[Federal Register: May 7, 2004 (Volume 69, Number 89)]

[Proposed Rules]               

[Page 25797-25799]

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

[DOCID:fr07my04-26]                         







[[Page 25797]]





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PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY CORPORATION



29 CFR Parts 4011 and 4071



RIN 1212-AA95



 

Assessment of and Relief From Penalties--Participant Notices



AGENCY: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.



ACTION: Proposed statement of policy.



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SUMMARY: The PBGC is proposing a new penalty policy for failures to 

issue Participant Notices as required under section 4011 of the 

Employee Retirement Security Act of 1974 and 29 CFR part 4011. The new 

policy would tie the guideline penalty amounts primarily to the number 

of plan participants. Subject to a one-year transition period, the new 

policy would apply to: (1) 2004 and later Participant Notices, (2) 2002 

and 2003 Participant Notices that do not meet the requirements for 

penalty relief under the Participant Notice Voluntary Correction 

Program (``VCP'') announced elsewhere in today's Federal Register, and 

(3) pre-2002 Participant Notices, where there is a 2002 or 2003 

Participant Notice failure that is covered by the VCP but that does not 

meet the requirements for penalty relief under the VCP.



DATES: Comments must be received on or before July 6, 2004.



ADDRESSES: Comments may be mailed to the Office of the General Counsel, 

Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K Street, NW., Washington, 

DC 20005-4026, or delivered to Suite 340 at the above address. Comments 

also may be submitted electronically through the PBGC's Web site at 

http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/leaving.cgi?from=leavingFR.html&log=linklog&to=http://www.pbgc.gov/regs, or by fax to 202-326-4112. The PBGC will make all comments available on its Web site, http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/leaving.cgi?from=leavingFR.html&log=linklog&to=http://www.pbgc.gov. Copies of 



the comments may also be obtained by writing to the PBGC's 

Communications and Public Affairs Department at Suite 240 at the above 

address or by visiting that office or calling 202-326-4040 during 

normal business hours. (TTY and TDD users may call the Federal relay 

service toll-free at 1-800-877-8339 and ask to be connected to 202-326-

4040.)



FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Harold J. Ashner, Assistant General 

Counsel, or Catherine B. Klion, Attorney, Pension Benefit Guaranty 

Corporation, Office of the General Counsel, Suite 340, 1200 K Street, 

NW., Washington, DC 20005-4026, 202-326-4024. (For TTY/TDD users, call 

the Federal relay service toll-free at 1-800-877-8339 and ask to be 

connected to 202-326-4024.)



SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 4011 of the Employee Retirement 

Income Security Act of 1974 (``ERISA'') requires certain underfunded 

plans to issue a notice to participants of the plan's funding status 

and the limits on the PBGC's guarantee (``Participant Notice''). The 

Participant Notice helps to ensure that participants better understand 

the financial status of their plans and the consequences that plan 

underfunding may have on their promised benefits. The PBGC's 

implementing regulations are at 29 CFR part 4011.

    Elsewhere in today's Federal Register, the PBGC is announcing a 

Participant Notice Voluntary Correction Program (``VCP''). This 

program, which generally covers Participant Notices for the 2002 or 

2003 plan year that were not issued as required, is designed to 

encourage plan administrators to correct recent compliance failures 

without penalty and to facilitate plan administrators' future 

compliance. The VCP and the requirements generally governing 

Participant Notices, including the effect of the Pension Funding Equity 

Act of 2004, which was signed into law by the President on April 10, 

2004, are more fully described in that announcement.

    Under section 4071 of ERISA and 29 CFR part 4071, the PBGC may 

assess a penalty of up to $1,100 a day for certain failures to provide 

notices or other material information in a timely manner, including a 

failure to provide a Participant Notice as required. The Department of 

Labor has advised the PBGC that a penalty assessed against a plan 

administrator under section 4071 of ERISA for failure to issue a 

Participant Notice as required is a liability of the plan 

administrator, not a liability of the plan, and may not be paid out of 

plan assets.

    On July 18, 1995 (60 FR 36837), the PBGC published its current 

penalty policy, which applies to Participant Notices along with other 

types of information. The current policy provides:

    General guideline penalty amounts: The penalty accrues at the rate 

of $25 per day for the first 90 days of delinquency and $50 per day 

thereafter. The penalty is reduced proportionately for plans with fewer 

than 100 participants, subject to a floor of $5 per day. There is a cap 

on the total penalty for any violation of $100 times the number of plan 

participants.

    Facts-and-circumstances adjustments: The PBGC may adjust the 

penalty rate up or down based on the facts and circumstances 

surrounding the violation. The policy identifies certain specific 

circumstances in which the PBGC may or will assess larger penalties.

    Penalty waivers for reasonable cause: The PBGC evaluates each 

request for a waiver based on ``reasonable cause'' to determine whether 

the responsible person exercised ordinary business care and prudence 

and delay resulted from circumstances beyond that person's control.

