and $240,000 for rate
history group Z, with A and B1 accounting
for $150,000 and C accounting for $45,000 of
the total contribution amounts.
Contribution rates for 2018 for A, B1, and
C (excluding rate increases required to be
disregarded for withdrawal liability
purposes) and contribution base units for the
three employers are: For A, 87 cents and
100,000 CBUs; for B1, 43 cents and 50,000
CBUs; and for C, 70 cents and 60,000 CBUs,
as shown in rows (1) and (2) of the table
below. Thus, the three employers’ adjusted
contributions are $87,000, $21,500, and
$42,000 respectively, as shown in row (3).
Moving from the employer level to the rate
history group level, the adjusted
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Plan Year 2014 Contribution Rate
(§ 4211.14(b)).
Assume Plan X is a calendar year
multiemployer plan in critical status which
did not have a benefit increase after plan year
2014. In accordance with section 305(g)(3)(B)
of ERISA, the annual 5 percent contribution
rate increases applicable to Employer A and
other employers in Plan X after the 2014 plan
year were deemed to be required to enable
the plan to meet the requirement of its
rehabilitation plan and must be disregarded.
Employer A, a contributing employer,
withdraws from Plan X in 2021. Using the
rolling-5 method, Plan X has unfunded
vested benefits of $200 million as of the end
of the 2020 plan year. To determine
Employer A’s allocable share of these
unfunded vested benefits, Employer A’s
hourly required contribution rate and
contribution base units for the 2014 plan year
and each of the 5 plan years between 2016
and 2020 are identified as shown in the
following table:
2019 PY
n/a
900,000
$6.33M
2020 PY
n/a
900,000
$6.64M
5-year total
....................
4,300,000
$28.96M
contributions for employers in the proxy
group that are in the same rate history group
are added together (row (4)). Those totals are
then divided by total actual contributions for
the proxy group employers in each rate
history group (row (6)) to derive an
adjustment factor for each rate history group
(row (7)) that is applied to the actual
contributions of all employers in the rate
history group (row (8)) to get the adjusted
contributions for each rate history group
represented in the proxy group (row (9)).
Moving from the rate history group level to
the plan level, the same process is repeated.
Adjusted employer contributions for the rate
history group are summed (row (10)) and
divided by the total contributions for all rate
history groups represented in the proxy
group (row (11)) to get an adjustment factor
for the plan (row (12)). Contributions for rate
history group X are excluded from row (11)
because no employer in rate history group X
is in the proxy group. The adjustment factor
for the plan is then applied to total plan
contributions (row (13)) to get adjusted plan
contributions (row (14)). Contributions for
rate history group X are included in row (13)
because—although X was ignored in
determining the adjustment factor for the
plan — the adjustment factor applies to all
plan contributions (other than those by
employers excluded from the plan’s
allocation fraction denominator). The plan
will use the adjusted plan contributions in
row (14) as the total contributions for 2018
in determining the denominator of any
allocation fraction that includes
contributions for 2018.
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Rate history group
Row number
Regulatory
reference in
§ 4211.14(d)
Description of action
Z
Employer A
Employer B1
Employer C
2018 contribution rate excluding disregarded increases.
2018 CBUs .........................................
Adjusted
employer
contributions
(1)x(2).
$0.87 per CBU .....
$0.43 per CBU .....
$0.70 per CBU
100,000
$87,000
50,000
$21,500
60,000
$42,000
(1) .........................
(6)(ii) .....................
(2) .........................
(3) .........................
(6)(i) .....................
(6) .........................
(4) .........................
(7)(i) .....................
Sum of adjusted contributions for
proxy employers by rate history
group.
$108,500
(5) .........................
(7)(ii) .....................
Unadjusted contributions for proxy
employers.
$100,000
(6) .........................
(7)(ii) .....................
Sum of unadjusted contributions for
proxy employers by rate history
group.
$125,000
$45,000
(7) .........................
(7) .........................
Adjustment factor by rate history
group (4)/(6).
0.868
0.933
(8) .........................
(7) .........................
Total actual contributions by rate history group.
$740,000
$240,000
(9) .........................
(7) .........................
Adjusted contributions by rate history
group (7)x(8).
$642,320
$223,920
(10) .......................
(8)(i) .....................
Sum of adjusted contributions for rate
history groups represented in proxy
group.
$866,240
(11) .......................
(8)(ii) .....................
Total actual contributions for rate history groups represented in proxy
group.
$980,000
(12) .......................
(8) .........................
Adjustment factor for plan (10)/(11) ...
0.884
(13) .......................
(8) .........................
Total plan contributions ......................
$1,000,000
(14) .......................
(8) .........................
Adjusted plan contributions (for allocation
fraction
denominators)
(12)x(13).
$884,000
§ 4219.1
PART 4219—NOTICE, COLLECTION,
AND REDETERMINATION OF
WITHDRAWAL LIABILITY
28. The authority citation for part
4219 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3) and
1399(c)(6).
29. In § 4219.1:
a. Amend paragraph (a) by adding two
sentences at the end of the paragraph;
■ b. Amend paragraph (b)(1) by
removing in the third sentence ‘‘shall’’
and adding in its place ‘‘does’’;
■ c. Amend paragraph (b)(2) by
removing in the second sentence ‘‘shall
cease’’ and adding in its place ‘‘cease’’;
■ d. Amend paragraph (c) by removing
in the second sentence ‘‘whom’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘which’’.
The additions read as follows:
■
■
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Y
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Purpose and scope.
[Amended]
30. In § 4219.2:
■ a. Amend paragraph (a) by removing
‘‘multiemployer plan,’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘multiemployer plan,
nonforfeitable benefit,’’;
■ b. Amend the definition of ‘‘Mass
withdrawal valuation date’’ by removing
the last sentence of the definition;
■
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
$25,000
$45,000
c. Amend the definition of
‘‘Reallocation record date’’ by removing
‘‘shall be’’ and adding in its place ‘‘is’’;
■ d. Amend the definition of
‘‘Unfunded vested benefits’’ by
removing ‘‘a plan’s vested nonforfeitable
benefits (as defined for purposes of this
section)’’ and adding in its place ‘‘a
plan’s nonforfeitable benefits’’.
■ 31. Add § 4219.3 to read as follows:
■
(a) * * * Section 4219(c) of ERISA
requires a withdrawn employer to make
annual withdrawal liability payments at
a set rate over the number of years
necessary to amortize its withdrawal
liability, generally limited to a period of
20 years. This subpart provides rules for
disregarding certain contribution
increases in determining the highest
contribution rate under section 4219(c)
of ERISA.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 4219.2
$42,000
§ 4219.3 Disregarding certain
contributions.
(a) General rule. For purposes of
determining the highest contribution
rate under section 4219(c) of ERISA, a
plan must disregard:
(1) Surcharge. Any surcharge under
section 305(e)(7) of ERISA and section
432(e)(7) of the Code the obligation for
which accrues on or after December 31,
2014.
(2) Contribution increase. Any
increase in the contribution rate or other
increase in contribution requirements
E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM
08JAR1
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES
1278
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 5 / Friday, January 8, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
that goes into effect during a plan year
beginning after December 31, 2014, so
that a plan may meet the requirements
of a funding improvement plan under
section 305(c) of ERISA and section
432(c) of the Code or a rehabilitation
plan under section 305(e) of ERISA and
section 432(e) of the Code, except to the
extent that one of the following
exceptions applies pursuant to section
305(g)(3) of ERISA and section 432(g)(3)
of the Code:
(i) The increases in contribution
requirements are due to increased levels
of work, employment, or periods for
which compensation is provided.
(ii) The additional contributions are
used to provide an increase in benefits,
including an increase in future benefit
accruals, permitted by section
305(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of ERISA and
section 432(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of the
Code.
(b) Simplified method for a plan that
is no longer in endangered or critical
status. A plan sponsor may amend a
plan without PBGC approval to use the
simplified method in this paragraph (b)
for purposes of determining the highest
contribution rate for a plan that is no
longer in endangered or critical status.
The highest contribution rate is the
greater of—
(1) The employer’s contribution rate
as of the date that is the later of the last
day of the first plan year that ends on
or after December 31, 2014 and the last
day of the plan year the employer first
contributes to the plan (the ‘‘employer
freeze date’’) plus any contribution
increases after the employer freeze date,
and before the employer’s withdrawal
date that are determined in accordance
with the rules under § 4219.3(a)(2)(ii); or
(2) The highest contribution rate for
any plan year after the plan year that
includes the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement of the
withdrawing employer requiring plan
contributions that expires after the plan
is no longer in endangered or critical
status, or, if earlier, the date as of which
the withdrawing employer renegotiated
a contribution rate effective after the
plan year the plan is no longer in
endangered or critical status.
(c) Example: The simplified method
in paragraph (b) of this section is
illustrated by the following example.
(1) Facts. A contributing employer
withdraws in plan year 2028, after the
2027 expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement
requiring plan contributions that expires
after the plan is no longer in critical
status in plan year 2026. The plan
sponsor determines that under the
expiring collective bargaining agreement
the employer’s $4.50 hourly
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16:26 Jan 07, 2021
Jkt 253001
contribution rate in plan year 2014 was
required to increase each year to $7.00
per hour in plan year 2025, to enable the
plan to meet its rehabilitation plan. The
plan sponsor determines that, over this
period, a cumulative increase of $0.85
per hour was used to fund benefit
increases, as provided by plan
amendment. Under a new collective
bargaining agreement effective in 2027,
the employer’s hourly contribution rate
is reduced to $5.00.
(2) Highest contribution rate. The plan
sponsor determines that the employer’s
highest contribution rate for purposes of
section 4219(c) of ERISA is $5.35,
because it is the greater of the highest
rate in effect after the plan is no longer
in critical status ($5.00) and the
employer’s contribution rate in plan
year 2014 ($4.50) plus any increases
between 2015 and 2025 ($0.85) that
were required to be taken into account
under section 305(g)(3) of ERISA.
(d) Effective and applicability dates.
(1) Effective date. This section is
effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section
applies to employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan
years beginning on or after February 8,
2021.
Issued in Washington, DC.
Gordon Hartogensis,
Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2020–28866 Filed 1–7–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7709–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army, Corps of
Engineers
33 CFR Part 220
[COE–2020–0009]
RIN 0710–AA85
Design Criteria for Dam and Lake
Projects
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Department of Defense.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule removes the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ part
titled Design Criteria for Dam and Lake
Projects. This part is out-of-date and
otherwise covers internal agency
operations that have no public
compliance component or adverse
public impact. Therefore, this part can
be removed from the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR).
DATES: This rule is effective on January
8, 2021.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Department of the Army,
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, ATTN:
CECW–EC (Mr. Robert Bank), 441 G
Street NW, Washington, DC 20314–
1000.
ADDRESSES:
Mr.
Robert Bank at (202) 761–5532 or by
email at Robert.Bank@usace.army.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
This final rule removes from the 33
CFR part 220, Design Criteria for Dam
and Lake Projects providing policy,
design, and report requirements for low
level discharge facilities for drawdown
of lakes to be impounded by Corps Civil
Works projects. The rule was initially
published in the Federal Register on
May 8, 1975 (40 FR 20081), and
amended on August 22, 1975 (40 FR
36774). While the rule applies only to
Corps design criteria on Corps dam and
lake projects, it was published, at that
time, in the Federal Register to aid
public accessibility.
The solicitation of public comment
for this removal is unnecessary because
the rule is out-of-date, duplicative of
existing internal agency guidance, and
otherwise covers internal agency
operations that have no public
compliance component or adverse
public impact. For current public
accessibility purposes, updated internal
agency policy on this topic may be
found in Engineer Manual 1110–2–
1602, ‘‘Hydraulic Design of Reservoir
Outlet Works’’ (available at https://
www.publications.usace.army.mil/
Portals/76/Publications/
EngineerManuals/EM_1110-2-1602.pdf).
The agency policy is only applicable to
field operating activities having
responsibility for the design of Corps
Civil Works projects and provides
guidance specific to the Corps’
hydraulic design analysis of reservoir
outlet works facilities.
This rule removal is being conducted
to reduce confusion for the public as
well as for the Corps regarding the
current policy which governs the Corps’
design criteria for Corps dam and lake
projects. Because the regulation does
not place a burden on the public, its
removal does not provide a reduction in
public burden or costs.
This rule is not significant under
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866,
‘‘Regulatory Planning and Review.’’
Therefore, the requirements of E.O.
13771, ‘‘Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs,’’ do not
apply. This removal supports a
recommendation of the DoD Regulatory
Reform Task Force.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 220
Dams, Flood control.
E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 5 (Friday, January 8, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1256-1278]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-28866]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY CORPORATION
29 CFR Parts 4001, 4204, 4206, 4207, 4211, 4219
RIN 1212-AB36
Methods for Computing Withdrawal Liability, Multiemployer Pension
Reform Act of 2014
AGENCY: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation is amending its
regulations on Allocating Unfunded Vested Benefits to Withdrawing
Employers and Notice, Collection, and Redetermination of Withdrawal
Liability. The amendments implement statutory provisions affecting the
determination of a withdrawing employer's liability under a
multiemployer plan and annual withdrawal liability payment amount when
the plan has had benefit reductions, benefit suspensions, surcharges,
or contribution increases that must be disregarded. The amendments also
provide simplified withdrawal liability calculation methods.
DATES: Effective date: This rule is effective February 8, 2021.
Applicability date: This rule applies to employer withdrawals from
multiemployer plans that occur in plan years beginning on or after
February 8, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Hilary Duke ([email protected]),
Assistant General Counsel for Regulatory Affairs, Office of the General
Counsel, 202-229-3839. (TTY users may call the Federal relay service
toll-free at 800-877-8339 and ask to be connected to 202-229-3839.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
Purpose of Regulatory Action
This rulemaking is needed to implement statutory changes affecting
the determination of an employer's withdrawal liability and annual
withdrawal liability payment amount when the employer withdraws from a
multiemployer plan. The final regulation provides simplified methods
for determining withdrawal liability and annual payment amounts, which
a multiemployer plan sponsor can adopt to satisfy the statutory
requirements and to reduce administrative burden. In this final rule,
PBGC adopts its proposed changes implementing statutory changes and
providing simplified methods, with some modifications in response to
public comments.
PBGC's legal authority for this action is based on section
4002(b)(3) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA), which authorizes PBGC to issue regulations to carry out the
purposes of title IV of ERISA; section 305(g) \1\ of ERISA, which
provides the statutory requirements for changes to withdrawal
liability; section 4001 of ERISA (Definitions); section 4204 of ERISA
(Sale of Assets); section 4206 of ERISA (Adjustment for Partial
Withdrawal); section 4207 (Reduction or Waiver of Complete Withdrawal
Liability); section 4211 of ERISA (Methods for Computing Withdrawal
Liability); and section 4219 of ERISA (Notice, Collection, Etc., of
Withdrawal Liability). Section 305(g)(5) of ERISA directs PBGC to
provide simplified methods for multiemployer plan sponsors to use in
determining withdrawal liability and annual payment amounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 305(g) of ERISA and section 432(g) of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code) are parallel provisions in ERISA and the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Major Provisions of the Regulatory Action
This final regulation amends PBGC's regulations on Allocating
Unfunded Vested Benefits to Withdrawing Employers (29 CFR part 4211)
and Notice, Collection, and Redetermination of Withdrawal Liability (29
CFR part 4219). The changes implement statutory changes affecting the
determination of an employer's withdrawal liability and annual
withdrawal liability payment amount and provide simplified methods for
a plan sponsor to--
Disregard reductions and suspensions of nonforfeitable
benefits in determining the plan's unfunded vested benefits for
purposes of calculating withdrawal liability.
Disregard certain contribution increases if the plan is
using the presumptive, modified presumptive, or rolling-5 method for
purposes of determining the allocation of unfunded vested benefits to
an employer.
