With the current economic
conditions, many companies have been forced to downsize either by laying
off a portion of the workforce or closing a plant or line of business.
These layoffs can have an impact on a qualified plan. If enough employees
are terminated, a partial plan termination can occur which requires that
the affected workers become fully vested in their benefits.
To avoid administrative problems, it is important to identify whether a
partial termination has occurred at the time of the event and not several
years later. The situation is particularly problematic in a defined
contribution plan once the terminated employees' nonvested benefits have
been forfeited. If, at that point, the IRS determines that a partial
termination had occurred, the employer would be required to make
additional contributions to restore the forfeited account balances of the
nonvested participants.
Unfortunately, neither the tax code nor IRS regulations explain how
plans sponsors should determine whether a partial plan termination has
occurred. Fortunately, in a 2007 revenue ruling, the IRS provided guidance
for making this determination.
This article will review the procedures for determining whether a
partial plan termination has occurred along with providing examples of the
application of these procedures.
Background
Over the years both the IRS and the courts have offered insight into
how to determine whether a partial termination has occurred. Treasury
regulations provide that whether a partial termination has occurred is
determined with regard to all the facts and circumstances in a particular
case.
The regulations point out that a partial termination can arise in a
number of situations including:
- The termination of a group of employees formerly covered under the
plan;
- A plan amendment excluding a group of employees who have previously
been covered;
- A plan amendment that adversely affects the rights of employees to
vest in benefits under the plan; or
- In a defined benefit plan, the reduction or cessation of future
benefit accruals resulting in a potential reversion to the employer.
The regulations also clarify that the full vesting provisions only
apply to the employees affected by the partial plan termination.
A number of courts have also ruled on this issue. In probably the most
important case, Matz v. Household International Tax Reduction
Investment Plan, the court held that there is a rebuttable presumption
that a 20% or greater reduction in plan participants is considered a
partial termination.
Clearer Guidance from the IRS
With this background, the IRS revisited the partial termination issue
in a 2007 revenue ruling. This ruling was important because it established
much clearer standards for determining whether a partial termination has
occurred.
The case involved an employer that ceased operations at one of its four
business locations. As a result, 23% of the plan's participants ceased
active participation due to a severance from employment. Some of those
terminated participants were already fully vested at the time of
termination.
The IRS found that the facts and circumstances supported a finding of a
partial termination because the severances from employment occurred as a
result of the shutdown of one of the employer's business locations (and
not as a result of routine turnover).
The 20% Presumption
In the ruling, the IRS adopted the Matz holding that, if the
turnover rate is at least 20%, there is a presumption that a partial
termination has occurred. It also adopted another court position that both
vested and nonvested participants are counted in making this
calculation.
Calculating the Turnover Rate
The IRS specified that the turnover rate is determined by dividing the
number of participating employees who had an employer-initiated severance
from employment during the "applicable period" by the sum of all of the
participating employees at the start of the applicable period plus the
employees who became participants during the applicable period (both
vested and nonvested employees are included in this calculation).
The IRS defined the applicable period as a plan year or a longer period
if there are a series of related severances from employment.
Example: Plan W has 300 participants at
the beginning of the plan year. Due to a plant closing, 80 participants
are terminated from employment during the year. An additional 20 employees
become eligible to participate during the plan year. The turnover rate is
80÷320 or 25%.
Defining Employer-Initiated Severance
The IRS broadly defined "employer-initiated severance" to include any
severance other than a severance that is on account of death, disability
or retirement on or after normal retirement age. A severance is even
considered employer-initiated if caused by an event outside of the
employer's control, such as severance due to depressed economic
conditions. However, the employer may be able to prove that an employee's
severance was voluntary and not employer-initiated through documentation
such as information from personnel files, employee statements and other
corporate records.
Example: Plan X has 120 participants at
the beginning of the plan year. Due to economic conditions, the company
lays off 20 employees. In addition, 8 employees terminate on a voluntary
basis (which can be documented). No new employees become eligible during
the plan year. The turnover rate is 16.7% (20÷120).
