US. New e-delivery rules for ERISA pension plans on the Horizon
By McBrayer McGinnis Leslie & Kirkland PLLC
In October, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) published a proposed rule that encourages electronic delivery of ERISA-required plan disclosures. It allows plan administrators to post disclosures online to cut costs of paper delivery and is a voluntary safe harbor that plans can use to make documents accessible on a website instead of mailing paper documents.
Adopting a so-called “notice and access” e-delivery structure, the DOL allows plans to save paper by emailing disclosures. The rule potentially would cover all ERISA required disclosures (i.e., Summary Plan Description, benefit statements, investment information) as long as the plan uses the proper email address of a participant. Disclosures can be made this way to beneficiaries and ex-employees as well. The proposed rule applies to ERISA pension plans, like profit sharing, 401(k) and money purchase plans, but does not apply to ERISA welfare plans like health, disability, life insurance and dental programs.
Generally, a plan will meet its ERISA disclosure obligation if it gives proper email notice followed by posting the disclosure document on a website. This is referred to under the proposed rules as the notice of internet availability. The proposed rule contains specific content requirements, so it is important to contact competent ERISA counsel for details. This e-delivery approach will be most welcomed by plans that continue to make paper delivery of voluminous plan disclosures; however, the requirement to make paper copies available upon request remains. The new rule would act as a safe harbor to protect the plan and employer sponsor from liability. Keep in mind it is not required. This new proposed rule will be an addition to the DOL’s existing safe harbor rules of electronic disclosures.
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