Disregard certain contribution increases for purposes of
determining an employer's annual withdrawal liability payment.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Discussion of Final Regulation and Public Comments
III. Regulatory Changes To Reflect Benefit Decreases
A. Requirement To Disregard Adjustable Benefit Reductions and
Benefit Suspensions (Sec. 4211.6)
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding Adjustable Benefit
Reductions and Benefit Suspensions (Sec. 4211.16)
1. Employer's Proportional Share of the Value of an Adjustable
Benefit Reduction
2. Employer's Proportional Share of the Value of a Benefit
Suspension
3. Chart of Simplified Methods To Determine Employer's
Proportional Share of the Value of a Benefit Suspension and an
Adjustable Benefit Reduction
IV. Regulatory Changes To Reflect Surcharges and Contribution
Increases
A. Requirement to Disregard Surcharges and Certain Contribution
Increases in Determining the Allocation of Unfunded Vested Benefits
to an Employer (Sec. 4211.4) and the Annual Withdrawal Liability
Payment Amount (Sec. 4219.3)
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding Certain Contribution
Increases in the Allocation Fraction (Sec. 4211.14)
1. Determining the Numerator Using the Employer's Plan Year 2014
Contribution Rate
2. Determining the Denominator Using Each Employer's Plan Year
2014 Contribution Rate
3. Determining the Denominator Using the Proxy Group Method
C. Simplified Methods After Plan Is No Longer in Endangered or
Critical Status
1. Including Contribution Increases in Determining the
Allocation of Unfunded Vested Benefits (Sec. 4211.15)
2. Continuing to Disregard Contribution Increases in Determining
the Highest Contribution Rate (Sec. 4219.3)
V. Compliance With Rulemaking Guidelines
I. Background
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) administers two
insurance programs for private-sector defined benefit pension plans
under title IV of the Employee Retirement
[[Page 1257]]
Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA): A single-employer plan termination
insurance program and a multiemployer plan insolvency insurance
program. In general, a multiemployer pension plan is a collectively
bargained plan involving two or more unrelated employers. This final
rule deals with multiemployer plans.
Under sections 4201 through 4225 of ERISA, when a contributing
employer withdraws from an underfunded multiemployer plan, the plan
sponsor assesses withdrawal liability against the employer. Withdrawal
liability represents a withdrawing employer's proportionate share of
the plan's unfunded benefit obligations. To assess withdrawal
liability, the plan sponsor must determine the withdrawing employer's:
(1) Allocable share of the plan's unfunded vested benefits (the value
of nonforfeitable benefits that exceeds the value of plan assets) as
provided under section 4211, and (2) annual withdrawal liability
payment as provided under section 4219.
There are four statutory allocation methods for determining a
withdrawing employer's allocable share of the plan's unfunded vested
benefits under section 4211 of ERISA: The presumptive method, the
modified presumptive method, the rolling-5 method, and the direct
attribution method. Under the first three methods, the basic formula
for an employer's withdrawal liability is one or more pools of unfunded
vested benefits times the withdrawing employer's allocation fraction--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Under ERISA sections 4211(b) and (c), the presumptive method
provides for 20 distinct year-by-year liability pools (each pool
represents the year in which the unfunded liability arose), the
modified presumptive method provides for two liability pools, and
the rolling-5 method provides for a single liability pool computed
as of the end of the plan year preceding the plan year when the
withdrawal occurs.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR08JA21.008
The withdrawing employer's allocation fraction is generally equal
to the withdrawing employer's required contributions over all
employers' contributions over the 5 years preceding the relevant period
or periods. Under the fourth method, the direct attribution method, an
employer's withdrawal liability is based on the benefits and assets
attributed directly to the employer's participants' service, and a
portion of the unfunded benefit obligations not attributable to any
present employer.
PBGC's regulation on Allocating Unfunded Vested Benefits to
Withdrawing Employers (29 CFR part 4211) provides modifications to the
allocation methods that plan sponsors may adopt. Part 4211 also
provides a process that plan sponsors may use to request approval of
other methods.
A withdrawn employer makes annual withdrawal liability payments at
a set rate over the number of years necessary to amortize its
withdrawal liability, generally limited to a period of 20 years. If any
of an employer's withdrawal liability remains unpaid under the payment
schedule after 20 years, the unpaid amount may be allocated to other
employers in addition to their basic withdrawal liability.
Annual withdrawal liability payments are designed to approximate
the employer's annual contributions before its withdrawal. The basic
formula for the annual withdrawal liability payment under section
4219(c) of ERISA is a contribution rate multiplied by a contribution
base. Specifically, the annual withdrawal liability payment is
determined as follows--
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR08JA21.009
As the basic formulas show, withdrawal liability and an employer's
annual withdrawal liability payment depend, among other things, on the
value of unfunded vested benefits and the amount of contributions.
In response to financial difficulties faced by some multiemployer
plans, Congress made statutory changes in 2006 and 2014 that affect
benefits and contributions under these plans. The four types of changes
provided for are shown in the following table:
[[Page 1258]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustable benefit reductions Reductions in adjustable benefits (e.g.,
post-retirement death benefits, early
retirement benefits) and reductions
arising from a restriction on lump sums
and other benefits.\3\
Benefit Suspensions.......... Temporary or permanent suspension of any
current or future payment obligation of
the plan to any participant or
beneficiary under the plan, whether or
not in pay status at the time of the
benefit suspension.\4\
Surcharges................... Surcharges, calculated as a percentage of
required contributions, that certain
underfunded plans are required to impose
on contributing employers.\5\
Contribution Increases....... Contribution increases that plan trustees
may require under a funding improvement
or rehabilitation plan.\6\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
While each of the changes has its own requirements, they generally
are all required to be ``disregarded'' by the plan sponsor in
determining an employer's withdrawal liability. The statutory
``disregard'' rules require in effect that all computations in
determining and assessing withdrawal liability be made using values
that do not reflect the lowering of benefits or raising of
contributions required to be disregarded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Section 305(e)(8) and (f) of ERISA and section 432(e)(8) and
(f) of the Code.
\4\ Section 305(e)(9) of ERISA and section 432(e)(9) of the
Code. The Department of the Treasury must approve an application for
a benefit suspension, in consultation with PBGC and the Department
of Labor, upon finding that the plan is eligible for the suspension
and has satisfied the criteria specified by the Multiemployer
Pension Reform Act of 2014, Public Law 113-235 (MPRA). The
Department of the Treasury has jurisdiction over benefit suspensions
and issued a final rule implementing the MPRA provisions on April
28, 2016 (81 FR 25539).
\5\ Under section 305(e)(7) of ERISA and section 432(e)(7) of
the Code, each employer otherwise obligated to make contributions
for the initial plan year and any subsequent plan year that a plan
is in critical status must pay a surcharge to the plan for such plan
year, until the effective date of a collective bargaining agreement
(or other agreement pursuant to which the employer contributes) that
includes terms consistent with the rehabilitation plan adopted by
the plan sponsor.
\6\ The plan sponsor of a plan in endangered status for a plan
year must adopt a funding improvement plan under section 305(c) of
ERISA and section 432(c) of the Code. The plan sponsor of a plan in
critical status for a plan year must adopt a rehabilitation plan
under section 305(e) of ERISA and section 432(e) of the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Pension Protection Act of 2006, Public Law 109-280 (PPA 2006),
amended ERISA's withdrawal liability rules to require a plan sponsor to
disregard the adjustable benefits reductions in section 305(e)(8) of
ERISA and the elimination of accelerated forms of distribution in
section 305(f) of ERISA (which, for purposes of this preamble are
referred to as adjustable benefit reductions) in determining a plan's
unfunded vested benefits. PPA 2006 also requires a plan sponsor to
disregard the contribution surcharges in section 305(e)(7) of ERISA in
determining the allocation of unfunded vested benefits.
PBGC issued a final rule in December 2008 (73 FR 79628)
implementing these PPA 2006 ``disregard'' rules by modifying the
definition of ``nonforfeitable benefit'' for purposes of PBGC's
regulations on Allocating Unfunded Vested Benefits to Withdrawing
Employers (29 CFR part 4211) and on Notice, Collection, and
Redetermination of Withdrawal Liability (29 CFR part 4219). PBGC
provided simplified methods to determine withdrawal liability for plan
sponsors required to disregard adjustable benefit reductions in
Technical Update 10-3 (July 15, 2010). The 2008 final rule also
excluded the employer surcharge from the numerator and denominator of
the allocation fractions used under section 4211 of ERISA. The preamble
included an example of the application of the exclusion of surcharge
amounts from contributions in the allocation fraction.
The Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014, Public Law 113-235
(MPRA), made further amendments to the withdrawal liability rules and
consolidated them with the PPA 2006 changes. The additional MPRA
amendments require a plan sponsor to disregard benefit suspensions in
determining the plan's unfunded vested benefits for a period of 10
years after the effective date of a benefit suspension. MPRA also
requires a plan sponsor to disregard certain contribution increases in
determining the allocation of unfunded vested benefits. A plan sponsor
must also disregard surcharges and those contribution increases in
determining an employer's annual withdrawal liability payment under
section 4219 of ERISA. The MPRA amendments apply to benefit suspensions
and contribution increases that go into effect during plan years
beginning after December 31, 2014, and to surcharges for which the
obligation accrues on or after December 31, 2014.
Congress also authorized PBGC to create simplified methods for
applying the ``disregard'' rules.
Proposed Regulation
On February 6, 2019 (at 84 FR 2075), PBGC published a proposed rule
to explain the PPA 2006 and MPRA ``disregard'' requirements and PBGC's
simplified methods. Each simplified method provided applies to one or
more specific aspects of the process of determining and assessing
withdrawal liability.
PBGC provided a 60-day comment period and received eight comment
letters from: Actuarial consulting firms; associations representing
multiemployer plans, pension practitioners, and contributing employers;
and a practitioner. To address the comments, PBGC is making
modifications and clarifications, adding examples, and providing
additional simplified methods. The public comments, PBGC's responses,
and the provisions of this final rule are discussed below.
II. Discussion of Final Regulation and Public Comments
Overview
This final rule, like the proposed, implements the PPA 2006 and
MPRA requirements to disregard adjustable benefit reductions, benefit
suspensions, surcharges, and contribution increases. All of the
commenters commented on the provision in the proposed rule implementing
the exception to the disregard rules for a contribution increase that
provides an increase in benefits. The provision, comments, and changes
to the proposed rule in response to the comments are discussed in more
detail in section IV.A. of the preamble. Except for those changes, the
final rule is substantially the same as the proposed rule.
The final rule, like the proposed rule, provides: (1) Simplified
methods for disregarding adjustable benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions; and (2) simplified methods for disregarding certain
contribution increases in determining the allocation of unfunded vested
benefits to an employer and the annual withdrawal liability payment
amount. A plan sponsor may, but is not required to, adopt any one or
more of the simplified methods to use in the calculation of determining
and assessing withdrawal liability but must follow the statutory
withdrawal liability rules for all other aspects. In response to
comments, PBGC made clarifications and improvements to the simplified
methods, which are discussed below in sections III and IV of the
preamble.
[[Page 1259]]
Because some of the commenters found the examples illustrating
calculations using the simplified methods helpful, PBGC is adding some
of the examples to the operative text and to an appendix to part 4211.
The final rule also eliminates some language that merely repeats
statutory provisions and makes other editorial changes.
``Safe Harbors''
One commenter asked PBGC to clarify that the simplified methods are
``safe harbor'' methods, but that alternate simplified methods could be
appropriate. The commenter requested that PBGC consider providing plan
sponsors with the opportunity to seek approval for an alternative
simplified method. Under the final rule, PBGC clarifies that, similar
to a safe harbor, a plan sponsor that adopts one of the simplified
methods satisfies the requirements of the applicable statutory
provision and regulations. Consistent with the proposed rule, a plan
sponsor may choose to use an alternative approach that satisfies the
requirements of the applicable statutory provisions and regulations
rather than any of the simplified methods. While PBGC does not approve
alternative simplified methods on a plan-by-plan basis, PBGC welcomes
informal consultations with trustees and their advisors on whether an
alternative approach could satisfy the requirements of the applicable
statutory provisions and regulations. In addition, PBGC invited
comments in the proposed rule on other simplified methods that a plan
might use to satisfy certain requirements in section 305(g) of ERISA
and incorporated changes in the final rule in response to comments
received. PBGC encourages trustees and their advisors to inform PBGC of
additional simplified methods to consider for a future rulemaking.
Effective and Applicability Dates
Under the proposed rule, the changes relating to simplified methods
would be applicable to employer withdrawals that occur on or after the
effective date of the final rule. It further proposed that the changes
relating to MPRA benefit suspensions and contribution increases for
determining an employer's withdrawal liability would apply to plan
years beginning after December 31, 2014, and to surcharges the
obligation for which occur on or after December 31, 2014. The proposed
rule did not provide an effective date.
Three commenters asked for clarification of the effective date and
were concerned that the rule would require retroactive application. Two
commenters were concerned that plans could be required to implement
changes at some time other than the beginning or end of a specified
plan year. The commenters made specific recommendations for an
applicability date. One commenter recommended that the date be based on
withdrawals in plan years beginning on or after the effective date of
the final rule. A second commenter recommended that the regulation
apply for withdrawals beginning in the plan year that next follows the
plan year in which the rule becomes effective with a transition period
in the event the next plan year begins within 6 months following the
issuance of the final regulation. A third commenter recommended a
transition period of at least 1 plan year to give plans time to
evaluate and consider the methodologies included in the regulation for
contribution increases that provide an increase in benefits. PBGC did
not adopt this suggested transition period because the final rule does
not include the proposed rule's provision implementing the exception
under section 305(g)(3) of ERISA for additional contributions used to
provide an increase in benefits. The provision is discussed in section
IV.A. of the preamble.
In response to the comments about the rule's effective date, PBGC
is clarifying that the changes made by the final rule apply to plans
prospectively. Accordingly, the final rule is effective February 8,
2021 and applies to employer withdrawals from multiemployer plans that
occur in plan years beginning on or after the effective date. Just as
before the final rule, plan sponsors may apply their own reasonable
interpretations of the statutory provisions to calculate an employer's
withdrawal liability. Plan sponsors may, but are not required to, adopt
the simplified methods provided in the final rule. In addition, as
suggested by one commenter, PBGC added effective dates in parts 4211
and 4219 for the new sections providing simplified methods.
III. Regulatory Changes To Reflect Benefit Decreases
A. Requirement To Disregard Adjustable Benefit Reductions and Benefit
Suspensions (Sec. 4211.6)
Under the basic methodology explained in section I above, a plan
sponsor must calculate the value of unfunded vested benefits (the value
of nonforfeitable benefits that exceeds the value of plan assets) \7\
to determine a withdrawing employer's liability. In computing
nonforfeitable benefits, under section 305(g)(1) of ERISA, a plan
sponsor is required to disregard certain adjustable benefit reductions
and benefit suspensions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The term ``unfunded vested benefits'' is defined in section
4213(c) of ERISA. However, for purposes of PBGC's notice,
collection, and redetermination of withdrawal liability regulation
(29 CFR part 4219), the calculation of unfunded vested benefits, as
used in subpart B of the regulation, is modified to reflect the
value of certain claims. To avoid confusion, PBGC proposes to add a
specific definition of ``unfunded vested benefits'' in each part of
its multiemployer regulations that uses the term.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final regulation, like the proposed, adds a new Sec. 4211.6 to
PBGC's unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation to implement the
requirements that plan sponsors must disregard adjustable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions in allocating unfunded vested
benefits. Section 4211.6 replaces the approach previously taken by PBGC
to implement the PPA 2006 ``disregard'' rules by modifying the
definition of ``nonforfeitable benefit.'' The added MPRA ``disregard''
rules made that prior approach difficult to sustain. The final
regulation, like the proposed, eliminates the special definition of
``nonforfeitable benefit'' in PBGC's unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation and notice, collection, and redetermination of
withdrawal liability regulation.
MPRA limited the requirement for a plan sponsor to disregard a
benefit suspension in determining an employer's withdrawal liability to
10 years. Under the final regulation, like the proposed, the
requirement to disregard a benefit suspension applies only for
withdrawals that occur within the 10 plan years after the end of the
plan year that includes the effective date of the benefit suspension.
To calculate withdrawal liability during the 10-year period, a plan
sponsor disregards the benefit suspension by including the value of the
suspended benefits in determining the amount of unfunded vested
benefits allocable to an employer. For example, if a plan has a benefit
suspension with an effective date within the plan's 2018 plan year, the
plan sponsor would include the value of the suspended benefits in
determining the amount of unfunded vested benefits allocable to an
employer for any withdrawal occurring in plan years 2019 through 2028.
