TPA Commentary - December 2005
A Primer on Qualified Plan Document Maintenance
The sponsor of a
tax-qualified retirement plan and the plan’s fiduciaries have a number of
obligations once a plan is established. Many of these obligations relate to the
day-to-day operation of a plan. However, plan document maintenance issues are
sometimes overlooked.
This newsletter will
summarize some of these issues and describe the consequences of not timely
amending plan documents. It will also summarize the new IRS determination
letter process.
Written Plan Document Requirement
Tax-qualified retirement
plans are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(“ERISA”). All ERISA-governed plans must be documented in a written plan
document.
The IRS has the primary
responsibility for the review of the terms and conditions of a tax-qualified
plan. The IRS reviews the plan document when a determination letter is
requested or during a plan audit.
Plan documents can take
various forms including individually designed, volume submitter and prototype
plans which are described below.
Individually Designed Plans
This type of plan
document is custom designed to meet the employer’s specific needs. The employer
has the greatest variety of available options with this type of plan.
Volume Submitter Plans
Volume submitter plans
generally look like individually designed plans, but the IRS has pre-approved
much of the document language since it is expected they will see a large volume
of these plans utilizing the document options.
Prototype Plans
Prototype plans are
pre-approved by the IRS and come with two types of adoption agreements: standardized and non-standardized. Standardized adoption agreements have very
limited choices which prevent the plan sponsor from designing a plan that will
not satisfy discrimination tests.
Non-standardized plans
offer additional flexibility to exclude certain forms of compensation for
allocation purposes or exclude certain employees from the plan or contribution
eligibility.
Plan provisions usually
take the form of a fill-in-the-blank adoption agreement. The selection of
available options varies by sponsor of the prototype document. These documents
are generally sponsored by companies such as retirement consulting firms,
brokerage firms, banks, insurance companies and mutual funds.
Determination Letter Applications
A first way that the IRS
may wind up reviewing a plan document is when a determination letter
application is submitted. A plan is voluntarily submitted to the IRS for a
determination that its terms and conditions satisfy all applicable IRS
tax-qualification requirements.
Plan sponsors are not
required to submit pension, 401(k), money purchase or other tax-qualified plans
for IRS approval. If, however, a plan sponsor does not submit a plan and the
IRS later determines that the plan does not satisfy a legal requirement, the
plan may be “disqualified” with negative tax consequences for the plan’s
participants.
When a determination
letter request is submitted, the IRS reviews the submitted plan against a
checklist of legally-required provisions derived from the Internal Revenue Code
and related regulations. If the IRS concludes that the plan satisfies these
requirements, the plan will be issued a favorable determination letter.
If the IRS concludes
that the plan does not satisfy these requirements or has questions about plan
terms and when they were adopted, it will contact the person submitting the
determination letter request for more information.
The Internal Revenue
Code and related IRS guidance allows a plan sponsor to adopt retroactive plan
amendments in certain limited circumstances. If a retroactive amendment is not
permitted, the IRS may refer a determination letter application to its employee
plans correction program which will trigger additional IRS fees.
Recent IRS Update of Determination Letter Process
The IRS recently issued
guidance (Revenue Procedure 2005-66) updating the rules governing the
determination letter process.
Although a plan sponsor
may submit a determination letter application at any time, the IRS has
historically been faced with periodic waves of determination letter
applications. These waves have generally occurred at the end of an applicable “remedial
amendment period.” A remedial amendment period is a period of time during which
a plan sponsor may amend a plan retroactively to comply with changes in
applicable law.
The result of these
waves was that the IRS often found itself needing to adjust its staff
(including using audit staff) to review determination letter applications. The
new determination letter application process attempts to smooth these waves.
Impact on Volume Submitter and Prototype Plans
The IRS has historically
required that pre-approved plan documents, such as volume submitter and
prototype plans, be amended from time-to-time to comply with applicable legal
changes. If a pre-approved plan satisfies applicable IRS requirements, an
opinion letter is issued to the sponsor of a pre-approved plan. Many individual
plan sponsors rely on this opinion letter rather than submitting a request for
their own determination letter.
Under the new
determination letter process, pre-approved plans must be submitted once every
six years for a new opinion letter. The timing of this six-year cycle depends
on the type of plan involved—the cycle will differ for defined contribution and
defined benefit plans.
