Employee Benefits Security Administration March 10, 2005 – Federal Register Recent Federal Regulation Documents
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Proposed Class Exemption for Services Provided in Connection With the Termination of Abandoned Individual Account Plans
This document contains a notice of a proposed class exemption from certain prohibited transaction restrictions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and from certain taxes imposed by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). If granted, the proposed class exemption would permit a ``qualified termination administrator'' (QTA) of an individual account plan that has been abandoned by its sponsoring employer to select itself or an affiliate to provide services to the plan in connection with the termination of the plan, and to pay itself or an affiliate fees for those services. The proposed exemption also would permit a qualified termination administrator of an abandoned plan to: Designate itself or an affiliate as provider of an individual retirement plan or other account; select a proprietary investment product as the initial investment for the rollover distribution of benefits for a participant or beneficiary who fails to make an election regarding the disposition of such benefits; and pay itself or its affiliate fees in connection therewith. This exemption is being proposed in connection with the Department's proposed regulation to be promulgated at 29 CFR 2578, relating to the Termination of Abandoned Individual Account Plans, and 2550.404a-3, relating to the Safe Harbor For Rollover Distributions from Terminated Individual Account Plans, which are being published simultaneously in this issue of the Federal Register. The proposed exemption, if granted, would affect individual account plans, the participants and beneficiaries of such plans, certain plan service providers, and the fiduciaries of such plans.
Termination of Abandoned Individual Account Plans
This document contains three proposed regulations under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) that, upon adoption, would facilitate the termination of, and distribution of benefits from, individual account pension plans that have been abandoned by their sponsoring employers. The first proposed rule would establish a regulatory framework pursuant to which financial institutions and other entities holding the assets of an abandoned individual account plan can terminate the plan and distribute benefits to the plan's participants and beneficiaries, with limited liability. The second proposed rule provides a fiduciary safe harbor for use in connection with making rollover distributions from terminated plans on behalf of participants and beneficiaries who fail to make an election regarding a form of benefit distribution. Appendices to these rules contain model notices for use in connection therewith. The third proposed rule would establish a simplified method for filing a terminal report for abandoned individual account plans. These proposed regulations, if adopted, would affect fiduciaries, plan service providers, and participants and beneficiaries of individual account pension plans.
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