The plan sponsor would not include the value of the suspended benefits
in determining the amount of unfunded vested benefits allocable to an
employer for a withdrawal occurring after the 2028 plan year.
In cases where a benefit suspension ends and full benefit payments
resume during the 10-year period following a suspension, the value of
the suspended
[[Page 1260]]
benefits would continue to be included when calculating withdrawal
liability until the end of the plan year in which the resumption of
full benefit payments was required as determined under Department of
the Treasury guidance, or otherwise occurs.
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding Adjustable Benefit Reductions
and Benefit Suspensions (Sec. 4211.16)
Under section 305(g)(5) of ERISA, PBGC is required to provide
simplified methods for a plan sponsor to determine withdrawal liability
when the plan has adjustable benefit reductions or benefit suspensions
that are required to be disregarded. The final regulation, like the
proposed, provides a simplified framework for disregarding adjustable
benefit reductions and benefit suspensions in Sec. 4211.16 of PBGC's
unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation. A plan sponsor may
adopt the simplified framework in Sec. 4211.16 to satisfy the
requirements of section 305(g)(1) of ERISA and Sec. 4211.6 of PBGC's
unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation, or may choose to use an
alternative approach to satisfy the requirements of the statutory
provisions and regulation.
Under the simplified framework, if a plan has adjustable benefit
reductions or benefit suspensions, the plan sponsor first calculates an
employer's withdrawal liability using the plan's withdrawal liability
method reflecting any adjustable benefit reduction and benefit
suspension (Sec. 4211.16(b)(1)). The plan sponsor adds the employer's
proportional share of the value of any adjustable benefit reduction and
any benefit suspension (Sec. 4211.16(b)(2)). In summary, withdrawal
liability for a withdrawing employer is based on the sum of the
following--
(1) The amount that would be the employer's allocable amount of
unfunded vested benefits determined in accordance with section 4211 of
ERISA under the method in use by the plan (based on the value of the
plan's nonforfeitable benefits reflecting any adjustable benefit
reduction and any benefit suspension),\8\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The amount of unfunded vested benefits allocable to an
employer under section 4211 may not be less than zero.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) The employer's proportional share of the value of any
adjustable benefit reduction and the employer's proportional share of
the value of any suspended benefits.
Consistent with the proposed rule, under the final rule, this
amount is required to be calculated before application of the
adjustments required by section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA, including the de
minimis reduction and the 20-year cap on payments under section
4219(c)(1)(B) of ERISA.
Two commenters asked for clarification on how the rule for the
application of adjustments required by section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA
interacts with guidance provided under Technical Update 10-3 (July 15,
2010) for plan sponsors required to disregard adjustable benefit
reductions. The commenters stated that plans may have interpreted
Technical Update 10-3 to adjust for the de minimis reduction before
adding the proportional share of the adjustable benefit reduction. One
commenter stated that any clarification of the method provided in
Technical Update 10-3 should be provided only on a prospective basis
and that the final rule should provide a safe harbor for plans that may
have interpreted Technical Update 10-3 differently.
PBGC agrees that Technical Update 10-3 did not specifically address
how adjustments for the de minimis reduction and the 20-year cap on
payments should be applied. PBGC is aware that some plans that adopted
the simplified method under Technical Update 10-3 make separate
calculations of an employer's liability under section 4211 of ERISA,
subject to the adjustments required under section 4201, and an
employer's liability for adjustable benefit reductions.
In reviewing the issue in the context of benefit suspensions, PBGC
concluded that the ``allocable amount of unfunded vested benefits''
under section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA, which is calculated before
adjustments are made, should include the employer's proportional share
of the value of benefit suspensions required to be disregarded. For
purposes of providing a simplified framework for adjustable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions, PBGC provided in the proposed rule
that the adjustments required by section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA are made
after adding the amount that would be the employer's allocable amount
of unfunded vested benefits determined in accordance with section 4211
of ERISA and the employer's proportional share of the value of each of
the benefit reductions and benefit suspensions required to be
disregarded. Section 4211.16(b) of the final rule is unchanged from the
proposed rule with respect to the application of the adjustments in
section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA. In consideration of the comments received,
PBGC is clarifying that the simplified framework in the final rule
applies prospectively only and is applicable for withdrawals that occur
in plan years beginning after the effective date of the final rule.
One commenter suggested that if the employer's allocable amount
determined under Sec. 4211.16(a) results in a negative value, a plan
sponsor should be able to use the negative value to offset the
employer's allocable share of the value of the adjustable benefit
reductions and benefit suspensions under Sec. 4211.16(b). The preamble
to the proposed rule stated that under the simplified framework, the
amount of unfunded vested benefits allocable to an employer under
section 4211 of ERISA may not be less than zero. PBGC acknowledges that
in some cases where precise actuarial calculations are being made
(i.e., calculations made not using a simplified method), it might be
appropriate to offset an interim negative value of allocable unfunded
vested benefits calculated under section 4211 of ERISA against a
positive allocable value of benefit reductions or benefit suspensions.
However, because the value of the employer's allocable share of the
value of adjustable benefit reductions and benefit suspensions under
the simplified framework are approximations that may be less than the
value that would be allocated under a non-simplified actuarial
calculation, PBGC did not allow for an offset of a negative number. In
the final rule, a sentence is added to the basic rule for the
simplified framework in Sec. 4211.16(b) to make it clear that the
amount determined under paragraph (b)(1) may not be a negative number
to be used as an offset to the employer's allocable share of the value
of the adjustable benefit reductions and benefit suspensions.
The same commenter stated that construction-industry plans that
have no unfunded vested benefits under section 4211 of ERISA should be
permitted to elect a fresh start for that plan year, even if the plan
continues to have liability for adjusted benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions. PBGC agrees with the comment and that a plan sponsor's
decision to implement a fresh start does not affect the value of
adjustable benefit reductions and benefit suspensions in calculating
withdrawal liability. In the final rule, PBGC is clarifying in new
Sec. 4211.12(d)(3) that in the case of a plan that primarily covers
employees in the building and construction industry, the plan year
designated by a plan amendment to implement a fresh start must be a
plan year for which the plan has no unfunded vested benefits determined
in accordance with section 4211 of ERISA without regard to Sec.
4211.6.
[[Page 1261]]
The commenter also suggested that to the extent adjustable benefit
reductions are restored, plan sponsors should be able to treat the
liability for the adjustable benefit reductions as if it had been
reduced or eliminated. PBGC agrees that, in this circumstance, a plan
sponsor can offset the present value of restored adjustable benefits
against the unamortized balance of the adjustable benefit reduction
under Sec. 4211.16(b)(2). The present value of the restored adjustable
benefits would be included in the calculation of the allocable amount
of unfunded vested benefits determined under Sec. 4211.16(b)(1).
The simplified framework provides simplified methods for
calculating the employer's proportional share of the value of any
adjustable benefit reduction and the employer's proportional share of
the value of any suspended benefits. If a plan has adjustable benefit
reductions, the plan sponsor may adopt the simplified method discussed
below to determine the value of the adjustable benefit reductions. If a
plan has a benefit suspension, the plan sponsor may adopt either the
static value method or adjusted value method to determine the value of
the suspended benefits (also discussed below). The contributions for
the allocation fractions for each of the simplified methods are
determined in accordance with the rules for disregarding contribution
increases under Sec. 4211.4 of PBGC's unfunded vested benefits
allocation regulation (and permissible modifications and
simplifications under Sec. Sec. 4211.12-4211.15 of PBGC's unfunded
vested benefits allocation regulation).
Under the simplified framework, a plan sponsor must include
liabilities for benefits that have been reduced or suspended in the
value of vested benefits. But the simplified framework does not require
a plan sponsor to calculate what plan assets would have been if benefit
payments had been higher. One commenter asked for the final regulation
to clarify that, regardless of whether plan sponsors adopt simplified
methods for disregarding adjustable benefit reductions or benefit
suspensions, plans are not required to track what plan assets would
have been absent those reductions or suspensions. PBGC believes that
generally accepted actuarial principles and practices accommodate the
adoption of assumptions about quantities (like the amount of such an
asset reduction) that may not have a material effect on the results of
the computation. Thus, the issue raised by the commenter is one for
resolution by the plan actuary.
1. Employer's Proportional Share of the Value of an Adjustable Benefit
Reduction
Except as discussed in the preamble, the final regulation, like the
proposed, incorporates the guidance provided in PBGC Technical Update
10-3 for disregarding the value of adjustable benefit reductions.
Technical Update 10-3 explains the simplified method for determining an
employer's proportional share of the value of adjustable benefit
reductions. The method applies for any employer withdrawal that occurs
in any plan year following the plan year in which an adjustable benefit
reduction takes effect and before the value of the adjustable benefit
reduction is fully amortized. The method is summarized in the chart in
section III.B.3. below.
An employer's proportional share of the value of adjustable benefit
reductions is determined as of the end of the plan year before
withdrawal as follows--
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR08JA21.010
The value of the adjustable benefit reductions is determined using
the same assumptions used to determine unfunded vested benefits for
purposes of section 4211 of ERISA. The unamortized balance as of a plan
year is the value as of the end of the year in which the reductions
took effect (base year), reduced as if that amount were being fully
amortized in level annual installments over 15 years, at the plan's
valuation interest rate, beginning with the first plan year after the
base year.
The withdrawing employer's allocation fraction is the amount of the
employer's required contributions over a 5-year period divided by the
amount of all employers' contributions over the same 5-year period.
The 5-year period for computing the allocation fraction is the most
recent 5 plan years ending before the employer's withdrawal. For
purposes of determining the allocation fraction, the denominator is
increased by any employer contributions owed with respect to earlier
periods that were collected in the 5 plan years and decreased by any
amount contributed by an employer that withdrew from the plan during
those plan years, or, alternatively, adjusted as permitted under Sec.
4211.12.
For calculating the value of adjustable benefit reductions,
Technical Update 10-3 provides an adjustment if the plan uses the
rolling-5 method. The value is reduced by outstanding claims for
withdrawal liability that can reasonably be expected to be collected
from employers that withdrew as of the end of the plan year before the
employer's withdrawal. PBGC is not including this adjustment in this
final rule. The requirement to reduce the unfunded vested benefits by
the present value of future withdrawal liability payments for
previously withdrawn employers is part of the rolling-5 calculation,
and PBGC believes that excluding this adjustment avoids some ambiguity
that might have led to additional unnecessary calculations and
recordkeeping.
One commenter asked for the final regulation to provide an
additional option for allocating the value of adjustable benefit
reductions for plans using the presumptive method based on the 5
consecutive plan years ending before the plan year in which the
adjustable benefit reduction takes effect. The commenter stated that
the option would produce an allocation that is more consistent with the
amount that would be allocated to an employer if the plan did not use a
simplified allocation method. PBGC considered the comment and has
determined that the option could be useful for plans using any
withdrawal liability method under section 4211 of ERISA. Accordingly,
PBGC has added this option to the simplified framework in Sec.
4211.16(d).
Under the added option, the 5-year period for computing the
allocation fraction is the most recent 5 plan years ending before the
plan year in which the adjustable benefit reduction takes effect. For
purposes of determining the allocation fraction, the denominator is
increased by any employer contributions owed with respect to earlier
periods that were collected in the 5 plan years and decreased by any
amount contributed by an employer that withdrew from the plan during
those plan years, or, alternatively, adjusted as permitted under Sec.
4211.12.
For the additional option, the regulation requires an additional
[[Page 1262]]
adjustment to the denominator of the allocation fraction for a plan
using a method other than the presumptive method or a similar method.
The denominator after the first year of the 5-year period is decreased
by the contributions of any employers that withdrew and were unable to
satisfy their withdrawal liability claims in any year before the
employer's withdrawal. This adjustment is intended to approximate how a
withdrawn employer's withdrawal liability is calculated under the
rolling-5 and modified presumptive methods by fully allocating the
present value of the suspended benefits to solvent employers. The
adjustment is not necessary under the presumptive method, as that
method has a specific adjustment for previously allocated withdrawal
liabilities that are deemed uncollectible.
2. Employer's Proportional Share of the Value of a Benefit Suspension
a. Static Value Method and Adjusted Value Method
PBGC's simplified framework provides two simplified methods that a
plan sponsor may choose between to calculate a withdrawing employer's
proportional share of the value of a benefit suspension--the static
value method and the adjusted value method. Both methods apply for any
employer withdrawal that occurs within the 10 plan years after the end
of the plan year that includes the effective date of the benefit
suspension (10-year period). A chart including a comparison of the two
methods is in section III.B.3. below.
Under either method, an employer's proportional share of the value
of a benefit suspension is determined as follows--
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR08JA21.011
Under the static value method, the present value of the suspended
benefits as of a single calculation date is used for all withdrawals in
the 10-year period. At the plan sponsor's option, the present value
could be determined as of: (1) The effective date of the benefit
suspension (as similar calculations are required as of that date to
obtain approval of the benefit suspension); or (2) the last day of the
plan year coincident with or following the date of the benefit
suspension (as calculations are required as of that date for other
withdrawal liability purposes). The present value is determined using
the amount of the benefit suspension as authorized by the Department of
the Treasury under the plan's application for benefit suspension.
Under the adjusted value method, the present value of the suspended
benefits for a withdrawal in the first year of the 10-year period is
the same as under the static value method. For withdrawals in years 2-
10 of the 10-year period, the value of the suspended benefits is
determined as of the ``revaluation date,'' the last day of the plan
year before the employer's withdrawal. The value of the suspended
benefits is equal to the present value of the benefits not expected to
be paid in the year of withdrawal or thereafter due to the benefit
suspension. For example, assume that a calendar year multiemployer plan
receives final authorization by the Secretary of the Treasury for a
benefit suspension, effective January 1, 2018, and a contributing
employer withdraws during the 2022 plan year. The revaluation date is
December 31, 2021. The value of the suspended benefits is the present
value of the benefits not expected to be paid after December 31, 2021,
due to the benefit suspension.
For both methods, the withdrawing employer's allocation fraction is
the amount of the employer's required contributions over a 5-year
period divided by the amount of all employers' contributions over the
same 5-year period.
For the static value method, the 5-year period is determined based
on the most recent 5 plan years ending before the plan year in which
the benefit suspension takes effect. For the adjusted value method, the
5-year period is determined based on the most recent 5 plan years
ending before the employer's withdrawal (which is the same 5-year
period as is used for the simplified method for adjustable benefit
reductions).
For both the static value method and the adjusted value method, the
denominator of the allocation fraction is increased by any employer
contributions owed with respect to earlier periods that were collected
in the applicable 5-year period for the allocation fraction and
decreased by any amount contributed by an employer that withdrew from
the plan during those same 5 plan years, or, alternatively, adjusted as
permitted under Sec. 4211.12 (the same adjustments are made using the
simplified method for adjustable benefit reductions).
For the static value method, the regulation requires an additional
adjustment in the denominator of the allocation fraction for a plan
using a method other than the presumptive method or similar method. The
denominator after the first year of the 5-year period is decreased by
the contributions of any employers that withdrew and were unable to
satisfy their withdrawal liability claims in any year before the
employer's withdrawal. This adjustment is intended to approximate how a
withdrawn employer's withdrawal liability is calculated under the
rolling-5 and modified presumptive methods by fully allocating the
present value of the suspended benefits to solvent employers. The
adjustment is not necessary under the presumptive method, as that
method has a specific adjustment for previously allocated withdrawal
liabilities that are deemed uncollectible.
An example illustrating the simplified framework using the static
value method for disregarding a benefit suspension is provided in Sec.
4211.16(e) of PBGC's unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation.
b. Temporary Benefit Suspension
If a benefit suspension is a temporary suspension of the plan's
payment obligations as authorized by the Department of the Treasury,
the present value of the suspended benefits includes the value of the
suspended benefits only through the ending period of the benefit
suspension.
For example, assume that a calendar-year plan has an approved
benefit suspension effective December 31, 2018, for a 15-year period
ending December 31, 2033. Effective January 1, 2034, benefits are to be
restored (prospectively only) to levels not less than those accrued as
of December 30, 2018, plus benefits accrued after December 31, 2018.
