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September 2008
The Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), administers the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA), which governs retirement plans (including profit
sharing and 401(k) plans) and welfare plans (including health, disability,
and life insurance plans). ERISA also includes the health coverage
continuation and accessibility provisions of the Consolidated Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) and the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA). This information sheet focuses on bankruptcy’s
effect on pension plans and group health plans.
If an employer declares bankruptcy, it will generally
take one of two forms: reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code, or liquidation under Chapter 7. A Chapter 11 (reorganization)
usually means that the company continues in business under the court’s
protection while attempting to reorganize its financial affairs. A Chapter
11 bankruptcy may or may not affect your pension or health plan. In some
cases, plans continue to exist throughout the reorganization process. In a
Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the company liquidates its assets to pay its
creditors and ceases to exist. Therefore, it is likely your pension and
health plans will be terminated.
When your employer files for bankruptcy you should
contact the administrator of each plan or your union representative (if
you are represented by a union) to request an explanation of the status of
your plan or benefits. The summary plan description will tell how to get
in touch with the plan administrator. Questions that you may want to ask
include:
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Will the plan continue or will it be
terminated?
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Who will be acting as plan
administrator of the plans during and after the bankruptcy, and who
will be the trustee in charge of the pension plan?
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If the pension plan is to be
terminated, how will accrued benefits be paid?
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Will COBRA continuation coverage be
offered to terminated employees?
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If the health plan is to be
terminated, how will outstanding health claims be paid, and when will
certificates of creditable coverage (showing, among other things, the
dates of enrollment in your employer’s health plan) be issued?
Know the plan rules that govern the way your pension assets
and health benefits are treated when the plan is terminated. The following
documents contain valuable information about your health and pension plans and
should be helpful to you. You should be able to obtain most of them from your
plan administrator, employer, or union representative.
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Summary plan description A description of
your pension and health plan.
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Summary annual report (not available for
some plans) An annual summary of the plan’s finances that may contain
names and addresses you may need to know.
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Earnings and leave statements These are
your pay stubs and may help you establish your employment dates,
compensation, and contributions to a plan.
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Certificate of creditable coverage
(available upon request even if you still have health coverage and provided
automatically when your health coverage ceases) A certificate of creditable
coverage is a statement of your past health care coverage with your
employer.
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Individual benefit statements showing how
much money is in your retirement account (for individual account plans) or
the value of your pension benefit (for defined benefit plans).
Workers in bankruptcy situations face two important issues
when it comes to their retirement benefits: access to pension benefits and the
continued safety of their pension assets. Generally, your pension assets should
not be at risk when a business declares bankruptcy, because ERISA requires that
promised pension benefits be adequately funded and that pension monies be kept
separate from an employer’s business assets and held in trust or invested in
an insurance contract. Thus, if an employer declares bankruptcy, the retirement
funds should be secure from the company’s creditors. In addition, plan
fiduciaries must comply with the ERISA provisions that prohibit the
mismanagement and abuse of plan assets. If contributions to a plan have been
withheld from your pay, you may want to confirm that the amounts deducted have
been forwarded to the plan’s trust or insurance contract.
In addition, some pension benefits may be insured by the
Federal Government. Traditional plans (defined benefit plans) are protected
by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), a Federal Government
corporation. If a plan is terminated because an employer has financial
difficulty and cannot fund the plan, and the plan does not have enough money
to pay the promised benefits, the PBGC will assume responsibility for the
plan. The PBGC pays benefits after termination up to a certain maximum
guaranteed amount. On the other hand, defined contribution plans, such as
401(k) plans, are not insured by the PBGC.
In the event the pension plan is terminated, the plan
must vest your accrued benefit 100 percent. This means that the plan owes
you all the pension benefits that you have earned so far, even benefits you
would have lost if you had voluntarily left your employment. ERISA does not
require that pension benefits be paid out before normal retirement age,
usually age 65. Your plan may provide for distribution sooner than this.
Some plans require participants to reach a certain age before benefits will
be distributed, and some require the participant to have been separated from
employment for a specified period of time. You should review the summary
plan description for the plan rules regarding payment of benefits. Also
remember that taking a distribution of pension benefits before retirement
may have important tax consequences. You may need to consult with a tax
advisor before accepting the distribution.
Your group health plan must notify you within 60 days
of any reduction in benefits. If a reorganizing employer maintained
several health plans and discontinues most of its plans, you may be
eligible to continue coverage in its remaining plan. If you are covered
under your employer’s health plan and you lose your job, have your hours
reduced, or get laid off and lose coverage as a result, you and your
dependents may qualify for COBRA continuation coverage. COBRA provides a
right to purchase extended health coverage under your employer’s plan.
You and your dependents may also have a special
enrollment right in a spouse’s group health plan. However, you and your
dependents must request enrollment within 30 days of losing your coverage.
If you elect COBRA coverage instead of special enrollment in a spouse’s
plan, you must exhaust COBRA before you may be eligible for another special
enrollment opportunity.
If, however, your employer discontinues all its health
plans, COBRA continuation coverage will not be available. You will have to
seek other coverage. Other coverage may be available by converting your
employer’s group health coverage to an individual policy. As mentioned
above, you may also have rights to special enrollment in a spouse’s
employer’s plan, or by being an "eligible individual" who is
guaranteed access to individual insurance. The opportunity to buy an
individual insurance policy is the same whether the individual is laid off,
is fired, or quits his or her job.
Special bankruptcy rules may apply if you are receiving
health benefits as a retiree or if your health benefits are the subject of a
collective bargaining agreement.
Finally, if you have unpaid health claims and your plan
sponsor has declared bankruptcy, you may want to consider filing a proof of
claim with the bankruptcy court.
You should contact the EBSA regional office nearest you if:
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You are unable to obtain information or
documents about your benefits or related to your pension or health plan;
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You suspect contributions deducted from
your pay check have not been deposited to the plan, your pension benefits
are not safe, or the assets are not prudently invested;
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You need information and assistance with
unpaid health claims or in obtaining a certificate of creditable coverage.
If your retirement plan is a defined benefit pension
plan, all or a portion of the benefits may be insured by the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation (PBGC). For further information contact the:
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
Administrative Review and Technology Assistance Department
1200 K Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005
Tel. 202.326.4000
If your health plan coverage ends, you should contact
your State department of insurance to inquire about your eligibility for an
individual policy under HIPAA.
You may call the EBSA toll-free Hotline at 1.866.444.EBSA
(3272) if you have questions about your options during a bankruptcy, or
contact EBSA electronically at www.askebsa.dol.gov. For more information
about rights to coverage, visit our Web site at www.dol.gov/ebsa.
This fact sheet has been developed by the U.S. Department
of Labor, Employee Benefits Security Administration, Washington, DC 20210.
It will be made available in alternate formats upon request: Voice phone:
202.693.8664; TTY: 202.501.3911. In addition, the information in this fact
sheet constitutes a small entity compliance guide for purposes of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.
Reprinted August 2003
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