Facts and Circumstances
Even though the focus is on the 20% presumption, the 2007 revenue
ruling notes that whether or not a partial termination occurs is still
ultimately dependent on all of the facts and circumstances in a particular
case.
If the employer can demonstrate that the turnover rate for an
applicable period is routine for the employer, this will favor a finding
that there is no partial termination for that applicable period. In making
the comparison, information as to the turnover rate in other periods and
the extent to which terminated employees were actually replaced, whether
the new employees performed the same functions, had the same job
classification or title, and received comparable compensation are relevant
to determining whether the turnover is routine for the employer.
Thus, there are a number of factors that are relevant to determining
whether a partial termination has occurred as a result of turnover, both
in the case where a partial termination is presumed to have occurred due
to the turnover rate being at least 20% and in the case where the turnover
rate is less than 20%.
Applying the IRS Rules
The IRS guidelines go a long way toward creating discernable standards.
Especially helpful is the clearly defined method for determining the
turnover rate. Even though the test is still a facts and circumstances
test, the 20% presumption and the IRS's discussion of what facts are
relevant should make it easier to decide whether a partial termination has
occurred in a particular case.
Small Plans
The 20% presumption test may be most problematic for small employers. A
small employer can face the partial termination issue if only one or two
employees are laid off.
Example: Plan Y has 6 participants at
the beginning of the plan year. Due to economic conditions, the company
lays off 2 employees and no new employees become eligible to participate
during the plan year. The turnover rate is 33.3% (2÷6) and the presumption
is that a partial termination has occurred.
Note that even when the 20% threshold has been met, the employer can
rebut the presumption with facts that show that this is a normal turnover
rate--which may very well be the case with a small employer. Also, the
potential for problems demonstrates the necessity to keep records
documenting the circumstances of each employee's termination.
Series of Layoffs
If a partial termination occurs on account of turnover during an
"applicable period," all participating employees who had a severance from
employment during the period must be fully vested in their accrued
benefits. According to the IRS's definition of the "applicable period,"
the IRS could look at the series as a single event. It's not entirely
clear when or how this determination would be made, which could be
problematic for the many employers facing this situation today.
Example: Plan Z has 100 participants at
the beginning of the plan year. Due to economic conditions, the company
lays off 10 employees in February. Fifteen months later in May of the
following year 15 more employees are terminated. If the IRS considers this
one "applicable period," it appears that the employees laid off in
February must be fully vested, even though these layoffs did not result in
a 20% or more turnover rate.
Other Concerns
In addition to these issues, here are several additional concerns under
the current partial termination guidance:
- An employer should not rely entirely on the IRS guidance as courts
have sometimes come to different conclusions. For example, some courts
have focused on the number of terminated employees in contrast to the
IRS's focus on the percentage involved. This could have an impact on
larger employers.
- The 20% presumption does not preclude a finding of a partial
termination if the percentage reduction is less than 20%. What changes
is the IRS would have the burden to demonstrate that the partial
termination occurred instead of the employer having to rebut the
presumption.
- The rules not only apply to employee terminations but also can apply
when exclusion from the plan is a result of a plan amendment. The IRS
has not traditionally applied the partial termination rules in these
cases, but the IRS revenue ruling reminds us of this possibility.
Conclusion
In these trying economic times, it is important for employers to be
aware that layoffs or plan cutbacks can result in a partial termination of
the company's qualified plan. The determination whether a partial
termination has occurred should be made at or about the time of the
employer-initiated reduction. Failure to 100% vest all affected
participants can result in plan disqualification.
Since employees who terminate voluntarily are not affected by a partial
plan termination, it is important for employers to document the
circumstances of each employee's termination.
An employer facing a situation of reducing its workforce should review
all the facts and circumstances in detail with the plan's advisors to
determine the appropriate course of action.
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