Employer A withdraws in a complete withdrawal during the 2022 plan
year. The plan sponsor first determines Employer A's allocable amount
of unfunded vested benefits under section 4211 of ERISA. That
[[Page 1263]]
amount is the present value of vested benefits as of December 31, 2021,
including the present value of the vested benefits that are expected to
be restored effective January 1, 2034. The plan sponsor then determines
Employer A's proportional share of the value of the suspended benefits.
The plan uses the static value method. The value of the suspended
benefits equals the present value, as of December 31, 2018, of the
benefits accrued as of December 30, 2018, that would otherwise have
been expected to have been paid, but for the benefit suspension, during
the 15-year period beginning December 31, 2018, and ending December 31,
2033. The portion of this present value allocable to Employer A is
added to the unfunded vested benefits allocable to Employer A under
section 4211 of ERISA.
c. Partial Withdrawals
PBGC invited public comment on whether the examples in the proposed
rule are helpful and whether there are additional types of examples
that would help plan sponsors with these calculations. Two commenters
stated that the provided examples are helpful and suggested that PBGC
provide examples involving partial withdrawals. One commenter asked for
clarification with examples of the simplified method for adjustable
benefit reductions as applied to partial withdrawals. Section 4206 of
ERISA and 29 CFR part 4206 provide rules for determining the amount of
an employer's liability for a partial withdrawal and, in the case of a
subsequent withdrawal, for determining the amount of the reduction of
the employer's liability for the prior partial withdrawal. PBGC
appreciates the comments requesting examples involving partial
withdrawals and provides the following example using the simplified
method in Sec. 4211.16.
Example: Assume the following:
(1) The employer's allocable amount of unfunded vested benefits
determined under section 4211 of ERISA is $1,000,000.
(2) The employer's proportional share of the value of the
adjustable benefit reduction is $100,000 (after 8 years of amortization
of the original amount).
(3) The employer's proportional share of the value of the benefit
suspension is $250,000 (the employer's partial withdrawal occurs 3
years after the effective date of the benefit suspension).
To calculate the employer's withdrawal liability amount, under
Sec. 4211.16(b), the amounts in (1) through (3) above are added
together for a sum of $1,350,000. Based on the sum, a de minimis
reduction would not apply. The sum is then adjusted in accordance with
the rules for adjustment of partial withdrawal under section 4206 of
ERISA. Thus, in this example, the employer's proportional share of the
value of the adjustable benefit reduction and proportional share of the
value of the benefit suspension are disregarded in determining the
withdrawn employer's partial withdrawal liability assessment amount.
4. Chart of Simplified Methods To Determine Employer's Proportional
Share of the Value of a Benefit Suspension and an Adjustable Benefit
Reduction
The following chart provides a summary of the simplified methods
discussed above:
Employer's Proportional Share of the Value of a Benefit Suspension or an Adjustable Benefit Reduction
[Value of benefit x allocation fraction]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefit suspension
Method ----------------------------------------------------- Adjustable benefit
Static value method Adjusted value method reduction
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Value of Benefit Suspension or Withdrawals in years 1-10 Withdrawals in year 1 Unamortized balance of
Adjustable Benefit Reduction. after the benefit after the suspension: the value of the
suspension: Present Same as Static Value adjustable benefit
value of the suspended Method. reduction using the
benefits as authorized Withdrawals in years 2- same assumptions as for
by the Department of the 10 after the UVBs for purposes of
Treasury in accordance suspension: The present section 4211 of ERISA
with section 305(e)(9) value, determined as of and amortization in
of ERISA calculated as the end of the plan level annual
of the date of the year before a installments over 15
benefit suspension or withdrawal, of the years.
the last day of the plan benefits not expected
year coincident with or to be paid in the year
following the date of of withdrawal or
the benefit suspension. thereafter due to the
benefit suspension.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allocation Fraction.............. For all three methods, the Allocation Fraction is the amount of the
employer's required contributions over a 5-year period divided by the amount
of all employers' contributions over the same 5-year period. The Allocation
Fraction is determined in accordance with rules to disregard contribution
increases under Sec. 4211.4 and permissible modifications and
simplifications under Sec. Sec. 4211.12-15.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Five-Year Period for the Five consecutive plan Five consecutive plan Choice of 5 consecutive
Allocation Fraction. years ending before the years ending before the plan years ending
plan year in which the employer's withdrawal. before the employer's
benefit suspension takes withdrawal or the plan
effect. year in which the
adjustable benefit
reduction takes effect.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustments to Denominator of the Same as Adjusted Value The denominator is Same as Adjusted Value
Allocation Fraction. Method, but using the 5- increased by any Method if using 5
year period for the employer contributions consecutive plan years
Static Value Method. In owed with respect to before the employer's
addition, if a plan uses earlier periods which withdrawal.
a method other than the were collected in the 5- If using alternative 5-
presumptive method, the year period and year period, same as
denominator after the decreased by any amount Static Value Method,
first year of the 5-year contributed by an but using the 5
period is decreased by employer that withdrew consecutive plan years
the contributions of any from the plan during before the plan year in
employers that withdrew the 5-year period, or, which the adjustable
from the plan and were alternatively, adjusted benefit reduction takes
unable to satisfy their as permitted under Sec. effect.
withdrawal liability 4211.12.
claims in any year
before the employer's
withdrawal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 1264]]
IV. Regulatory Changes To Reflect Surcharges and Contribution Increases
A. Requirement To Disregard Surcharges and Certain Contribution
Increases in Determining the Allocation of Unfunded Vested Benefits to
an Employer (Sec. 4211.4) and the Annual Withdrawal Liability Payment
Amount (Sec. 4219.3)
Changes in contributions can affect the calculation of an
employer's withdrawal liability and annual withdrawal liability payment
amount. For example, such changes can increase or decrease the
allocation fraction (discussed above in section I) that is used to
calculate an employer's withdrawal liability. They can also increase or
decrease an employer's highest contribution rate used to calculate the
employer's annual withdrawal liability payment amount (also discussed
above in section I).
Required surcharges and certain contribution increases would
typically result in an increase in an employer's withdrawal liability
even though unfunded vested benefits are being reduced by the increased
contributions. Sections 305(g)(2) and (3) of ERISA mitigate the effect
on withdrawal liability by providing that these surcharges and
contribution increases that are required or made to enable the plan to
meet the requirements of the funding improvement plan or rehabilitation
plan are disregarded in determining contribution amounts used for the
allocation of unfunded vested benefits and the annual payment amount.
These sections do not apply for purposes of determining the unfunded
vested benefits attributable to an employer by a plan using the direct
attribution method under section 4211(c)(4) of ERISA or a comparable
method.
Except as described below the final regulation, like the proposed,
amends Sec. 4211.4 of PBGC's unfunded vested benefits allocation
regulation and Sec. 4219.3 of PBGC's notice, collection, and
redetermination of withdrawal liability regulation to incorporate the
requirements to disregard these surcharges and contribution increases.
The final regulation also provides simplified methods for disregarding
certain contribution increases in the allocation fraction in Sec.
4211.14 of PBGC's unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation
(discussed below in section IV.B.). The final rule incorporates the
disregard rules and simplified methods for contribution increases in
the allocation methods for merged multiemployer plans provided in
subpart D of part 4211. PBGC is not providing a simplified method for
disregarding surcharges in the final rule because we believe that plans
have been able to apply the statutory requirements without the need for
a simplified method.
The provision regarding contribution increases applies to increases
in the contribution rate or other required contribution increases that
go into effect during plan years beginning after December 31, 2014.\9\
A special rule under section 305(g)(3)(B) of ERISA provides that a
contribution increase is deemed to be required or made to enable the
plan to meet the requirement of the funding improvement plan or
rehabilitation plan, such that the contribution increase is
disregarded. However, the statute provides that this deeming rule does
not apply to increases in contribution requirements due to increases in
levels of work, employment, or periods for which compensation is
provided, or additional contributions used to provide an increase in
benefits, including an increase in future benefit accruals, permitted
by section 305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B). Accordingly, the final
regulation, with changes from the proposed rule as discussed below,
provides that these increases are included as contribution increases
for purposes of determining the allocation fraction and the highest
contribution rate. In addition, under section 305(g)(4) of ERISA,
contribution increases are not treated as necessary to satisfy the
requirement of the funding improvement plan or rehabilitation plan
after the plan has emerged from critical or endangered status. This
exception applies only to the determination of the allocation fraction.
The table below summarizes the statutory exceptions to the rule to
disregard a contribution increase under section 305(g)(3) and (4) of
ERISA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The requirement to disregard surcharges for purposes of
determining an employer's annual withdrawal liability payment is
effective for surcharges the obligation for which accrues on or
after December 31, 2014.
Exceptions to Disregarding a Contribution Increase
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allocation fraction and highest (1) Increases in contribution
contribution rate exceptions requirements associated with
(simplified methods for these increased levels of work,
exceptions are explained in III.B. of employment, or periods for
the preamble). which compensation is
provided.
(2) Additional contributions
used to provide an increase in
benefits, including an
increase in future benefit
accruals, permitted by section
305(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of
ERISA.
Allocation fraction exception (3) The withdrawal occurs on or
(simplified methods for this exception after the expiration date of
are explained in III.C. of the the employer's collective
preamble). bargaining agreement in effect
in the plan year the plan is
no longer in endangered or
critical status, or, if
earlier, the date as of which
the employer renegotiates a
contribution rate effective
after the plan year the plan
is no longer in endangered or
critical status.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sections 4211.4(b)(2)(ii) and 4219.3(a)(2)(ii) of the proposed rule
reflected an interpretation of the exception under section 305(g)(3) of
ERISA for additional contributions used to provide an increase in
benefits. Those sections provided, ``The contribution increase provides
an increase in benefits, including an increase in future benefit
accruals, permitted by sections 305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA
or sections 432(d)(1)(B) or section 432(f)(1)(B) of the Code, and an
increase in benefit accruals as an integral part of the benefit
formula.'' The proposed rule required the portion of such contribution
increase that is attributable to an increase in benefit accruals to be
determined actuarially and for those contribution increases to be
included in the calculation of a withdrawn employer's withdrawal
liability and annual withdrawal liability payment amount.
Three commenters disagreed with the interpretation provided in the
proposed rule. They said that the only narrow exception to include
contribution increases that are used to provide an increase in benefits
in the calculation of
[[Page 1265]]
withdrawal liability is for increases specifically referred to in
sections 305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA. These commenters noted
that plans have excluded all contribution increases under a funding
improvement plan or rehabilitation plan that became effective in plan
years beginning after December 31, 2014 from the calculation of
withdrawal liability. In contrast, two commenters noted that some plans
have included all contribution increases. One commenter explained that
some plans use a benefit formula that makes it nearly impossible to
allocate between what is and is not benefit bearing. Commenters
objected to the requirement for the portion of the contribution
increase that is benefit bearing to be determined actuarially. They
stated that this would cause an increase in administrative costs and
that plans have used other methods to differentiate between benefit
bearing and non-benefit bearing portions of contribution increases. For
example, some plan sponsors classify contribution increases as either
benefit-bearing (i.e., included in a benefit formula that bases
accruals on contributions) or supplemental (i.e., excluded from the
benefit accrual formula). Finally, one commenter asked whether
certifications under sections 305(d)(1)(B) or 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA are
required in the case of a plan with a percentage of contribution
formula and a contribution increase required by a funding improvement
plan or rehabilitation plan.
The final rule modifies proposed Sec. 4211.4(b)(2)(ii) and Sec.
4219.3(a)(2)(ii) to provide the exception to the disregard rules for a
contribution increase that provides an increase in benefits by simply
referring to section 305(g)(3) of ERISA. Specifically, Sec.
4211.4(b)(2)(ii) and Sec. 4219.3(a)(2)(ii) in the final rule describe
the exception as applying to contribution increases ``used to provide
an increase in benefits, including an increase in future benefit
accruals, permitted by section (d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of ERISA.'' A
plan sponsor is required to include such contribution increases in the
calculation of a withdrawn employer's withdrawal liability and annual
withdrawal liability payment amount. The final rule does not provide
further interpretation. Commenters raised interpretive issues about
sections 305(g)(3), 305(d)(1)(B), and 305(f)(1)(B) of ERISA that are
under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Treasury as well as
plan benefit design issues that require further study. PBGC is
continuing to examine these issues with the Department of the Treasury
and, if appropriate, will issue additional guidance.
B. Simplified Methods for Disregarding Certain Contribution Increases
in the Allocation Fraction (Sec. 4211.14)
The allocation fraction that is used in the presumptive, modified
presumptive, and rolling-5 methods to determine an employer's
proportional share of unfunded vested benefits is discussed above in
section I. The final regulation adds a new Sec. 4211.14 to the
unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation to provide a choice of
one simplified method for the numerator and two simplified methods for
the denominator of the allocation fraction. A plan sponsor may adopt
the simplified methods in Sec. 4211.14 to satisfy the requirements of
section 305(g)(3) of ERISA and Sec. 4211.4(b)(2) to disregard
contribution increases in determining the allocation of unfunded vested
benefits, or may choose an alternative approach that satisfies the
requirements of the statutory provisions and regulations. A plan
amended to use one or more of the simplified methods in this section
must also apply the rules to disregard surcharges under new Sec.
4211.4.
One commenter asked that the final regulation allow plans using the
direct attribution method to use the simplified methods for
contribution increases if use of such methods is otherwise reasonable.
The disregard rules for contribution increases under section
305(g)(3)(A) of ERISA do not apply for purposes of determining the
unfunded vested benefits attributable to an employer by a plan using
the direct attribution method under section 4211(c)(4) of ERISA or a
comparable method. PBGC's authority to provide simplified methods under
section 305(g)(5) of ERISA is limited to methods for applying the
disregard rules in determining withdrawal liability and payment
amounts. PBGC therefore did not incorporate the commenter's requested
change in the final rule.
1. Determining the Numerator Using the Employer's Plan Year 2014
Contribution Rate
Under the simplified method for determining the numerator of the
allocation fraction, a plan sponsor bases the calculation on an
employer's contribution rate as of the last day of each plan year
(rather than applying a separate calculation for contribution increases
that occur in the middle of a plan year). The plan sponsor starts with
the employer's contribution rate as of the ``employer freeze date.''
The employer freeze date is the date that is the later of the last day
of the first plan year that ends on or after December 31, 2014
(December 31, 2014 for a calendar year plan) and the last day of the
plan year the employer first contributes to the plan. If, after the
employer freeze date, the plan has a contribution rate increase that
provides an increase in benefits so that the contribution increase is
included, that rate increase is added to the contribution rate for each
target year for which the rate increase is effective. Under the method,
the product of the employer freeze date contribution rate (increased in
accordance with the prior sentence, if applicable) and the withdrawn
employer's contribution base units in each plan year (``target year'')
are used for the numerator and the comparable amount determined for
each employer is included in the denominator (described in B.2 below),
unless the plan sponsor uses the proxy group method for determining the
denominator (described in B.3 below). If there is more than one
contribution rate or basis for calculating contribution base units, the
calculations can be performed separately for each contribution rate or
contribution base sub-group and then summed. An example illustrating
the simplified method for disregarding certain contributions in
determining the numerator using the employer's plan year 2014
contribution rate is provided in the appendix to part 4211.
2. Determining the Denominator Using Each Employer's Plan Year 2014
Contribution Rate
Under the first simplified method for determining the denominator
of the allocation fraction, a plan sponsor applies the same principles
as for the simplified method above for determining the numerator of the
allocation fraction. The plan sponsor holds steady each employer's
contribution rate as of the employer freeze date, except for
contribution increases that provide benefit increases as described
above. For each employer, the plan sponsor multiplies this rate by each
employer's contribution base units in each target year.
3. Determining the Denominator Using the Proxy Group Method
Plans frequently offer multiple contribution schedules under a
funding improvement plan or rehabilitation plan, which may have varying
contribution rate increases. Under these and other circumstances, it
could be administratively burdensome for plans to determine the exact
amount of an employer's contributions--excluding contributions required
to be disregarded
[[Page 1266]]
in determining withdrawal liability--to include in the denominator of
the allocation fraction. Accordingly, the regulation provides a second
simplified method for determining contributions in the denominator.
