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Published byClarence McCormick Modified over 8 years ago
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2 The Basics for Child Support Enforcement QUALIFIED DOMESTIC RELATIONS ORDERS QDROS Jennifer A. Coultas Division Chief, Court Operations County of Los Angeles
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3 History: Then and Now Prior to 1974 – Private pension plans were not regulated by the federal government 1974 – Implementation of Employee Retirement Income Security Act Anti-Alienation Clause of ERISA “Benefits cannot be assigned or alienated” [29 USC 1056(d)(1)]
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4 History: Then and Now 1974 – 1984 State divorce law developments Pension rights earned or acquired during marriage were marital or community property In re Marriage of Brown 544 P.2d 561 (Cal. 1976) These developments give rise to: Apparent conflict with ERISA Pre-Emption Issues 1984 Retirement Equity Act (REA) P.L. 98-397 (1984)
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5 History: Then and Now 1984 Retirement Equity Act (REA) Amended Key Sections of ERISA and Internal Revenue Code Certain orders entered in state domestic relations cases must be accepted & honored by ERISA qualified pension plans REA specifies the required characteristics of a QDRO Under REA, QDRO is expressly exempted from the anti-assignment and alienation clause of 1056(d)(1) of ERISA
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6 History: Then and Now Non-ERISA Plans: Military Federal State & Local Government Similar developments between 1974-2000 Plans divisible in a parallel although not precisely identical fashion as ERISA plans Similar developments
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7 History: Then and Now Battle has now shifted Have parties complied with requirements of the Retirement Equity Act? Is an order in a domestic relations case qualified under the terms of ERISA?
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8 What is a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO)? A Domestic Relations Order (DRO) that meets certain requirements specified under the law, is signed by a judicial officer in the appropriate court, and is approved by the Plan Administrator This DRO is then a QDRO
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9 The Requirements in a Nutshell Before it can be a QDRO, it must be a DRO. ■ A judgment, decree or order, including approval of a property settlement agreement ■ That is made pursuant to state domestic relations law
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10 The Requirements in a Nutshell ■That relates to the provision of child support, alimony or marital property rights For the benefit of a spouse, former spouse, child or ■Other dependent
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11 The Requirements in a Nutshell To constitute a QDRO, a DRO must: ■Create or recognize the Alternate Payee’s right to receive, or assign to the Alternate Payee ■All or a portion of the benefits otherwise payable with respect to a Participant under the plan
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12 The Requirements in a Nutshell The Four “Do’s” To become a QDRO, the DRO must contain: ■Name and last known mailing address of Participant and Alternate Payee; ■The name of the plan to which the order relates. ■Amount or percentage of P’s benefit to be paid to AP, or manner in which the amount or percentage is to be determined. ■The number of payments or period to which the order applies.
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13 The Requirements in a Nutshell The Four “Don'ts” The DRO must not require the plan to: ■Provide any type or form of benefit or option not otherwise provided under the plan (except it may permit early payout to the alternate payee) ; ■ Pay a joint and survivor annuity to the alternate payee and his or her subsequent spouse.
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14 The Requirements in a Nutshell The Four “Don'ts” (continued) ■Provide increased benefits (determined actuarially). ■Pay benefits that are assigned to another alternate payee under a prior QDRO.
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15 The Requirements in a Nutshell Who can be an Alternate Payee? ■ Spouse ■Former Spouse ■Child ■Other dependent All of these relate to the participant.
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16 The Requirements in a Nutshell QDRO Procedures ■All plans must have written QDRO procedures ■QDRO procedures may contain default interpretations ■but clear disclosure of the defaults is critical
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17 The Requirements in a Nutshell What actions must a Plan Administrator take when it receives a DRO? ■Acknowledge ■Review ■Notify
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18 The Requirements in a Nutshell What must the Plan Administrator do with the participant’s benefits upon receipt of a DRO? ■Segregate ■Account separately ■Freeze disbursements
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19 Perfect v. Good Enough - Is There a Difference? Substantial compliance ■ Plan Administrators generally have applied the QDRO requirements relatively strictly. ■Courts often have applied the requirements more liberally, sometimes straining to approve a QDRO in an effort to obtain a fair and equitable result.
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20 Is it too late for a QDRO? What if the participant is in retirement pay status when the DRO is served on the plan? ■Retirement election irrevocable ■Share each payment when made (no separate interest) ■Rights of current spouse may supersede alternate payee’s rights to survivor benefits
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21 Is it too late for a QDRO? What if the Participant is deceased when the DRO is served on the Plan? ■Answer depends upon jurisdiction ■Answer depends upon plan terms ■Answer depends upon whether participant is remarried
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22 Which plans do not require a QDRO? IRA’s SEP’s SIMPLE’s Non-Qualified Plans Governmental (Federal, state, local or political subdivision) Plans
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23 When may benefits commence? Primarily dependent on plan provisions Secondarily dependent on the provisions of the QDRO Can always require payment on or after the date on which the participant attains the earliest retirement age Earliest retirement age is the earlier of the date of entitlement to a distribution, or the earlier of attainment of age 50 or the earliest date the participant could begin receiving benefits if he/she terminated
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24 Defined Benefit or Defined Contribution? Defined Contribution Plans [Profit Sharing, 401(k)] Otherwise known as account balance plan Divide account balance either by percentage or amount Primarily dependent on plan provisions Excellent for use on with arrears collection
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25 Defined Benefit or Defined Contribution? Defined Benefit Plans Participant contribution unknown Monthly or annual benefit derived by formula at retirement age Independent or separate interest approach Shared interest approach Useful for ongoing monthly support obligation Cannot exceed Participant’s monthly benefit
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26 Defined Benefit or Defined Contribution? Defined Benefit vs. Defined Contribution Plans – Understanding the Difference Language used for various issues Methodology of split Forms of payment Timing of payment Death Benefits
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27 First things First Obtain the four key items of information: Name & current address of Participant and the Alternate Payee Social Security Number for Participant and the Alternate Payee Exact name of the Plan to which the DRO will apply The amount of benefits available from each Plan The form in which benefits may be paid All options concerning the form and timing of payments
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28 First things First Obtain the three key plan documents: The Summary Plan Description The Annual Benefits Statement The Plan’s Written QDRO Procedures If available: Sample of Plan Approved QDRO
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29 Step by Step Guide ■Step 1 – Obtain the key items of information ■Step 2 – Request the plan documents ■Step 3 – Read the plan documents ■Step 4 – Read the QDRO procedures ■Step 5 – Review the sample QDRO
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30 Step by Step Guide ■Step 6 – Draft the QDRO ■Step 7 – Submit QDRO to Plan legal department for review and approval ■Step 8 – Make changes; re-submit if necessary ■Step 9 – Once approved, set OSC for QDRO approval by court
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31 When should you use a QDRO? ■The Participant is already retired and receiving payments from the plan (in pay status) ■The Participant is currently unemployed but has pension rights from previous employment ■The Participant has evaded previous enforcement efforts ■Most or all of a Participant’s assets are located in another state
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32 Final Thoughts ■QDROs are a useful enforcement tool ■Communicate with the Plan Legal Department ■Be creative with your non-paying cases ■Refer to suggested websites for more information ■Feel free to contact me: ✷ Jennifer_Coultas@cssd.lacounty.gov Jennifer_Coultas@cssd.lacounty.gov
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