| | 86-7 |
| | March 24, 1986 |
| | REFERENCE: |
| | 4203(a) Complete Withdrawal. Definition of Complete Withdrawal |
| | OPINION: |
| | This responds to your request, as supplemented by your letter of March 11, 1986, for the opinion of the Pension Benefit |
| | Guaranty Corporation regarding the application of section 4203(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, as |
| | amended, (ERISA) to an employer that ceases to make contributions to a multiemployer pension plan following a union |
| | decertification. Specifically, you ask whether such an employer has any special defenses to withdrawal liability. You also |
| | ask whether the answer to that question would be affected by the facts that the employer's contributions to the plan |
| | exceeded the vested benefits of its employees, and the employer established a new plan for its employees that included |
| | Section 4203(a) of ERISA provides: |
| | For purposes of this part, a complete withdrawal from a multiemployer plan occurs when an employer-- |
| | (2) permanently ceases to have an obligation to contribute under the plan, or |
| | (2) permanently ceases all covered operations under the plan. |
| | Section 4203(a) thus makes no distinctions based on the causes of a cessation of an employer's obligation to contribute |
| | under a plan. Since section 4203 expressly provides special withdrawal rules in cases to which Congress did not want the |
| | general rule of section 4203(a) to apply, e.g., the entertainment industry and the building and construction industry, we |
| | conclude that the absence of any special provision in section 4203 (or elsewhere) for cessations caused by decertification |
| | elections indicates that Congress intended for the general provisions of section 4203(a) to apply to such cessations. |
| | This conclusion is supported by the fact that Congress provided relief in section 4235 of ERISA for certain employers that |
| | completely or partially withdraw from a multiemployer plan as a result of a certified change of collective bargaining |
| | representative. Under section 4235(c), the employer's withdrawal liability to the plan to which it ceased making |
| | contributions because of a change in the collective bargaining representative is reduced to the extent the plan sponsor |
| | transfers to the new plan unfunded vested benefits allocable to the employer. This section clearly indicates that Congress |
| | intended for an employer that ceases contributions as a result of a decertification to be subject to withdrawal liability. If |
| | such an employer were not subject to the general withdrawal liability rule of section 4203(a), there would be no need for the |
| | relief provision in section 4235(c). |
| | Your letter characterizes decertification as an involuntary withdrawal and cites legislative history that you believe indicates |
| | that Congress did not intend the withdrawal liability provisions to apply to involuntary cessations of contributions. The |
| | basic thrust of these citations, you seem to assert, is that the purpose of the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments |
| | Act of 1980 was to discourage voluntary withdrawals from multiemployer plans. |
| | Without agreeing with your assertion that a decertification constitutes an involuntary withdrawal, it is, in any event, our |
| | view that this is too narrow a statement of MPPAA's purposes. These purposes include protection of plans when an |
| | employer withdraws, regardless of whether the withdrawal may be characterized as voluntary or involuntary. As the First |
| | Circuit stated in Keith Fulton & Sons v. New England Teamsters, 762 F.2d 1124, 1131 (1st Cir. 1984), modified on other |
| | grounds, 762 F.2d 1137 (1st Cir. 1985) (en banc): |
| | The MPPAA and its legislative history show that Congress was concerned about the effect of any withdrawal, not just |
| | "voluntary" ones. Any withdrawal causes the same harm to the fund -- it was logical for Congress not to distinguish |
| | between them on the basis of voluntariness. [Emphasis in original.] |
| | The court in Pacific Iron & Metal Co. v. Western Conference of Teamsters Pension Trust Fund, 553 F. Sup. 523, 526 |
| | (W.D. Wash. 1982), applied similar reasoning in upholding liability for a withdrawal that occurred when the union disclaimed |
| | any further intent to represent the employer's employees following a contested decertification election. |
| | Although your letter relies on general statements of legislative purpose from the PBGC's Multiemployer Study Required by |
| | P.L. 95-214, specific statements in the Study expressly support the conclusion that withdrawal liability applies to |
| | withdrawals caused by decertification: |
| | Liability would be assessed when a withdrawal occurs irrespective of the reason for the withdrawal, and irrespective of |
| | whether the union, the employer, or both initiate the withdrawal. Liability would be assessed, for example, when employees |
| | vote to decertify (footnote omitted) their bargaining representative or when the employer bargains out of a plan. (footnote |
| | omitted) (at p. 101). |
| |
This answer is not changed by the additional facts presented in your March 11 letter. In general, an employer in a |
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multiemployer plan is not responsible only for the benefits of its own employees, but rather shares, with the other |
| |
employers, a responsibility for all the plan's benefit obligations. Indeed, three of the four statutory methods for allocating |
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a plan's unfunded vested benefits to withdrawing employers are based on the plan's unfunded vested benefits, not on the |
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vested benefits attributable to a withdrawn employer's employees. Only in a plan using the direct attribution method |
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(section 4211(c)(4)), is an employer's liability based on the unfunded vested benefits attributable to its employees; but |
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even under this method, the employer is also liable for certain additional amounts. |
| |
With respect to your second point, we note that the pension arrangements an employer may make for its employees |
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following a withdrawal from a multiemployer plan do not mitigate the harm to the plan caused by the withdrawal. Therefore, |
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absent the type of situation described in section 4235(c) and section 4211(e), i.e., where the multiemployer plan transfers |
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some of its unfunded vested benefits to a plan to be maintained by the withdrawing employer, the employer's |
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establishment of a new plan for its employees does not affect the employer's withdrawal liability to the multiemployer plan. |
| |
Finally, we call to your attention section 412(a)(1)(B) of the Multiemployer Act, which directs the PBGC to study "the |
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necessity of adopting special rules in cases of union-mandated withdrawal from multiemployer pension plans". The PBGC |
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is currently conducting that study; as yet, no date for its completion has been set. |
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I hope this has been of assistance. If you have further questions please contact the attorney handling this matter, Ronald |
| |
Goldstein, of the Corporate Policy and Regulations Department. His telephone number is (202) 956-5050 |
| |
Edward R. Mackiewicz |
| |
General Counsel |