This method, called the proxy group method, is available for plans that
are amended to provide for use of the method. The method permits the
contributions included in the denominator of the allocation fraction
for a plan year to be based on an amount calculated for ``proxy''
representatives of the plan's contributing employers.
A commenter noted that different schedules and rate increases may
apply to different categories of employees of a single employer--for
example, because different collective bargaining agreements apply to
different categories of the employer's employees. In response, the
final regulation permits a single employer whose employees have highly
dissimilar contribution histories to be treated as two or more
employers with more uniform contribution histories in applying the
proxy group method.
Under the proxy group method, employers are grouped in rate history
groups, based on similarity of contribution histories (or same
percentage increases in contributions from year to year).
(Notwithstanding the diversity of contribution histories, rate history
groups may be limited to 10.) Representative employers, representing at
least 10 percent of active plan participants, are drawn from rate
history groups to form the proxy group. ``Adjusted contributions''--
excluding contribution rate increases that must be disregarded for
withdrawal liability purposes--are determined for employers in the
proxy group; then for rate history groups, based on the adjusted
contributions of employers in each rate history group; and finally for
the plan, based on the adjusted contributions of rate history groups
represented in the proxy group. The plan's adjusted contributions form
the denominator of the withdrawal liability allocation fraction.
As with other simplified methods, only contribution rates in effect
at year end need be considered.
The process of forming rate history groups may be illustrated by
the following examples.
Example 1. Employers in Plan A had twelve different contribution
rates at the start of the rehabilitation period, as shown in the
following table:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 Column 4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Row 1........................................... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75
Row 2........................................... 3.00 3.25 3.50 3.75
Row 3........................................... 4.00 4.25 4.50 4.75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The rehabilitation plan requires increases of $0.50 per hour per
year for employers in Row 1, $0.75 per hour per year for those in Row
2, and $1.00 per hour per year for those in Row 3. All collective
bargaining agreements are amended by the beginning of 2015, and the
increases are effective as of the beginning of 2015. The following
table shows the percentage rates of increase in contribution rates at
year-end 2015 compared with year-end 2014:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 Column 4
(percent) (percent) (percent) (percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Row 1........................................... 25.00 22.22 20.00 18.18
Row 2........................................... 25.00 23.08 21.43 20.00
Row 3........................................... 25.00 23.53 22.22 21.05
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the increase rates for employers in Column 1 are the same,
the plan can put those employers in one rate group. Similarly,
employers in Column 2 have relatively uniform rates and can be grouped
together, and likewise for those in Columns 3 and those in Column 4.
Alternatively, employers in Columns 3 and 4 of Row 1 could be grouped
together with those in Column 4 of Row 2; and employers in Columns 3
and 4 of Row 3 could be grouped together with those in Column 3 of Row
2.
Example 2. Plan B has many employers and many contribution rate
schedules. Contributions change between 2010 and 2021 as follows:
Under the default schedule, there are one-time increases of 50
percent in 2010 for employers in Category A (defaults occurring in
2010); 55 percent in 2011 for employers in Category B (defaults
occurring in 2011); and 60 percent in 2012 for employers in Category C
(defaults occurring in 2012). For employers in Category D through Y,
which have negotiated new collective bargaining agreements, increases
are as shown in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual percentage
First increase (year and increase
Category quarter) thereafter through
2021
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D...................... 2010 Q1.................... 3.8
E...................... 2010 Q2.................... 3.9
F...................... 2010 Q3.................... 4.0
G...................... 2010 Q4.................... 4.1
H...................... 2011 Q1.................... 4.3
I...................... 2011 Q2.................... 4.5
J...................... 2011 Q3.................... 4.7
K...................... 2011 Q4.................... 4.9
L...................... 2012 Q1.................... 5.2
M...................... 2012 Q2.................... 5.5
N...................... 2012 Q3.................... 5.8
O...................... 2012 Q4.................... 6.1
P...................... 2013 Q1.................... 6.4
[[Page 1267]]
Q...................... 2013 Q2.................... 6.7
R...................... 2013 Q3.................... 7.1
S...................... 2013 Q4.................... 7.5
T...................... 2014 Q1.................... 8.0
U...................... 2014 Q2.................... 8.5
V...................... 2014 Q3.................... 9.0
W...................... 2014 Q4.................... 9.5
X...................... 2015 Q1.................... 10.3
Y...................... 2015 Q2 and later.......... 11.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The annual percentage increases for employers in Category D through
Y are cumulative. Thus, if an employer's contribution rate for the
second quarter of 2010 in Category F was $100.00, its contributions for
2010, 2011, and 2012 would be $104.00, $108.16, and $112.49 (based on
rates in effect at year-end).
Appropriate rate history groups for 2015 through 2021 could be as
follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rate history group Employer categories in group
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1........................................ A, B, C.
2........................................ D, E, F, G.
3........................................ H, I, J, K.
4........................................ L, M, N, O.
5........................................ P, Q.
6........................................ R, S.
7........................................ T, U.
8........................................ V, W.
9........................................ X.
10....................................... Y.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
These groupings take advantage of the provision that no more than
ten rate history groups need be provided for.
In response to a comment requesting more flexibility in the
determination of proxy groups, the final regulation omits the
requirement that the proxy group employers be named in the plan.
However, the regulation requires that there be consistency from year to
year in the composition of both the proxy group and rate history
groups, with certain exceptions. The intent is to keep these groups
generally unchanged but to permit changes in their make-up to
accommodate changes in circumstances such as contribution histories and
employer withdrawals.
Employers contributing under the same rate schedule would typically
be in the same rate history group, and a change in the rate schedule
would typically not change the composition of the rate history group,
because the rate histories of all employers in the group would be
similarly affected. For example, suppose all the employers under a rate
schedule are in the same rate history group, and the rate schedule
changes. This would typically not change the composition of the rate
history group, because the rate histories of all employers in the group
would be similarly affected.
In the same vein, employers with disparate rate histories would
typically be in different rate history groups, and the fact that they
became covered by the same rate schedule would not typically place them
in the same rate history group because their rate histories would
remain different. For example, suppose two employers with disparate
rate histories are in different rate history groups and become covered
by the same rate schedule. This would not typically place them in the
same rate history group because their rate histories would remain
different.
On the other hand, if two employers in a rate history group moved
to a different rate schedule, their rate histories would no longer
match those of the other employers in the group. Depending on
circumstances, this change might result in the formation of a new rate
history group that (if it represented more than 5 percent of active
participants) would require representation in the proxy group.
For proxy group employers, adjusted contributions for the plan year
are determined by multiplying each employer's contribution base units
for the plan year by what would have been the employer's contribution
rate excluding contribution rate increases that are required to be
disregarded in determining withdrawal liability.
Determining adjusted contributions for rate history groups is a
two-step process. First, an adjustment factor is determined for the
plan year for each rate history group represented in the proxy group of
employers. This adjustment factor equals the sum of the adjusted
contributions for the plan year for all employers in the rate history
group that are in the proxy group, divided by the sum of those
employers' actual total contributions for the plan year. Second, the
adjustment factor for the year for each rate history group is
multiplied by the contributions for the year of all employers in the
rate history group (both proxy group members and non-members) to
determine the adjusted contributions for the rate history group for the
year.
Finally, the same steps are performed to determine adjusted
contributions at the plan level. The sum of the adjusted contributions
for all the rate history groups represented in the proxy group is
divided by the sum of the actual contributions for the employers in
those rate history groups, and the resulting adjustment factor for the
plan is multiplied by the plan's total contributions for the plan year,
including contributions by employers in small rate history groups not
represented in the proxy group. The result--the adjusted contributions
for the whole plan--is the amount of contributions for the plan year
that may be used to determine the denominator for the allocation
fraction under the proxy group method.
This process weights contributors by the size of their
contributions. Heavy contributors' rates have a greater impact on the
adjusted contributions than light contributors' rates.
A commenter asked that relief be provided for cases where
information needed to determine adjusted contributions is unavailable.
In response, PBGC has added a provision addressing situations where
total contributions for a rate history group or a plan are unavailable
to calculate adjusted contributions. In such situations, total
contributions may be estimated by multiplying each contribution rate
times the relevant projected contribution base units and adding all the
results.
An example illustrating the simplified method for disregarding
certain contributions in determining the denominator of the allocation
fraction using the proxy group method is provided in the appendix to
part 4211.
C. Simplified Methods After Plan Is No Longer in Endangered or Critical
Status
As noted above in section IV.A., changes in contributions can
affect the calculation of an employer's withdrawal
[[Page 1268]]
liability and annual withdrawal liability payment amount. Once a plan
is no longer in endangered or critical status, the ``disregard'' rules
for contribution increases change. Under section 305(g)(4) of ERISA,
plan sponsors are required to: (1) Include contribution increases in
determining the allocation fraction used to calculate withdrawal
liability under section 4211 of ERISA; and (2) continue to disregard
contribution increases in determining the highest contribution rate
used to calculate the annual withdrawal liability payment amount under
section 4219(c) of ERISA, as follows:
Plans No Longer in Endangered or Critical Status
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allocation Fraction (section 4211 A plan sponsor is required to
of ERISA). include contribution increases
(previously disregarded) as of the
expiration date of the collective
bargaining agreement in effect when
a plan is no longer in endangered
or critical status.
Highest Contribution Rate (section A plan sponsor is required to
4219(c) of ERISA). continue disregarding contribution
increases that applied for plan
years during which the plan was in
endangered or critical status.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final regulation, like the proposed, amends Sec. 4211.4 of
PBGC's unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation and Sec. 4219.3
of PBGC's notice, collection, and redetermination of withdrawal
liability regulation to incorporate the requirements for contribution
increases when a plan is no longer in endangered or critical status.
The final regulation also provides simplified methods required by
section 305(g)(5) of ERISA that a plan sponsor could adopt to satisfy
the requirements of section 305(g)(4).
1. Including Contribution Increases in Determining the Allocation of
Unfunded Vested Benefits (Sec. 4211.15)
The rule to begin including contribution increases for purposes of
determining withdrawal liability is based, in part, on when a plan's
collective bargaining agreements expire. Because plans may operate
under numerous collective bargaining agreements with varying expiration
dates, it could be burdensome for a plan sponsor to calculate the
amount contributed by employers over the 5-year periods used for the
denominators of the plan's allocation method. The plan sponsor would
have to make a year-by-year determination of whether contribution
increases should be included or disregarded in the denominators
relative to collective bargaining agreements expiring in each
applicable year. The final regulation adds a new Sec. 4211.15 to
PBGC's unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation to provide two
alternative simplified methods that a plan sponsor could adopt for
determining the denominators in the allocation fractions when the plan
is no longer in endangered or critical status.
Under the first simplified method, a plan sponsor could adopt a
rule that contribution increases previously disregarded are included in
the allocation fraction as of the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement requiring contributions that expires
after the plan's emergence from endangered or critical status. If the
plan sponsor adopts this rule, then for any withdrawals after the
applicable expiration date, the plan sponsor would include the total
amount contributed by employers for plan years included in the
denominator of the allocation fraction determined in accordance with
section 4211 of ERISA under the method in use by the plan. This would
relieve plan sponsors of the burden of a year-by-year determination of
whether contribution increases should be included or disregarded in the
denominator under the plan's allocation method relative to collective
bargaining agreements expiring in that year. An example illustrating
this simplified method is provided in Sec. 4211.15(c) of PBGC's
unfunded vested benefits allocation regulation.
Under the second simplified method, a plan sponsor could adopt a
rule that contribution increases previously disregarded are included in
calculating withdrawal liability for any employer withdrawal that
occurs after the first full plan year after a plan is no longer in
endangered or critical status, or if later, the plan year including the
expiration date of the first collective bargaining agreement requiring
plan contributions that expires after the plan's emergence from
endangered or critical status.
The final regulation also provides that, for purposes of these
simplified methods, an ``evergreen contract'' that continues until the
collective bargaining parties elect to terminate the agreement has a
termination date that is the earlier of--
(1) The termination of the agreement by decision of the parties.
(2) The beginning of the third plan year following the plan year in
which the plan is no longer in endangered or critical status.
PBGC invited public comment on other simplified methods that a plan
operating under numerous collective bargaining agreements with varying
expiration dates might use to satisfy the requirement in section
305(g)(4) of ERISA that, as of the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement requiring plan contributions that
expires after a plan is no longer in endangered or critical status, the
allocation fraction must include contribution increases that were
previously disregarded. Two commenters supported PBGC's proposed
simplified method as a reasonable way to satisfy the requirements of
section 305(g)(4) of ERISA.
2. Continuing To Disregard Contribution Increases in Determining the
Highest Contribution Rate (Sec. 4219.3)
The rule for determining the highest contribution rate requires a
plan sponsor of a plan that is no longer in endangered or critical
status to continue to disregard increases in the contribution rate that
applied for plan years during which the plan was in endangered or
critical status. Because an employer's highest contribution rate is
determined over the 10 plan years ending with the year of withdrawal,
applying the rule would require a year-by-year determination of whether
contribution increases should be included or disregarded. The final
regulation adds a new Sec. 4219.3 to PBGC's notice, collection, and
redetermination of withdrawal liability regulation to provide a
simplified method that a plan sponsor could adopt for determining the
highest contribution rate.
The simplified method provides that, for a plan that is no longer
in endangered or critical status, the highest contribution rate for
purposes of section 4219(c) of ERISA is the greater of--
(1) The employer's contribution rate in effect, for a calendar year
plan, as of December 31, 2014, and for other plans, the last day of the
plan year that ends on or after December 31, 2014, plus any
contribution increases occurring after that date and before the
employer's withdrawal that must be included in
[[Page 1269]]
determining the highest contribution rate under section 305(g)(3) of
ERISA, or
(2) The highest contribution rate for any plan year after the plan
year that includes the expiration date of the first collective
bargaining agreement of the withdrawing employer requiring plan
contributions that expires after the plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status, or, if earlier, the date as of which the withdrawing
employer renegotiated a contribution rate effective after a plan is no
longer in endangered or critical status.
An example illustrating this simplified method is provided in Sec.
4219.3 of PBGC's notice, collection, and redetermination of withdrawal
liability regulation. PBGC received two comments about the simplified
method provided in Sec. 4219.3. One commenter asked for clarification
about the contribution rate that should be included in determining the
highest contribution rate if an employer withdraws after its collective
bargaining agreement expires, but before a new collective bargaining
agreement is adopted. Another commenter stated that under the
simplified method, if the plan year ends soon after the expiration date
of the collective bargaining agreement, a higher contribution rate
could be imposed on an employer than the plan's later negotiated
contribution rate. PBGC agrees that this could occur under the
simplified method if the bargaining parties do not reach agreement by
the plan year after the plan year that includes the expiration date of
the first collective bargaining agreement of the withdrawing employer
requiring plan contributions that expires after the plan is no longer
in endangered or critical status.
A commenter suggested that a grace period could be provided after
the expiration date of the collective bargaining agreement, such as 180
days, during which the higher rate would not apply if it had not been
agreed to in collective bargaining. While in many cases collective
bargaining agreements are not renegotiated until after the expiration
date of the collective bargaining agreement, PBGC believes that the
collective bargaining parties will generally have time to resolve the
scenario described by the commenter before a plan emerges from
endangered or critical status. In addition, PBGC's simplified method
already extends the disregard period beyond the highest contribution
rate ``for plan years during which the plan was in endangered or
critical status'' to include the period through the end of the plan
year after the plan year that includes the expiration date of the first
collective bargaining agreement that expires after the plan is no
longer in endangered or critical status. Therefore, PBGC did not adopt
the commenter's suggestion to change the simplified method in the final
rule.
V. Compliance With Rulemaking Guidelines
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 13771
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this
rulemaking is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under Executive
Order 12866 and Executive Order 13771. The rule provides simplified
methods, as required by section 305(g)(5) of ERISA, to determine
withdrawal liability and payment amounts, which multiemployer plan
sponsors may choose, but are not required, to adopt. Accordingly, this
final rule is exempt from Executive Order 13771 and OMB has not
reviewed the rule under Executive Order 12866.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, and public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). E.O.
13563 emphasizes retrospective review of regulations, harmonizing
rules, and promoting flexibility.