    On January 12, 2001 (66 FR 2856), the PBGC published a proposed 

rule that would, among other things, codify in its regulations an 

expanded version of its 1995 penalty policy. The proposed policy leaves 

the guideline amounts for assessing penalties basically unchanged and 

provides guidance on determining whether there is ``reasonable cause'' 

that would justify a waiver of penalties. The PBGC did not receive any 

comments on this proposal.

    Based on its experience in enforcing Participant Notice 

requirements, the PBGC has reconsidered its 2001 proposal as applied to 

Participant Notices. The PBGC believes that its guideline penalties for 

Participant Notice failures should be tied primarily to the number of 

plan participants rather than, as is the case under the existing policy 

and the 2001 proposal, the number of days of delinquency. This approach 

recognizes that the significance of a failure to provide a Participant 

Notice varies with the number of participants who were entitled to, but 

did not, receive the Participant Notice. Accordingly, the PBGC is 

issuing a supplemental proposal relating to its penalty policy for 

Participant Notice failures. Under the proposed new penalty structure, 

as under the existing penalty policy and the 2001 penalty policy 

proposal, the PBGC would continue to consider the facts and 

circumstances of each case to ensure that the penalty fits the 

violation. The PBGC intends to publish its final Participant Notice 

penalty policy as soon as practicable after considering public 

comments.



Proposed Participant Notice Penalty Policy



    The guideline penalty amount for a failure to issue a Participant 

Notice as required would equal the number of participants in the plan 

multiplied by the applicable per-participant information penalty rate. 

That rate would depend on whether the failure is a repeat violation and 

on the timing of its correction in relation to a PBGC audit:



[[Page 25798]]



    Pre-audit corrections: If the plan administrator corrects the 

failure on or before the date the PBGC issues a written notice to the 

plan that it is or may be auditing compliance with Participant Notice 

requirements, the per-participant information penalty rate would be $5, 

unless the violation is a repeat violation, in which case the per-

participant information penalty rate would be $20.

    Post-audit corrections: If the plan administrator corrects the 

failure after the date the PBGC issues a written notice to the plan 

that it is or may be auditing compliance with Participant Notice 

requirements, the per-participant information penalty rate would be 

$40, unless the violation is a repeat violation, in which case the per-

participant information penalty rate would be $100.

    However, if the plan administrator corrects the failure within one 

year after the Participant Notice was originally due (regardless of 

whether the correction was pre-audit or post-audit), the PBGC would 

prorate the penalty based on the number of days before correction. For 

example, if the plan administrator corrects the failure 90 days after 

the Participant Notice deadline, the PBGC would reduce the penalty by 

multiplying it by 90/365. The PBGC would not increase the penalty for 

failures corrected after a year.



Determination of Participant Count



    In applying the new penalty structure, the PBGC generally would use 

the number of plan participants as determined for premium purposes for 

the plan for which the Participant Notice is required. Thus, the 

participant count would ordinarily be determined as of the last day of 

the prior plan year, which usually serves as the ``snapshot'' date used 

to count participants for premium purposes. However, where this 

participant count is significantly higher or lower than the number of 

persons entitled to receive the Participant Notice, the PBGC may make 

an appropriate adjustment to the participant count.



Determination of Repeat Violation Status



    The PBGC would treat a failure to issue a Participant Notice as 

required for a plan year as a repeat violation if it occurred after the 

date the plan administrator knew, or should have known, that there was 

a non-de minimis Participant Notice failure for a previous plan year. 

For this purpose, the PBGC would disregard any Participant Notice 

failure for: (1) Any plan year more than six years before the plan year 

in question, (2) any 2002 or 2003 plan year, provided the 2002 or 2003 

Participant Notice failure meets the requirements for penalty relief 

under the VCP announced elsewhere in today's Federal Register, and (3) 

any pre-2002 plan year, except where there is a 2002 or 2003 

Participant Notice failure that is covered by the VCP but that does not 

meet the requirements for penalty relief under the VCP.



Determination That Valid Corrective Notice Has Been Issued



    The PBGC would determine whether a corrective notice issued by a 

plan administrator is valid for purposes of this penalty policy under 

the following guidelines:

    Pre-audit corrections: If the plan administrator corrects a 

Participant Notice failure on or before the date the PBGC issues a 

written notice to the plan that it is or may be auditing compliance 

with Participant Notice requirements, the correction would be valid for 

purposes of this penalty policy if the PBGC determines, based on the 

facts and circumstances, that the corrective notice serves the 

statutory purposes of the Participant Notice requirement. There would 

be a ``safe harbor'' under which the PBGC would treat the corrective 

notice as valid if the corrective notice:

    (1) Included, in addition to the information originally required in 

the delinquent Participant Notice, all information that was required in 

all later Participant Notices that were due on or before the date the 

corrective notice is issued; and

    (2) Was issued to the persons who were entitled to receive the most 

recent Participant Notice that was due on or before the date the 

corrective notice was issued.