When the review of a
cycle of pre-approved plans (which is anticipated to last two years) has neared
completion, the IRS will publish an announcement stating a uniform date by
which all employers using a pre-approved plan must adopt the newly approved
plans. It is expected that this date will give virtually all plan sponsors
adopting a pre-approved plan a two-year window in which to adopt the updated
plan and, if necessary, submit the plan for its own determination letter.
Impact on Individually Designed Plans
Under the new
determination letter process, individually designed plans have a five-year
remedial amendment period that, in most cases, is based on the last digit of a
plan sponsor’s federal employer identification number.
A plan sponsor may apply
for an updated determination letter during the last twelve months of its
five-year filing cycle. In general, a plan sponsor may submit either a
restatement or a working copy that incorporates all amendments. The sponsor’s
favorable determination letter will include an expiration date, so the sponsor
will need to refile if it wants to preserve reliance.
Interim Amendments
Changes to a plan
document, either due to Internal Revenue Code tax-qualification requirements or
because of a discretionary plan design change, must be reflected in a timely adopted
good-faith “interim” amendment. An interim amendment addressing a disqualifying
plan provision will be treated as timely adopted if the plan amendment is
adopted by the due date (including extensions) of the employer’s tax return for
the year in which the change is first effective. However, any discretionary
change must be adopted by the end of the plan year in which the plan amendment
is effective (unless earlier adoption is necessary to prevent a cutback under
applicable IRS guidance).
Plans must always be
operated in compliance with a new or changed tax-qualification requirement as
of its effective date regardless of when an amendment is adopted.
Plan Audits
A second way that the
IRS may wind up reviewing a plan document is when the IRS conducts an audit of
a plan. The IRS, as part of its enforcement activities, may request the plan
document and other information about the plan.
Although these
activities have been relatively infrequent in recent years, the IRS has
recently begun renewed enforcement activities. As part of its renewed efforts,
the IRS is working to streamline the audit process to avoid “open ended” audits
that consume significant amounts of time. Instead, many IRS auditors are likely
to initially focus on a few core areas of concern when conducting an audit.
Of course certain
audits, such as the IRS’s new Employee Plans Team Audit program for large
employers, may be far more comprehensive.
Timely plan amendments
are key to avoiding problems when a plan is audited. Although the IRS may also
focus on operational activities, a clear plan document helps to streamline the
audit process. Plan sponsors who fail to timely adopt plan amendments to comply
with law changes may utilize the IRS’s Voluntary Correction Program (“VCP”), as
long as the plan is not under examination by the IRS. Reduced filing fees apply
if the VCP filing is within one year of the missed deadline.
If the IRS finds that a
plan has not been timely amended during an audit, a plan and plan sponsor may
be subject to significant IRS closing agreement fees and, in the worst case, a
plan may lose its tax-qualified status.
Summary Plan Description and Summary of Material Modification
A summary plan
description (“SPD”) generally describes the material terms of a plan, including
all contribution rules, distribution rules, fees and other participant rights
under the plan in a manner designed to be understood by an average plan
participant.
An updated summary plan
description must be provided once every ten years if there have been no plan
amendments and every five years if plan amendments have been adopted. A plan
administrator must provide a summary plan description to a participant or
beneficiary within 90 days of becoming a participant or becoming eligible to
receive benefits from a plan. Also, unless a new SPD is provided each time an
amendment is adopted, a plan administrator must provide a summary of the
amendment in a summary of material modifications to participants and
beneficiaries within 210 days after the close of a plan year in which an
amendment is adopted.
Conclusion
There are a number of
ongoing plan document maintenance activities that are easily overlooked by plan
sponsors and fiduciaries. Pre-approved and individually designed plan sponsors
should keep in mind the need to timely amend their plan for discretionary and
Internal Revenue Code-mandated changes and be aware of the new remedial
amendment periods.
Complying with IRS
requirements involve a commitment of time and effort. However, taking steps to comply
with these requirements now can help to prevent the need for more time
consuming and costly efforts to achieve after-the-fact compliance at a later
date.

The information contained
in this newsletter is intended to provide general information on matters of
interest in the area of qualified retirement plans and is provided with the
understanding that our company is not engaged in rendering legal or tax advice.
Legal or tax questions should always be referred to a qualified tax advisor
such as an attorney or CPA.
©2005 Benefit Insights, Inc. All rights reserved.
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