Although this is not a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, PBGC has examined the economic implications of
this final rule and has concluded that the amendments providing
simplified methods for plan sponsors to comply with the statutory
requirements will reduce costs for multiemployer plans by approximately
$1,476,000. Based on 2016 data, there are about 450 plans that are in
endangered or critical status.\10\ PBGC estimates that a portion of
these plans using the simplified methods under the final rule will have
administrative savings, as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ https://www.pbgc.gov/sites/default/files/2017_pension_data_tables.pdf, Table M-18.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
number of Savings per
Annual amounts plans plan Total savings
affected
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Savings on actuarial calculations using simplified methods and assuming an average hourly rate of $400
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disregarding benefit suspensions (Section III.B.2.)............. 5 $2,000 $10,000
Exceptions to disregarding contribution increases (Section 40 4,000 160,000
IV.A.).........................................................
Allocation fraction numerator (Section IV.B.1.)................. 200 1,200 240,000
Allocation fraction denominator using 2014 contribution rate 160 4,000 640,000
(Section IV.B.2.)..............................................
Allocation fraction denominator using proxy group of employers 40 8,000 320,000
(Section IV.B.3.)..............................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other estimated savings
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced plan valuation cost for plans that have a benefit 3 2,000 6,000
suspension and use the static value method.....................
Savings on potential withdrawal liability arbitration costs 5 20,000 100,000
assuming an average hourly rate of $400........................
-----------------------------------------------
Total savings............................................... .............. .............. 1,476,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PBGC invited public comment on the expected savings on actuarial
calculations and other costs using the simplified methods. A commenter
noted that expected savings on actuarial calculations and plan
administration
[[Page 1270]]
will vary greatly from plan to plan based on the plan's industry,
benefit formula, and other factors. Three commenters stated that the
requirement in the proposed rule that the portion of contribution
increases that is funding an increase in future benefit accruals be
determined actuarially would cause an increase in administrative costs.
As discussed above in section IV.A. of the preamble, the final rule
does not adopt this provision.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act imposes certain requirements with
respect to rules that are subject to the notice and comment
requirements of section 553(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act and
that are likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Unless an agency determines that a rule is
not likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, section 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires that the agency present a final regulatory flexibility
analysis at the time of the publication of the final regulation
describing the impact of the rule on small entities and steps taken to
minimize the impact. Small entities include small businesses,
organizations, and governmental jurisdictions.
For purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act requirements with
respect to this final rule, PBGC considers a small entity to be a plan
with fewer than 100 participants. This is substantially the same
criterion PBGC uses in other regulations \11\ and is consistent with
certain requirements in title I of ERISA \12\ and the Code,\13\ as well
as the definition of a small entity that the Department of Labor has
used for purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See, e.g., special rules for small plans under part 4007
(Payment of Premiums).
\12\ See, e.g., section 104(a)(2) of ERISA, which permits the
Secretary of Labor to prescribe simplified annual reports for
pension plans that cover fewer than 100 participants.
\13\ See, e.g., section 430(g)(2)(B) of the Code, which permits
plans with 100 or fewer participants to use valuation dates other
than the first day of the plan year.
\14\ See, e.g., DOL's final rule on Prohibited Transaction
Exemption Procedures, 76 FR 66637, 66644 (Oct. 27, 2011).
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Thus, PBGC believes that assessing the impact of the proposed
regulation on small plans is an appropriate substitute for evaluating
the effect on small entities. The definition of small entity considered
appropriate for this purpose differs, however, from a definition of
small business based on size standards promulgated by the Small
Business Administration (13 CFR 121.201) pursuant to the Small Business
Act. PBGC therefore requested comments on the appropriateness of the
size standard used in evaluating the impact on small entities of the
proposed amendments. PBGC did not receive any such comments.
On the basis of its definition of small entity, PBGC certifies
under section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.) that the amendments in this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Based on data for recent premium filings, PBGC estimates that only 38
plans of the approximately 1,400 plans covered by PBGC's multiemployer
program are small plans, and that only about 14 of those plans will be
impacted by this final rule. Furthermore, plan sponsors may, but are
not required to, use the simplified methods under the final rule. As
shown above, plans that use the simplified methods will have
administrative savings. The final rule will not impose costs on plans.
Accordingly, as provided in section 605 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), sections 603 and 604 do not apply.
List of Subjects
20 CFR Part 4001
Business and industry, Employee benefit plans, Pension insurance.
20 CFR Part 4204
Employee benefit plans, Pension insurance, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
20 CFR Part 4206
Employee benefit plans, Pension insurance.
20 CFR Part 4207
Employee benefit plans, Pension insurance.
29 CFR Part 4211
Employee benefit plans, Pension insurance, Pensions, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
29 CFR Part 4219
Employee benefit plans, Pension insurance, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons given above, PBGC amends 29 CFR parts 4001, 4204,
4206, 4207, 4211 and 4219 as follows:
PART 4001--TERMINOLOGY
0
1. The authority citation for part 4001 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1301, 1302(b)(3).
Sec. 4001.2 [Amended]
0
2. In Sec. 4001.2, amend the definition of ``Nonforfeitable benefit''
by removing ``will be considered forfeitable.'' and adding in its place
``are considered forfeitable.''
PART 4204--VARIANCES FOR SALE OF ASSETS
0
3. The authority citation for part 4204 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3), 1384(c).
0
4. In Sec. 4204.2, add in alphabetical order a definition for
``Unfunded vested benefits'' to read as follows:
Sec. 4204.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Unfunded vested benefits means, as described in section 4213(c) of
ERISA, the amount by which the value of nonforfeitable benefits under
the plan exceeds the value of the assets of the plan.
Sec. 4204.12 [Amended]
0
5. In Sec. 4204.12:
0
a. Amend the first sentence by removing ``for the purposes of section''
and adding in its place ``for the purposes of section 304(b)(3)(A) of
ERISA and section''; and
0
b. Remove the second sentence.
PART 4206--ADJUSTMENT OF LIABILITY FOR A WITHDRAWAL SUBSEQUENT TO A
PARTIAL WITHDRAWAL
0
6. The authority citation for part 4206 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3) and 1386(b).
0
7. In Sec. 4206.2, add in alphabetical order a definition for
``Unfunded vested benefits'' to read as follows:
Sec. 4206.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Unfunded vested benefits means, as described in section 4213(c) of
ERISA, the amount by which the value of nonforfeitable benefits under
the plan exceeds the value of the assets of the plan.
PART 4207--REDUCTION OR WAIVER OF COMPLETE WITHDRAWAL LIABILITY
0
8. The authority citation for part 4207 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3), 1387.
0
9. In Sec. 4207.2, add in alphabetical order a definition for
``Unfunded vested benefits'' to read as follows:
[[Page 1271]]
Sec. 4207.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Unfunded vested benefits means, as described in section 4213(c) of
ERISA, the amount by which the value of nonforfeitable benefits under
the plan exceeds the value of the assets of the plan.
PART 4211--ALLOCATING UNFUNDED VESTED BENEFITS TO WITHDRAWING
EMPLOYERS
0
10. The authority citation for part 4211 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3); 1391(c)(1), (c)(2)(D),
(c)(5)(A), (c)(5)(B), (c)(5)(D), and (f).
0
11. In Sec. 4211.1, amend paragraph (a) by removing the sixth,
seventh, and eighth sentences and adding two sentences in their place
to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.1 Purpose and scope.
(a) * * * Section 4211(c)(5) of ERISA also permits certain
modifications to the statutory allocation methods that PBGC may
prescribe in a regulation. Subpart B of this part contains the
permissible modifications to the statutory methods that plan sponsors
may adopt without PBGC approval. * * *
* * * * *
0
12. In Sec. 4211.2:
0
a. Amend the introductory text by removing ``multiemployer plan,'' and
adding in its place ``multiemployer plan, nonforfeitable benefit,'';
0
b. Amend the definition of ``Initial plan year'' by removing
``establishment'' and adding in its place ``effective date'';
0
c. Remove the definition of ``Nonforfeitable benefit'';
0
d. Revise the definition of ``Unfunded vested benefits'';
0
e. Amend the definition of ``Withdrawing employer'' by removing ``for
whom'' and adding in its place ``for which'';
0
f. Amend the definition of ``Withdrawn employer'' by removing ``who,
prior to the withdrawing employer,'' and adding in its place ``that, in
a plan year before the withdrawing employer withdraws,'';
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 4211.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Unfunded vested benefits means, as described in section 4213(c) of
ERISA, the amount by which the value of nonforfeitable benefits under
the plan exceeds the value of the assets of the plan.
* * * * *
0
13. Revise Sec. 4211.3 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.3 Special rules for construction industry and Code section
404(c) plans.
(a) Construction plans. A plan that primarily covers employees in
the building and construction industry must use the presumptive method
for allocating unfunded vested benefits, except as provided in
Sec. Sec. 4211.11(b) and 4211.21(b).
(b) Code section 404(c) plans. A plan described in section 404(c)
of the Code or a continuation of such a plan must use the rolling-5
method for allocating unfunded vested benefits unless the plan sponsor,
by amendment, adopts an alternative method or modification.
0
14. Revise Sec. 4211.4 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.4 Contributions for purposes of the numerator and
denominator of the allocation fractions.
(a) In general. Subject to paragraph (b) of this section, each of
the allocation fractions used in the presumptive, modified presumptive
and rolling-5 methods is based on contributions that certain employers
have made to the plan for a 5-year period.
(1) The numerator of the allocation fraction, with respect to a
withdrawing employer, is based on the ``sum of the contributions
required to be made'' or the ``total amount required to be
contributed'' by the employer for the specified period.
(2) The denominator of the allocation fraction is based on
contributions that certain employers have made to the plan for a
specified period.
(b) Disregarding surcharges and contribution increases. For each of
the allocation fractions used in the presumptive, modified presumptive
and rolling-5 methods in determining the allocation of unfunded vested
benefits to an employer, a plan in endangered or critical status must
disregard:
(1) Surcharge. Any surcharge under section 305(e)(7) of ERISA and
section 432(e)(7) of the Code.
(2) Contribution increase. Any increase in the contribution rate or
other increase in contribution requirements that goes into effect
during plan years beginning after December 31, 2014, so that a plan may
meet the requirements of a funding improvement plan under section
305(c) of ERISA and section 432(c) of the Code or a rehabilitation plan
under section 305(e) of ERISA and 432(e) of the Code, except to the
extent that one of the following exceptions applies pursuant to section
305(g)(3) or (4) of ERISA and section 432(g)(3) or (4) of the Code:
(i) The increases in contribution requirements are due to increased
levels of work, employment, or periods for which compensation is
provided.
(ii) The additional contributions are used to provide an increase
in benefits, including an increase in future benefit accruals,
permitted by section 305(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of ERISA and section
432(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of the Code.
(iii) The withdrawal occurs on or after the expiration date of the
employer's collective bargaining agreement in effect in the plan year
the plan is no longer in endangered or critical status, or, if earlier,
the date as of which the employer renegotiates a contribution rate
effective after the plan year the plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status.
(c) Simplified methods. See Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15 for
simplified methods of meeting the requirements of this section.
0
15. Add Sec. 4211.6 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.6 Disregarding benefit reductions and benefit suspensions.
(a) In general. A plan must disregard the following nonforfeitable
benefit reductions and benefit suspensions in determining a plan's
nonforfeitable benefits for purposes of determining an employer's
withdrawal liability under section 4201 of ERISA:
(1) Adjustable benefit. A reduction to adjustable benefits under
section 305(e)(8) of ERISA and section 432(e)(8) of the Code.
(2) Lump sum. A benefit reduction arising from a restriction on
lump sums or other benefits under section 305(f) of ERISA and section
432(f) of the Code.
(3) Benefit suspension. A benefit suspension under section
305(e)(9) of ERISA and section 432(e)(9) of the Code, but only for
withdrawals not more than 10 years after the end of the plan year in
which the benefit suspension takes effect.
(b) Simplified methods. See Sec. 4211.16 for simplified methods
for meeting the requirements of this section.
0
16. Revise Sec. 4211.11 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.11 Plan sponsor adoption of modifications and simplified
methods.
(a) General rule. A plan sponsor, other than the sponsor of a plan
that primarily covers employees in the building and construction
industry, may adopt by amendment, without the approval of PBGC, any of
the statutory allocation methods and any of the modifications and
simplified methods set forth in Sec. Sec. 4211.12 through 4211.16.
(b) Building and construction industry plans. The plan sponsor of a
plan that primarily covers employees in the building and construction
industry may adopt by amendment, without the
[[Page 1272]]
approval of PBGC, any of the modifications to the presumptive rule and
simplified methods set forth in Sec. 4211.12 and Sec. Sec. 4211.14
through 4211.16.
0
17. Revise Sec. 4211.12 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.12 Modifications to the presumptive, modified presumptive,
and rolling-5 methods.
(a) Disregarding certain contribution increases. A plan amended to
use the modifications in this section must apply the rules to disregard
surcharges and contribution increases under Sec. 4211.4. A plan
sponsor may amend a plan to incorporate the simplified methods in
Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15 to fulfill the requirements of Sec.
4211.4 with the modifications in this section if done consistently from
year to year.
(b) Changing the period for counting contributions. A plan sponsor
may amend a plan to modify the denominators in the presumptive,
modified presumptive and rolling-5 methods in accordance with one of
the alternatives described in this paragraph (b). Any amendment adopted
under this paragraph (b) must be applied consistently to all plan
years. Contributions counted for 1 plan year may not be counted for any
other plan year. If a contribution is counted as part of the ``total
amount contributed'' for any plan year used to determine a denominator,
that contribution may not also be counted as a contribution owed with
respect to an earlier year used to determine the same denominator,
regardless of when the plan collected that contribution.
(1) A plan sponsor may amend a plan to provide that ``the sum of
all contributions made'' or ``total amount contributed'' for a plan
year means the amount of contributions that the plan actually received
during the plan year, without regard to whether the contributions are
treated as made for that plan year under section 304(b)(3)(A) of ERISA
and section 431(b)(3)(A) of the Code.
(2) A plan sponsor may amend a plan to provide that ``the sum of
all contributions made'' or ``total amount contributed'' for a plan
year means the amount of contributions actually received during the
plan year, increased by the amount of contributions received during a
specified period of time after the close of the plan year not to exceed
the period described in section 304(c)(8) of ERISA and section
431(c)(8) of the Code and regulations thereunder.
(3) A plan sponsor may amend a plan to provide that ``the sum of
all contributions made'' or ``total amount contributed'' for a plan
year means the amount of contributions actually received during the
plan year, increased by the amount of contributions accrued during the
plan year and received during a specified period of time after the
close of the plan year not to exceed the period described in section
304(c)(8) of ERISA and section 431(c)(8) of the Code and regulations
thereunder.
(c) Excluding contributions of significant withdrawn employers.
Contributions of certain withdrawn employers are excluded from the
denominator in each of the fractions used to determine a withdrawing
employer's share of unfunded vested benefits under the presumptive,
modified presumptive and rolling-5 methods. Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, contributions of all employers that
permanently cease to have an obligation to contribute to the plan or
permanently cease covered operations before the end of the period of
plan years used to determine the fractions for allocating unfunded
vested benefits under each of those methods (and contributions of all
employers that withdrew before September 26, 1980) are excluded from
the denominators of the fractions.
(1) The plan sponsor of a plan using the presumptive, modified
presumptive or rolling-5 method may amend the plan to provide that only
the contributions of significant withdrawn employers are excluded from
the denominators of the fractions used in those methods.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (c), ``significant withdrawn
employer'' means--
(i) An employer to which the plan has sent a notice of withdrawal
liability under section 4219 of ERISA; or
(ii) A withdrawn employer that in any plan year used to determine
the denominator of a fraction contributed at least $250,000 or, if
less, 1 percent of all contributions made by employers for that year.
(3) If a group of employers withdraw in a concerted withdrawal, the
plan sponsor must treat the group as a single employer in determining
whether the members are significant withdrawn employers under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section. A ``concerted withdrawal'' means a cessation of
contributions to the plan during a single plan year--
(i) By an employer association;
(ii) By all or substantially all of the employers covered by a
single collective bargaining agreement; or
(iii) By all or substantially all of the employers covered by
agreements with a single labor organization.