    (If the plan was not required to issue a Participant Notice for a 

particular plan year, the safe-harbor requirements would apply as if 

the plan had been required to issue a Participant Notice for that plan 

year.) The PBGC encourages plan administrators to correct Participant 

Notice failures as soon as possible, both to ensure that participants 

receive more timely information and to minimize penalty exposure. 

However, depending on the timing, a plan administrator might choose to 

combine into a single document a ``safe-harbor'' corrective notice and 

a required Participant Notice for a later plan year. If so, the PBGC 

would not treat the required Participant Notice as violating the 

requirement in Sec.  4011.10(d) that additional information may be 

included only if it is in a separate document.



    Example: Assume that a Plan Administrator fails to issue a 

required Participant Notice for the 2004 plan year, is not required 

to issue a Participant Notice for the 2005 plan year, and is 

required to issue a Participant Notice for the 2006 plan year. 

Assume further that the Plan Administrator issues the 2006 

Participant Notice to the persons entitled to receive it and 

includes as part of the 2006 Participant Notice all information 

originally required in the 2004 Participant Notice and all 

information that would have been required in the 2005 Participant 

Notice if it had been required to be issued. The PBGC would treat 

the plan administrator as having issued a valid corrective notice, 

and the 2006 Participant Notice would not violate the requirement in 

Sec.  4011.10(d) that additional information may be included only if 

it is in a separate document.



    Plan administrators are encouraged to contact the PBGC for guidance 

on pre-audit corrections of Participant Notice failures by submitting 

questions electronically through the PBGC's Web site at http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/leaving.cgi?from=leavingFR.html&log=linklog&to=http://www.pbgc.gov/participantnotice

 or by calling the toll-free telephone 



number at the PBGC's Practitioner Customer Service Center (1-800-736-

2444). Post-audit corrections: If the plan administrator corrects a 

Participant Notice failure after the date the PBGC issues a written 

notice to the plan that it is or may be auditing compliance with 

Participant Notice requirements, the PBGC would treat the correction as 

valid only if the corrective notice is approved by the PBGC.



Downward Adjustment to Guideline Penalty Amount for Partial Failure



    The PBGC would make an appropriate downward adjustment to the 

penalty amount where there was a partial failure to comply with the 

Participant Notice requirements other than a late issuance of an 

otherwise valid Participant Notice (e.g., a failure to issue the 

Participant Notice to some of the persons entitled to receive it or a 

failure to include in the Participant Notice some of the required 

information).



Upward Adjustment to Guideline Penalty Amount for Failure To Cooperate



    The PBGC would make an appropriate upward adjustment to the penalty 

amount where it determines upon audit that there was a failure to 

comply with the Participant Notice requirements and the plan 

administrator does not promptly issue a corrective notice approved by 

the PBGC. The upward adjustment would generally be to a penalty that is 

significantly higher.



[[Page 25799]]



Applicability



    The new Participant Notice penalty policy would apply to: (1) 2004 

and later Participant Notices, (2) 2002 and 2003 Participant Notices 

that do not meet the requirements for penalty relief under the VCP, and 

(3) pre-2002 Participant Notices, where there is a 2002 or 2003 

Participant Notice failure that is covered by the VCP but that does not 

meet the requirements for penalty relief under the VCP.

    The PBGC would generally use the new guideline penalty amounts for 

its penalty assessments and reviews of penalty assessments on and after 

the effective date of the new penalty policy, which the PBGC 

anticipates will be at least 30 days after the date it publishes its 

final penalty policy. However, the PBGC would apply a transition rule 

in the case of a Participant Notice failure that starts before the 

effective date of the new penalty policy and that is corrected no later 

than one year after the effective date of the new penalty policy 

(including a delinquency corrected before the new penalty policy 

becomes effective). For such delinquencies, the guideline penalty 

amount would be the lesser of the amount calculated under the current 

penalty policy and the amount calculated under the new penalty policy.



Compliance With Rulemaking Guidelines



    The PBGC has determined, in consultation with the Office of 

Management and Budget, that this proposed Statement of Policy is a 

``significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866. The 

Office of Management and Budget has therefore reviewed this proposed 

Statement of Policy under Executive Order 12866.

    This action is not subject to notice and comment rulemaking 

requirements under section 553 of the Administrative Procedure Act 

because it deals only with a general statement of PBGC policy. However, 

the PBGC nonetheless is publishing this Statement of Policy in proposed 

form and invites public comment. Because no general notice of proposed 

rulemaking is required, the Regulatory Flexibility Act does not apply. 

See 5 U.S.C. 601(2), 603, 604.



    Issued in Washington, DC, this 3rd day of May, 2004.

Bradley D. Belt,

Executive Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.

[FR Doc. 04-10407 Filed 5-6-04; 8:45 am]



BILLING CODE 7708-01-P