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Build_Credibilty_With_Expertise
| Build Credibilty With Expertise
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Build Credibility with Expertise Lawrence Groves-July 2005
As an Investment Representative you’ve worked hard to build
trust with your pension clients. Now, you can solidify that long
term relationship with your expertise on one of the greatest
fears of small business retirement plan sponsors.
Next to an audit, nothing frightens retirement plan sponsors
more than a notification letter from the Dept of Labor regarding
inadequacies in their responses on the Form 5500 or 5500-EZ
filing. Inadequacies that, if not corrected within 30 days of
the date of the letter, would subject the plan sponsor to
substantial fines and penalties, not only from the Dept of Labor
but from the IRS as well.
Following is a listing of the most common filing errors that
will generate a letter from the Dept of Labor.
1. The Form 5500 Must Be Properly Signed And Dated Make sure
that you have the proper signatures by the Employer and Plan
Administrator and dates on the Form 5500, Form 5500-EZ, and any
attached schedules that require a signature (Schedules B:
Actuary; P: Trustee; and Schedule SSA; Plan Administrator).
2. The Form 5550 Must Have The Proper EIN And Plan Number (PN)
It is critical that the Employer Identification Number (EIN)
used to identify the “plan sponsor” be the same year to year
when completing line 2b of the Form 5500 or Form 5500EZ.
3. The Form 5500 Filing May Not Be For A Period Greater Than 12
Months Be certain the time period entered in Part I of the Form
5500 is not greater than twelve months. If the plan is not
reporting on a calendar year basis, then input the twelve-month
fiscal year period in the spaces provided.
4. Use A Proper Business Code When Completing Line 2d Of The
Form 5500 On Form 5500, Line 2d, be certain to enter a valid
business code that best describes the nature of the plan
sponsor's business. The only business codes that are valid for
use in answering Line 2d are listed in the Form 5500 filing
instructions section marked “Codes for Principal Business
Activity”. 5 Use The Correct Plan Characteristics Codes On Line
8 Of The Form 5500. On Form 5500, Line 8, you must check box A
to indicate if the plan is providing pension benefits. You must
enter the Plan Characteristics Codes in the space provided
beneath box A. These codes describe the type of pension benefits
provided and other features of the plan. A list and description
of the Plan Characteristics Codes is in Section 6 of the
Instructions for Form 5500.
6. Properly Identify The Funding And Benefit Arrangements On
Line 9 Of The Form 5500 Indicate all the proper Funding and
Benefit Arrangements on Form 5500, Lines 9a and 9b. The “Funding
Arrangement” is the method used for the receipt, holding,
investment, and transmittal of plan assets prior to the time the
plan actually provides benefits. The “Benefit Arrangement” is
the method by which the plan provides benefits to participants.
The responses on Lines 9a and 9b are cross-referenced against
information on Schedules H, I, and/or A as appropriate. Be
careful to attach the appropriate financial or insurance
schedule (H, I, A) that corresponds to the Benefit and Funding
Arrangements you indicate.
7. File All The Required Schedules And Attachments With Your
Form 5500 Make sure you are filing all the required schedules
and attachments with your Form 5500. If you check a box
indicating that a schedule is attached, the schedule must be
submitted with your Form 5500.
8. Schedule R And Distributions You must prepare Schedule R only
if there are any distributions or rollovers from the plan. You
must enter both the EIN of the distribution payer and the EIN of
the pension plan. Part 3 is only for money purchase plans that
have made single sum distributions.
9. File The Appropriate Financial Information Schedule (H or I)
With Your Form 5500. Make sure you file the proper Financial
Information Schedule with your Form 5500. The Schedule H is for
“large plan” filers (generally plans with 100 or more
participants at the beginning of the plan year). The Schedule I
is for “small plan” filers (generally plans with fewer than 100
participants at the beginning of the plan year).
10. Complete the Participant Benefit Information on the Schedule
SSA Make sure that you list all of the terminated participants
with their vested balances from the prior year that still have
not been paid. Starting with the 2004 filing year, sponsors are
required to list participants, previously outstanding, who have
been subsequently paid.
When your client calls, anxious of a possible Dept of Labor
fine, you can build long term credibility by taking charge of
seeing the correction is made by the preparer. Better still,
review or have an expert review, the Form 5500 before the client
sends the forms into the Dept of Labor and save your client
receiving any letter at all. Calendar year plans Form 5500 EZ
and Form 5500 with related schedules are due by July 31, each
year.
About the author:
About the Author: Lawrence Groves is the Small Business
Retirement Services Director for The Retirement Group. He has
helped thousands of small businesses set up retirement plans.
Visit the site for more information http://www.solo-k.com
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