(d) ``Fresh start'' rules under presumptive method. (1) The plan
sponsor of a plan using the presumptive method (including a plan that
primarily covers employees in the building and construction industry)
may amend the plan to provide that--
(i) A designated plan year ending after September 26, 1980, will
substitute for the plan year ending before September 26, 1980, in
applying section 4211(b)(1)(B), section 4211(b)(2)(B)(ii)(I), section
4211(b)(2)(D), section 4211(b)(3), and section 4211(b)(3)(B) of ERISA;
and
(ii) Plan years ending after the end of the designated plan year in
paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section will substitute for plan years
ending after September 25, 1980, in applying section 4211(b)(1)(A),
section 4211(b)(2)(A), and section 4211(b)(2)(B)(ii)(II) of ERISA.
(2) A plan amendment made pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) of this
section must provide that the plan's unfunded vested benefits for plan
years ending after the designated plan year are reduced by the value of
all outstanding claims for withdrawal liability that can reasonably be
expected to be collected from employers that had withdrawn from the
plan as of the end of the designated plan year.
(3) In the case of a plan that primarily covers employees in the
building and construction industry, the plan year designated by a plan
amendment pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) of this section must be a plan
year for which the plan has no unfunded vested benefits determined in
accordance with section 4211 of ERISA without regard to Sec. 4211.6.
(e) ``Fresh start'' rules under modified presumptive method. (1)
The plan sponsor of a plan using the modified presumptive method may
amend the plan to provide--
(i) A designated plan year ending after September 26, 1980, will
substitute for the plan year ending before September 26, 1980, in
applying section 4211(c)(2)(B)(i) and section 4211(c)(2)(B)(ii)(I) and
(II) of ERISA; and
(ii) Plan years ending after the end of the designated plan year
will substitute for plan years ending after September 25, 1980, in
applying section 4211(c)(2)(B)(ii)(II) and section 4211(c)(2)(C)(i)(II)
of ERISA.
(2) A plan amendment made pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this
section must provide that the plan's unfunded vested benefits for plan
years ending after the designated plan year are reduced by the value of
all outstanding claims for withdrawal liability that can reasonably be
expected to be collected from employers that had withdrawn from the
plan as of the end of the designated plan year.
[[Page 1273]]
Sec. 4211.13 [Amended]
0
18. In Sec. 4211.13:
0
a. Amend paragraph (a) by removing ``shall'' and adding in its place
``must'';
0
b. Amend paragraph (b) by removing ``shall be'' and adding in its place
``is''.
0
19. Add Sec. 4211.14 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.14 Simplified methods for disregarding certain
contributions.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor may amend a plan without PBGC
approval to adopt any of the simplified methods in paragraphs (b)
through (d) of this section to fulfill the requirements of section
305(g)(3) of ERISA and section 432(g)(3) of the Code and Sec.
4211.4(b)(2) in determining an allocation fraction. Examples
illustrating calculations using the simplified methods in this section
are provided in the appendix to this part.
(b) Simplified method for the numerator--after 2014 plan year. A
plan sponsor may amend a plan to provide that the withdrawing
employer's required contributions for each plan year (a ``target
year'') after the date that is the later of the last day of the first
plan year that ends on or after December 31, 2014 and the last day of
the plan year the employer first contributes to the plan (the
``employer freeze date'') is the product of--
(1) The employer's contribution rate in effect on the employer
freeze date, plus any contribution increase in Sec. 4211.4(b)(2)(ii)
that is effective after the employer freeze date but not later than the
last day of the target year; times
(2) The employer's contribution base units for the target year.
(c) Simplified method for the denominator--after 2014 plan year. A
plan sponsor may amend a plan to provide that the denominator for the
allocation fraction for each plan year after the employer freeze date
is calculated using the same principles as paragraph (b) of this
section.
(d) Simplified method for the denominator--proxy group averaging.
(1) A plan sponsor may amend a plan to provide that, for purposes of
determining the denominator of the unfunded vested benefits allocation
fraction, employer contributions for a plan year beginning after the
plan freeze date described in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section are
calculated, in accordance with this paragraph (d), based on an average
of representative contribution rates that exclude contribution
increases that are required to be disregarded in determining withdrawal
liability. The method described in this paragraph (d) is effective only
for plan years to which the amendment applies.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (d) --
(i) Plan freeze date means the last day of the first plan year that
ends on or after December 31, 2014.
(ii) Base year means the first plan year beginning after the plan
freeze date.
(iii) Contribution history for a plan year means the history of
total contribution rates, and contribution rates that are not required
to be disregarded in determining withdrawal liability, from the plan
freeze date up to the end of the plan year.
(iv) Included employer with respect to a plan for a plan year means
an employer that is a contributing employer of the plan on at least 1
day of the plan year and whose contributions for the plan year are to
be taken into account under the plan in determining the denominator of
the unfunded vested benefits allocation fraction under section 4211 of
ERISA. If the contribution histories of different categories of
employees of an employer are not substantially the same, the employer
may be treated as two or more employers that have more uniform
contribution histories.
(v) Rate history group is defined in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section.
(vi) Proxy group is defined in paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
(vii) Adjusted as applied to contributions for an employer, a rate
history group, or a plan is defined in paragraphs (d)(5), (6), and (7)
of this section.
(3) A rate history group of a plan for a plan year is a group of
included employers satisfying all of the following requirements:
(i) Each included employer of the plan is in one and only one rate
history group.
(ii) The employers in the rate history group have substantially the
same contribution history (or the same percentage increases in
contributions from year to year), but there need not be more than ten
rate history groups.
(iii) There is consistency in the composition of rate history
groups from year to year.
(4) The proxy group of a plan for a plan year is a group of
included employers satisfying all of the following requirements:
(i) On at least 1 day of the plan year, the employers in the proxy
group represent at least 10 percent of active plan participants.
(ii) There is at least one employer in the proxy group from each
rate history group of the plan for the plan year that represents, on at
least 1 day of the plan year, at least 5 percent of active plan
participants.
(iii) There is consistency in the composition of the proxy group
from year to year.
(5) The adjusted contributions of an employer under a plan for a
plan year are --
(i) The employer's contribution base units for the plan year;
multiplied by
(ii) The employer's contribution rate per contribution base unit at
the end of the plan year, reduced by the sum of the employer's
contribution rate increases since the plan freeze date that are
required to be disregarded in determining withdrawal liability.
(6) The adjusted contributions of a rate history group that is
represented in the proxy group of a plan for a plan year are the total
contributions for the plan year attributable to employers in the rate
history group, multiplied by the adjustment factor for the rate history
group. The adjustment factor for the rate history group is the
quotient, for all employers in the rate history group that are also in
the proxy group, of --
(i) Total adjusted contributions for the plan year; divided by
(ii) Total contributions for the plan year.
(7) The adjusted contributions of a plan for a plan year are the
plan's total contributions for the plan year by all employers,
multiplied by the adjustment factor for the plan. For this purpose,
``the plan's total contributions for the plan year'' means the total
unadjusted plan contributions for the plan year that would otherwise be
included in the denominator of the allocation fraction in the absence
of section 305(g)(1) of ERISA, including any employer contributions
owed with respect to earlier periods that were collected in that plan
year, and excluding any amounts contributed in that plan year by an
employer that withdrew from the plan during that plan year. The
adjustment factor for the plan is the quotient, for all rate history
groups that are represented in the proxy group, of --
(i) Total adjusted contributions for the plan year; divided by
(ii) Total contributions for the plan year.
(8) Under this method, in determining the denominator of a plan's
unfunded vested benefits allocation fraction, the contributions taken
into account with respect to any plan year (beginning with the base
year) are the plan's adjusted contributions for the plan year.
(9) Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this paragraph (d),
if total contributions for a year for a rate history group or for a
plan are not timely and reasonably available for calculating adjusted
contributions for that year,
[[Page 1274]]
each relevant contribution rate for the year may be multiplied by the
projected contribution base units for the year corresponding to that
rate and the sum, for all rates, may be used in place of total
contributions for that year.
(e) Effective and applicability dates. (1) Effective date. This
section is effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section applies to employer
withdrawals from multiemployer plans that occur in plan years beginning
on or after February 8, 2021.
0
20. Add Sec. 4211.15 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.15 Simplified methods for determining expiration date of a
collective bargaining agreement.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor may amend a plan without PBGC
approval to adopt any of the simplified methods in this section to
fulfill the requirements of section 305(g)(4) of ERISA and 432(g)(4) of
the Code and Sec. 4211.4(b)(2)(iii) for a withdrawal that occurs on or
after the plan's reversion date.
(b) Reversion date. The reversion date is either--
(1) The expiration date of the first collective bargaining
agreement requiring plan contributions that expires after the plan is
no longer in endangered or critical status, or
(2) The date that is the later of--
(i) The end of the first plan year following the plan year in which
the plan is no longer in endangered or critical status; or
(ii) The end of the plan year that includes the expiration date of
the first collective bargaining agreement requiring plan contributions
that expires after the plan is no longer in endangered or critical
status.
(3) For purposes of paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the
expiration date of a collective bargaining agreement that by its terms
remains in force until terminated by the parties thereto is considered
to be the earlier of--
(i) The termination date agreed to by the parties thereto; or
(ii) The first day of the third plan year following the plan year
in which the plan is no longer in endangered or critical status.
(c) Example. The simplified method in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section is illustrated by the following example.
(1) Facts. A plan certifies that it is not in endangered or
critical status for the plan year beginning January 1, 2021. The plan
operates under several collective bargaining agreements. The plan
sponsor adopts a rule providing that all contribution increases will be
included in the numerator and denominator of the allocation fractions
for withdrawals occurring after October 31, 2022, the expiration date
of the first collective bargaining agreement requiring plan
contributions that expires after January 1, 2021.
(2) Allocation fraction. A contributing employer withdraws from the
plan in November 2022, after the date designated by the plan sponsor
for the inclusion of all contribution rate increases in the allocation
fraction. The allocation fraction used by the plan sponsor to determine
the employer's share of the plan's unfunded vested benefits includes
all of the employer's required contributions in the numerator and total
contributions made by all employers in the denominator, including any
amounts related to contribution increases previously disregarded.
(d) Effective and applicability dates. (1) Effective date. This
section is effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section applies to employer
withdrawals from multiemployer plans that occur in plan years beginning
on or after February 8, 2021.
0
21. Add Sec. 4211.16 to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.16 Simplified methods for disregarding benefit reductions
and benefit suspensions.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor may amend a plan without PBGC
approval to adopt the simplified methods in this section to fulfill the
requirements of section 305(g)(1) of ERISA and section 432(g)(1) of the
Code and Sec. 4211.6 to disregard benefit reductions and benefit
suspensions.
(b) Basic rule. The withdrawal liability of a withdrawing employer
is the sum of paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section, and then
adjusted by paragraphs (A)-(D) of section 4201(b)(1) of ERISA. The
amount determined under paragraph (b)(1) may not be less than zero.
(1) The amount that would be the employer's allocable amount of
unfunded vested benefits determined in accordance with section 4211 of
ERISA under the method in use by the plan without regard to Sec.
4211.6 (but taking into account Sec. 4211.4); and
(2) The employer's proportional share of the value of each of the
benefit reductions and benefit suspensions required to be disregarded
under Sec. 4211.6 determined in accordance with this section.
(c) Benefit suspension. This paragraph (c) applies to a benefit
suspension under Sec. 4211.6(a)(3).
(1) General. The employer's proportional share of the present value
of a benefit suspension as of the end of the plan year before the
employer's withdrawal is determined by applying paragraph (c)(2) or (3)
of this section to the present value of the suspended benefits, as
authorized by the Department of the Treasury in accordance with section
305(e)(9) of ERISA, calculated either as of the date of the benefit
suspension or as of the end of the plan year coincident with or
following the date of the benefit suspension (the ``authorized
value'').
(2) Static value method. A plan may provide that the present value
of the suspended benefits as of the end of the plan year in which the
benefit suspension takes effect and for each of the succeeding 9 plan
years is the authorized value in paragraph (c)(1) of this section. An
employer's proportional share of the present value of a benefit
suspension to which this paragraph (c) applies using the static value
method is determined by multiplying the present value of the suspended
benefits by a fraction--
(i) The numerator is the sum of all contributions required to be
made by the withdrawing employer for the 5 consecutive plan years
ending before the plan year in which the benefit suspension takes
effect; and
(ii) The denominator is the total of all employers' contributions
for the 5 consecutive plan years ending before the plan year in which
the suspension takes effect, increased by any employer contributions
owed with respect to earlier periods which were collected in those plan
years, and decreased by any amount contributed by an employer that
withdrew from the plan during those plan years. If a plan uses an
allocation method other than the presumptive method in section 4211(b)
of ERISA or similar method, the denominator after the first year is
decreased by the contributions of any employers that withdrew from the
plan and were unable to satisfy their withdrawal liability claims in
any year before the employer's withdrawal.
(iii) In determining the numerator and the denominator in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section, the rules under Sec. 4211.4 (and permissible
modifications under Sec. 4211.12 and simplified methods under
Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
(3) Adjusted value method. A plan may provide that the present
value of the suspended benefits as of the end of the plan year in which
the benefit suspension takes effect is the authorized value in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section and that the present value as of the
end of each of the succeeding nine plan years (the ``revaluation
date'') is the present value, as of a revaluation date, of the benefits
not expected to be paid
[[Page 1275]]
after the revaluation date due to the benefit suspension. An employer's
proportional share of the present value of a benefit suspension to
which this paragraph (c) applies using the adjusted value method is
determined by multiplying the present value of the suspended benefits
by a fraction--
(i) The numerator is the sum of all contributions required to be
made by the withdrawing employer for the 5 consecutive plan years
ending before the employer's withdrawal; and
(ii) The denominator is the total of all employers' contributions
for the 5 consecutive plan years ending before the employer's
withdrawal, increased by any employer contributions owed with respect
to earlier periods which were collected in those plan years, and
decreased by any amount contributed by an employer that withdrew from
the plan during those plan years.
(iii) In determining the numerator and the denominator in this
paragraph (c)(3), the rules under Sec. 4211.4 (and permissible
modifications under Sec. 4211.12 and simplified methods under
Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
(iv) If a benefit suspension in Sec. 4211.6(a)(3) is a temporary
suspension of the plan's payment obligations as authorized by the
Department of the Treasury, the present value of the suspended benefits
in this paragraph (c)(3) includes only the value of the suspended
benefits through the ending period of the benefit suspension.
(d) Benefit reductions. This paragraph (d) applies to benefits
reduced under Sec. 4211.6(a)(1) or (2).
(1) Value of a benefit reduction. The value of a benefit reduction
is--
(i) The unamortized balance, as of the end of the plan year before
the withdrawal, of;
(ii) The value of the benefit reduction as of the end of the plan
year in which the reduction took effect; and
(iii) Determined using the same assumptions as for unfunded vested
benefits and amortization in level annual installments over a period of
15 years.
(2) Employer's proportional share of a benefit reduction. An
employer's proportional share of the value of a benefit reduction to
which this paragraph (d) applies is determined by multiplying the value
of the benefit reduction by a fraction--
(i) The numerator is the sum of all contributions required to be
made by the withdrawing employer for the 5 consecutive plan years
ending before the employer's withdrawal; and
(ii) The denominator is the total of all employers' contributions
for the 5 consecutive plan years ending before the employer's
withdrawal, increased by any employer contributions owed with respect
to earlier periods which were collected in those plan years, and
decreased by any amount contributed by an employer that withdrew from
the plan during those plan years.
(iii) The 5 consecutive plan years ending before the plan year in
which the adjustable benefit reduction takes effect may be used in
determining the numerator and the denominator in this paragraph (d). If
such 5-year period is used, in determining the denominator, if a plan
uses an allocation method other than the presumptive method in section
4211(b) of ERISA or similar method, the denominator after the first
year is decreased by the contributions of any employers that withdrew
from the plan and were unable to satisfy their withdrawal liability
claims in any year before the employer's withdrawal.
(iv) In determining the numerator and the denominator in this
paragraph (d), the rules under Sec. 4211.4 (and permissible
modifications under Sec. 4211.12 and simplified methods under
Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
(e) Example. The simplified framework using the static value method
under Sec. 4211.16(c)(2) for disregarding a benefit suspension is
illustrated by the following example.
