- Posts by Samuel C. NolanAssociate
Clients turn to attorney Sam Nolan for guidance on complex employee benefits matters.
Sam advises clients from numerous industries on designing, implementing, and operating employers’ employee benefits programs, including ...
“ERISA – you’ll need a lawyer for that.” Our practice group’s tagline is meant to be a shorthand for the alphabet soup of laws that apply to employee benefits, including the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). Employee benefits compliance has many traps for the unwary and is ever evolving. Below, we have provided a primer on current issues of importance in the employee benefits area to help in-house attorneys identify potential risks, mitigate them, and know when to call an outside ERISA lawyer.
1. What Is Old Is New: Get Your Health Plan Governance in Order
Employers that sponsor self-funded health plans have a host of complicated obligations. There are greater potential legal, regulatory, and fiduciary risks than in years past with managing health plans because of increased congressional legislation, increased Department of Labor (DOL) focus on group health plan compliance, and increased group health plan litigation, often by the same plaintiffs’ firms that have been suing 401(k) plans in fee litigation the past 20 years or more.
The wildfires moving through Southern California have destroyed communities and displaced countless individuals. While the nation’s first responders are tirelessly working to contain and neutralize the devastation, many employers are grappling with how best to provide support for their affected employees.
Disaster Assistance to Employees
Employers may consider offering the following disaster assistance directly to employees:
- Qualified Disaster Relief Payments: Under Section 139 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), employers operating in states such as California, receiving FEMA assistance can make tax-free qualified disaster relief payments directly to impacted employees. The payments can be made for reasonable and necessary personal, family, or living expenses as a result of a qualified disaster. Funeral expenses as a result of a qualified disaster will also qualify under these payments. However, employers should be aware that these payments do not cover income replacement payments or expenses reimbursed through insurance of FEMA grants.
- Charitable Emergency Funds: Employers may provide tax-free emergency funds to employees through related 501(c)(3) charities and foundations. The specific rules and requirements for these 501(c)(3) entities, including whether and to what extent contributions are deductible, differ depending on whether the entity is an employer-sponsored public charity, an employer-sponsored private foundation, an employer-sponsored donor advised fund, or an unrelated public charity.
On December 23, 2024, President Biden signed two bills intended to ease the burden of reporting under the Affordable Care Act (“ACA”) for health plan sponsors and health insurance providers. The new laws also give employers more time to respond to proposed penalty assessments for ACA coverage failures, and establish a statute of limitations for the IRS to make such assessments.
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