| 94-2 |
| July 26, 1994 |
| REFERENCE: |
| 4007 Payment of Premiums |
| 4007(a) Payment of Premiums. Due Dates |
| 4007(b) Payment of Premiums. Penalties and Interest |
| OPINION: |
| You have requested an opinion from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation ("PBGC") whether interest and penalties |
| assessed by PBGC for the late payment of premiums due under section 4007 of the Employee Retirement Income |
| Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA") can be paid from the assets of a multiemployer pension plan or must be paid by the plan |
| trustees personally or by the plan's sponsoring organizations or employer(s). |
| You state that your client, the board of trustees of a multiemployer pension plan, discovered that the plan's prior trustees |
| and/or administrator had failed to count the number of plan participants accurately and, therefore, failed to pay the correct |
| amount of premiums to PBGC within the time required by law. As a result, PBGC assessed interest and penalties of |
| approximately $ 1,000. |
| ERISA section 4007(a) and (b) provide that -- |
| (a) The designated payor of each plan shall pay the premiums imposed by the [PBGC] under [Title IV of ERISA] with |
| respect to that plan when they are due. . . . |
| (b) If any basic benefit premium is not paid when it is due[,] the [PBGC] is authorized to assess a [penalty]. . . . If any |
| premium is not paid by the last date prescribed for a payment, interest . . . shall be paid. . . . |
| ERISA section 4007(e)(1) provides that, in the case of a multiemployer plan, the term "designated payor" is the plan |
| administrator. Thus, the plan administrator has the duty to ensure that PBGC premiums are paid in a timely fashion. |
| Because the obligation to pay penalties and interest is triggered by a failure to make premium payments, the plan |
| administrator has the duty to ensure the payment of penalties and interest as well. n1 |
| n1 Section 4007(b) and (c) support this conclusion by authorizing the designated payor to apply for penalty waivers and |
| authorizing the PBGC to bring a civil action for "the amount of the premium[,] penalty, and interest" if the designated payor |
| fails to pay a premium when due. |
| Although the plan administrator has the duty of ensuring these payments are made, the payments -- including penalties |
| and interest -- may be paid from plan assets. This point is made clear in the conference committee report on ERISA. |
| The plan is to be liable for both the premiums for coverage of benefits and for any penalty assessed for failure to pay |
| premiums. Besides the penalty, the [PBGC] may also charge interest . . . for unpaid premiums that are past due. |
| H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 1280, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 365 (1974), reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5038, 5145. Of course, the |
| payments may also be paid from other sources, such as the individual assets of the plan administrator or trustee or funds |
| of a contributing employer. |
| This letter does not address issues that may be raised under Title I of ERISA by a trustee's or plan administrator's failure |
| to pay PBGC premiums in a timely manner. You may wish to consult with the Department of Labor, which has |
| responsibility for the interpretation and enforcement of the provisions of Title I, if you have any questions concerning |
| If you have any further questions regarding this matter, please call Denise Yegge of my staff at (202) 326-4124. |
| Carol Connor Flowe |
| General Counsel |