(1) Facts. Assume that a calendar year multiemployer plan receives
final authorization by the Secretary of the Treasury for a benefit
suspension, effective January 1, 2018. The present value, as of that
date, of the benefit suspension is $30 million. Employer A, a
contributing employer, withdraws during the 2022 plan year. Employer
A's proportional share of contributions for the 5 plan years ending in
2017 (the year before the benefit suspension takes effect) is 10
percent. Employer A's proportional share of contributions for the 5
plan years ending before Employer A's withdrawal in 2022 is 11 percent.
The plan uses the rolling-5 method for allocating unfunded vested
benefits to withdrawn employers under section 4211 of ERISA. The plan
sponsor has adopted by amendment the static value simplified method for
disregarding benefit suspensions in determining unfunded vested
benefits. Accordingly, there is a one-time valuation of the initial
value of the suspended benefits with respect to employer withdrawals
occurring during the 2019 through 2028 plan years, the first 10 years
of the benefit suspension.
(2) Unfunded vested benefits allocable to Employer A. To determine
the amount of unfunded vested benefits allocable to Employer A, the
plan's actuary first determines the amount of Employer A's withdrawal
liability as of the end of 2021 assuming the benefit suspensions remain
in effect. Under the rolling-5 method, if the plan's unfunded vested
benefits as determined in the plan's 2021 plan year valuation were $170
million (not including the present value of the suspended benefits),
the share of these unfunded vested benefits allocable to Employer A is
equal to $170 million multiplied by Employer A's allocation fraction of
11 percent, or $18.7 million. The plan's actuary then adds to this
amount Employer A's proportional 10 percent share of the $30 million
initial value of the suspended benefits, or $3 million. Employer A's
share of the plan's unfunded vested benefits for withdrawal liability
purposes is $21.7 million ($18.7 million + $3 million).
(3) Adjustment of allocation fraction. If another significant
contributing employer--Employer B--had withdrawn in 2019 and was unable
to satisfy its withdrawal liability claim, the allocation fraction
applicable to the value of the suspended benefits is adjusted. The
contributions in the denominator for the last 5 plan years ending in
2017 is reduced by the contributions that were made by Employer B,
thereby increasing Employer A's allocable share of the $30 million
value of the suspended benefits.
(f) Effective and applicability dates. (1) Effective date. This
section is effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section applies to employer
withdrawals from multiemployer plans that occur in plan years beginning
on or after February 8, 2021.
Sec. 4211.21 [Amended]
0
22. In Sec. 4211.21, amend paragraph (b) by removing ``Sec. 4211.12''
and adding in its place ``section 4211 of ERISA''.
Sec. 4211.31 [Amended]
0
23. In Sec. 4211.31, amend paragraph (b) by removing ``set forth in
Sec. 4211.12'' and adding in its place ``subpart B of this part''.
0
24. Amend Sec. 4211.32 by adding paragraph (c)(2)(iii) to read as
follows:
Sec. 4211.32 Presumptive method for withdrawals after the initial
plan year.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) In determining the numerator and the denominator in this
paragraph (c), the rules under Sec. 4211.4 (and permissible simplified
methods under Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
* * * * *
[[Page 1276]]
0
25. Amend Sec. 4211.33 by adding paragraph (c)(2)(iii) to read as
follows:
Sec. 4211.33 Modified presumptive method for withdrawals after the
initial plan year.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) In determining the numerator and the denominator in this
paragraph (c), the rules under Sec. 4211.4 (and permissible simplified
methods under Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15) apply.
0
26. In Sec. 4211.36, amend paragraph (a) by adding a sentence at the
end of the paragraph to read as follows:
Sec. 4211.36 Modifications to the determination of initial
liabilities, the amortization of initial liabilities, and the
allocation fraction.
(a) * * * In determining the numerators and the denominators in
paragraph (d) of this section, the rules under Sec. 4211.4 (and
permissible simplified methods under Sec. Sec. 4211.14 and 4211.15)
apply.
* * * * *
0
27. Add appendix to part 4211 to read as follows:
APPENDIX TO PART 4211--EXAMPLES
The examples in this appendix illustrate simplified methods for
disregarding certain contribution increases in the allocation
fraction provided in Sec. 4211.14 of this part.
Example 1. Determining the Numerator of the Allocation Fraction
Using the Employer's Plan Year 2014 Contribution Rate (Sec.
4211.14(b)).
Assume Plan X is a calendar year multiemployer plan in critical
status which did not have a benefit increase after plan year 2014.
In accordance with section 305(g)(3)(B) of ERISA, the annual 5
percent contribution rate increases applicable to Employer A and
other employers in Plan X after the 2014 plan year were deemed to be
required to enable the plan to meet the requirement of its
rehabilitation plan and must be disregarded. Employer A, a
contributing employer, withdraws from Plan X in 2021. Using the
rolling-5 method, Plan X has unfunded vested benefits of $200
million as of the end of the 2020 plan year. To determine Employer
A's allocable share of these unfunded vested benefits, Employer A's
hourly required contribution rate and contribution base units for
the 2014 plan year and each of the 5 plan years between 2016 and
2020 are identified as shown in the following table:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5-year
2014 PY 2016 PY 2017 PY 2018 PY 2019 PY 2020 PY total
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Employer A's Contribution Rate............................... $5.51 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a ...........
Contribution Base Units...................................... 800,000 800,000 800,000 900,000 900,000 900,000 4,300,000
Contributions................................................ $4.41M $4.86M $5.10M $6.03M $6.33M $6.64M $28.96M
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The plan sponsor makes a determination pursuant to section
305(g)(3) of ERISA that the annual 5 percent contribution rate
increases applicable to Employer A and other employers in Plan X
after the 2014 plan year were required to enable the plan to meet
the requirement of its rehabilitation plan and should be
disregarded; benefits were not increased after plan year 2014.
Applying the simplified method, contribution rate increases that
went into effect during plan years beginning after December 31, 2014
would be disregarded: The $5.51 contribution rate in effect at the
end of plan year 2014 would be held steady in computing Employer A's
required contributions for the plan years included in the numerator
of the allocation fraction. Based on 4.3 million contribution base
units, this results in total required contributions of $23.7 million
over 5 years. Absent section 305(g)(3) of ERISA, the sum of the
contributions required to be made by Employer A would have been
determined by multiplying Employer A's contribution rate in effect
for each plan year by the contribution base units in that plan year,
producing total required contributions of $28.96 million over 5
years.
Example 2. Determining the Denominator of the Allocation
Fraction Using the Proxy Group Method (Sec. 4211.14(d)).
Assume a plan covers ten employers. For 2017, three small
employers were in rate history group X, representing less than 5
percent of active plan participants; employers A and B and two other
employers were in rate history group Y; and employer C and two other
employers were in rate history group Z. For 2018, there were changes
in contribution rates for some of B's employees, and as a result,
employer B is being treated as two employers, B1 and B2. B1 remained
in rate history group Y because, while B1 has a significantly lower
contribution rate than A, the contributions of both are subject to
the same percentage increase each year. B2 was added to rate history
group X. X continues to represent less than 5 percent of active plan
participants, and the plan continues to ignore it in forming the
proxy group. The plan forms a 2018 proxy group of three employers--A
and B1 from rate history group Y and C from rate history group Z--
that together represent more than 10 percent of active plan
participants.
Contributions for 2018 are $1,000,000: $20,000 for rate history
group X, $740,000 for rate history group Y, and $240,000 for rate
history group Z, with A and B1 accounting for $150,000 and C
accounting for $45,000 of the total contribution amounts.
Contribution rates for 2018 for A, B1, and C (excluding rate
increases required to be disregarded for withdrawal liability
purposes) and contribution base units for the three employers are:
For A, 87 cents and 100,000 CBUs; for B1, 43 cents and 50,000 CBUs;
and for C, 70 cents and 60,000 CBUs, as shown in rows (1) and (2) of
the table below. Thus, the three employers' adjusted contributions
are $87,000, $21,500, and $42,000 respectively, as shown in row (3).
Moving from the employer level to the rate history group level,
the adjusted contributions for employers in the proxy group that are
in the same rate history group are added together (row (4)). Those
totals are then divided by total actual contributions for the proxy
group employers in each rate history group (row (6)) to derive an
adjustment factor for each rate history group (row (7)) that is
applied to the actual contributions of all employers in the rate
history group (row (8)) to get the adjusted contributions for each
rate history group represented in the proxy group (row (9)).
Moving from the rate history group level to the plan level, the
same process is repeated. Adjusted employer contributions for the
rate history group are summed (row (10)) and divided by the total
contributions for all rate history groups represented in the proxy
group (row (11)) to get an adjustment factor for the plan (row
(12)). Contributions for rate history group X are excluded from row
(11) because no employer in rate history group X is in the proxy
group. The adjustment factor for the plan is then applied to total
plan contributions (row (13)) to get adjusted plan contributions
(row (14)). Contributions for rate history group X are included in
row (13) because--although X was ignored in determining the
adjustment factor for the plan -- the adjustment factor applies to
all plan contributions (other than those by employers excluded from
the plan's allocation fraction denominator). The plan will use the
adjusted plan contributions in row (14) as the total contributions
for 2018 in determining the denominator of any allocation fraction
that includes contributions for 2018.
[[Page 1277]]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rate history group
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Row number Regulatory reference in Description of action Y Z
Sec. 4211.14(d) -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Employer A Employer B1 Employer C
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)..................... (6)(ii)................. 2018 contribution rate $0.87 per CBU........... $0.43 per CBU........... $0.70 per CBU
excluding disregarded
increases.
(2)..................... (6)(i).................. 2018 CBUs............. 100,000 50,000 60,000
(3)..................... (6)..................... Adjusted employer $87,000 $21,500 $42,000
contributions (1)x(2).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(4)..................... (7)(i).................. Sum of adjusted $108,500 $42,000
contributions for
proxy employers by
rate history group.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5)..................... (7)(ii)................. Unadjusted $100,000 $25,000 $45,000
contributions for
proxy employers.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(6)..................... (7)(ii)................. Sum of unadjusted $125,000 $45,000
contributions for
proxy employers by
rate history group.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(7)..................... (7)..................... Adjustment factor by 0.868 0.933
rate history group
(4)/(6).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(8)..................... (7)..................... Total actual $740,000 $240,000
contributions by rate
history group.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(9)..................... (7)..................... Adjusted contributions $642,320 $223,920
by rate history group
(7)x(8).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(10).................... (8)(i).................. Sum of adjusted $866,240
contributions for
rate history groups
represented in proxy
group.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(11).................... (8)(ii)................. Total actual $980,000
contributions for
rate history groups
represented in proxy
group.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(12).................... (8)..................... Adjustment factor for 0.884
plan (10)/(11).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(13).................... (8)..................... Total plan $1,000,000
contributions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(14).................... (8)..................... Adjusted plan $884,000
contributions (for
allocation fraction
denominators)
(12)x(13).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 4219--NOTICE, COLLECTION, AND REDETERMINATION OF WITHDRAWAL
LIABILITY
0
28. The authority citation for part 4219 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3) and 1399(c)(6).
0
29. In Sec. 4219.1:
0
a. Amend paragraph (a) by adding two sentences at the end of the
paragraph;
0
b. Amend paragraph (b)(1) by removing in the third sentence ``shall''
and adding in its place ``does'';
0
c. Amend paragraph (b)(2) by removing in the second sentence ``shall
cease'' and adding in its place ``cease'';
0
d. Amend paragraph (c) by removing in the second sentence ``whom'' and
adding in its place ``which''.
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 4219.1 Purpose and scope.
(a) * * * Section 4219(c) of ERISA requires a withdrawn employer to
make annual withdrawal liability payments at a set rate over the number
of years necessary to amortize its withdrawal liability, generally
limited to a period of 20 years. This subpart provides rules for
disregarding certain contribution increases in determining the highest
contribution rate under section 4219(c) of ERISA.
* * * * *
Sec. 4219.2 [Amended]
0
30. In Sec. 4219.2:
0
a. Amend paragraph (a) by removing ``multiemployer plan,'' and adding
in its place ``multiemployer plan, nonforfeitable benefit,'';
0
b. Amend the definition of ``Mass withdrawal valuation date'' by
removing the last sentence of the definition;
0
c. Amend the definition of ``Reallocation record date'' by removing
``shall be'' and adding in its place ``is'';
0
d. Amend the definition of ``Unfunded vested benefits'' by removing ``a
plan's vested nonforfeitable benefits (as defined for purposes of this
section)'' and adding in its place ``a plan's nonforfeitable
benefits''.
0
31. Add Sec. 4219.3 to read as follows:
Sec. 4219.3 Disregarding certain contributions.
(a) General rule. For purposes of determining the highest
contribution rate under section 4219(c) of ERISA, a plan must
disregard:
(1) Surcharge. Any surcharge under section 305(e)(7) of ERISA and
section 432(e)(7) of the Code the obligation for which accrues on or
after December 31, 2014.
(2) Contribution increase. Any increase in the contribution rate or
other increase in contribution requirements
[[Page 1278]]
that goes into effect during a plan year beginning after December 31,
2014, so that a plan may meet the requirements of a funding improvement
plan under section 305(c) of ERISA and section 432(c) of the Code or a
rehabilitation plan under section 305(e) of ERISA and section 432(e) of
the Code, except to the extent that one of the following exceptions
applies pursuant to section 305(g)(3) of ERISA and section 432(g)(3) of
the Code:
(i) The increases in contribution requirements are due to increased
levels of work, employment, or periods for which compensation is
provided.
(ii) The additional contributions are used to provide an increase
in benefits, including an increase in future benefit accruals,
permitted by section 305(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of ERISA and section
432(d)(1)(B) or (f)(1)(B) of the Code.
(b) Simplified method for a plan that is no longer in endangered or
critical status. A plan sponsor may amend a plan without PBGC approval
to use the simplified method in this paragraph (b) for purposes of
determining the highest contribution rate for a plan that is no longer
in endangered or critical status. The highest contribution rate is the
greater of--
(1) The employer's contribution rate as of the date that is the
later of the last day of the first plan year that ends on or after
December 31, 2014 and the last day of the plan year the employer first
contributes to the plan (the ``employer freeze date'') plus any
contribution increases after the employer freeze date, and before the
employer's withdrawal date that are determined in accordance with the
rules under Sec. 4219.3(a)(2)(ii); or
(2) The highest contribution rate for any plan year after the plan
year that includes the expiration date of the first collective
bargaining agreement of the withdrawing employer requiring plan
contributions that expires after the plan is no longer in endangered or
critical status, or, if earlier, the date as of which the withdrawing
employer renegotiated a contribution rate effective after the plan year
the plan is no longer in endangered or critical status.
(c) Example: The simplified method in paragraph (b) of this section
is illustrated by the following example.
(1) Facts. A contributing employer withdraws in plan year 2028,
after the 2027 expiration date of the first collective bargaining
agreement requiring plan contributions that expires after the plan is
no longer in critical status in plan year 2026. The plan sponsor
determines that under the expiring collective bargaining agreement the
employer's $4.50 hourly contribution rate in plan year 2014 was
required to increase each year to $7.00 per hour in plan year 2025, to
enable the plan to meet its rehabilitation plan. The plan sponsor
determines that, over this period, a cumulative increase of $0.85 per
hour was used to fund benefit increases, as provided by plan amendment.
Under a new collective bargaining agreement effective in 2027, the
employer's hourly contribution rate is reduced to $5.00.
(2) Highest contribution rate. The plan sponsor determines that the
employer's highest contribution rate for purposes of section 4219(c) of
ERISA is $5.35, because it is the greater of the highest rate in effect
after the plan is no longer in critical status ($5.00) and the
employer's contribution rate in plan year 2014 ($4.50) plus any
increases between 2015 and 2025 ($0.85) that were required to be taken
into account under section 305(g)(3) of ERISA.
(d) Effective and applicability dates. (1) Effective date. This
section is effective on February 8, 2021.
(2) Applicability date. This section applies to employer
withdrawals from multiemployer plans that occur in plan years beginning
on or after February 8, 2021.
Issued in Washington, DC.
Gordon Hartogensis,
Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2020-28866 Filed 1-7-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7709-02-P