September 11, 2012
--- Multiple-employer plans (MEPs) do not absolve plan sponsors
from fiduciary responsibility, despite what marketing campaigns may advertise. ---
“Before the end of May, we lived in a world where there was
a lot of marketing,” David Levine, principal at Groom Law Group, Chartered,
told attendees at the 2012 PLANADVISER National Conference. “It’s pretty clear
that [this] didn’t sit well with the [Department of Labor].”
In May, the Department of Labor (DOL) issued Advisory Opinion 2012-04A, which addressed whether a multiple-employer plan open
to unrelated employers constitutes a single employee pension benefit plan (see “DOL
Says Open MEPs Not Single-Employee Plans”). The
DOL said it has been its consistent view that where several unrelated employers
merely execute identically worded trust agreements or similar documents as a
means to fund or provide benefits, in the absence of any genuine organizational
relationship between the employers, no employer group or association exists for
purposes of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) section
3(5).
This means that
each employer that has adopted an open MEP will be treated as if they have
their own stand-alone plan and disclosure requirements – such as Form 5500 – and
plan audits that have been done collectively until now must be performed
separately going forward.
Marketing materials that claimed plan sponsors could reduce
or completely eliminate their fiduciary responsibilities was a “trigger point”
for the DOL to issue its advisory, said Geoffrey Strunk, senior vice president and
general counsel at ExpertPlan Consulting Services. “The idea that you can
delegate [fiduciary responsibility] all away, I think, is kind of a farce.”
Plan sponsors can still offer open MEPs, but they have lost
many of the advantages after the DOL’s advisory guidance, Strunk said. Going
forward, he thinks plan sponsors will need guidance on Form 5500s, citing it as
a “serious concern.”
Levine said some open MEPs in the startup phase have simply
shut them down after the DOL advisory, while other large MEPs have continued and are adjusting to the DOL's guidance.
Corie Russell