Certain plans, such as those for churches, certain governments,
collective bargaining plans and for limited universal
availability exclusions may have delayed effective dates
for the new regulations.
Effective January 1, 2009, a plan sponsor/employer is
now required to maintain a written 403(b) plan document.
Plan documents should include information related to the
form and operation of the plan, eligibility requirements,
investment options/limits, contribution and distribution
policies, and loan provisions among other topics. The
plan document may include references to other related
documents, such as insurance policies and related accounts,
but a single document is required for each plan. The most
pressing matter to remember is the date, which is fast
approaching. To reemphasize, even for plans that do not
use a calendar-basis year, the plan document must be adopted
by the January 1, 2009 date.
The 403(b) plan is defined by the regulations as a" written
defined contribution plan, which, in both form and operation"
satisfy the requirements of the new regulations. The requirements
note that the 403(b) contract does not satisfy the regulations
if it is not maintained in accordance with the plan document
specifications. Thus, adopting a plan document and then
not strictly adhering to its terms may disqualify the
entire plan. The employer, investment professional providing
services under the plan and any other related third parties
assisting the plan must adhere to the terms of the plan.
Other major changes under the new 403(b) requirements
include the following:
New Form 5500 Reporting Requirements
403(b) plans (with certain exceptions such as church
plans and other ERISA-exempt plans) will now be subject
to expanded reporting requirements (including financial
statement reporting) on their Form 5500.
For those plans with more than 100 participants (and
participant counts must now be maintained) will be subject
to the same independent audit requirements as other plans.
The Form 5500 must be filed electronically starting January
1, 2009.
New Invesment Information Sharing Requirements
As required by Treasury Regulation Section 1.403(b)-10(b),
the employer plan sponsor and service providers (for example,
investment managers, etc.) must share information to ensure
the plan's compliance with the requirements of the IRC
and final regulations. Examples of the type of information
that should be shared include participant's eligibility
for hardship distributions/loans and employment status,
etc. Thus service providers to the plan will no longer
be able to simply rely on communication with the participant.
The effective date for the new information sharing requirement
(for accounts/contracts that receive amounts from another
account/contract after September 24, 2007) will be subject
to the new exchange requirements as of January 1, 2009.
It should be noted that if the effective date is not met,
the 403(b) status may be in jeopardy. The end result could
be that the employee/participant account will become income
taxable, including those with multiple contracts. Moreover,
if the employee falls below the age of 59 ½ as of the
January 1, 2008 effective date, the value of the employee's
contract(s) may be subject to the 10% Federal early withdrawal
penalty.
A Final Note...Early Response
Except for particular restrictions related to collective
bargaining plans, employer plan sponsors may opt to comply
with the new 403(b) requirements prior to the effective
date(s). Given the need for a written plan document, the
complexities of revised Form 5500 reporting and the coordinated
task of creating information sharing agreements with all
providers to a plan, early compliance with the new regulations
seems like the best choice for the 403(b) plan sponsor
to enter 2009 ahead of the curve.