On May 27, 2020, the Department of Labor (DOL) published a final rule that should greatly expand the electronic delivery of ERISA-mandated disclosure notices to 401(k) plan participants. More specifically, the rule creates two new safe harbors that give employers the ability to post notices to a website or e-mail them directly to plan participants when certain requirements are met. Both safe harbors take effect July 27, 2020.
This 401(k) reform is great news, if long overdue.
The paper delivery of 401(k) notices is costly and increasingly at odds with the way people intake information. I mean, when was the last time you read a paper book, magazine or newspaper? It’s probably been a while. Electronic delivery can lower the cost of 401(k) plan administration, while improving the usefulness of participant disclosure notices. In short, the method can be a win-win for plan participants.
How much savings? A lot! In a Fact Sheet, the DOL claims electronic delivery would save “an estimated $2.4 billion net cost over the next 10 years for ERISA-covered retirement plans by eliminating materials, printing, and mailing costs associated with furnishing printed disclosures.”
Besides cost savings, electronic delivery can benefit 401(k) participants in other ways. In a 2015 white paper, the SPARK Institute – a major 401(k) industry group – cited several other potential benefits:
401(k) notices can always be delivered in paper form – either by distributing copies at a company meeting or by mailing them to each participant’s last known address. Posting a required notice in an employee break room or other common area is not acceptable.
Employers must distribute a paper notice to 401(k) participants that don’t meet these requirements (e.g., former employees or beneficiaries with an account balance) unless they receive an affirmative consent from the participant for electronic delivery.
The new DOL rule does not touch this old safe harbor. Employers can still take advantage of it.
The new DOL rule creates two safe harbor methods for electronic delivery:
The two new safe harbors share the following requirements:
Employers that intend to meet “notice-and-access” safe harbor must also satisfy the following requirements:
The new DOL rule also allows employers to e-mail covered documents to plan participants directly – instead of posting them to a website. The e-mails used to deliver covered documents must meet the following requirements:
Employers can mix and match the two new safe harbors, using whichever method they want to send a specific document. One thing they can’t do, however, is text documents to a smartphone number.
In general, inefficient or ineffective 401(k) regulation increases the cost of 401(k) administration. That’s a problem when you consider how much cost matters when saving for retirement. The posterchild for bad 401(k) regulation, in my view, is the participant disclosure rules. The number of required disclosures has grown dramatically during the past 20 years. Much of this information is redundant, making new information more difficult to discern and act upon. Further, plans need to jump through too many hoops to use cheap modern technology for distributing disclosures.
The new DOL rule won’t streamline or consolidate 401(k) disclosure notices, but it should make notice delivery more cost-efficient and effective. For that reason, I’m very happy to see it!