On April 19, 2019, the Internal Revenue Service (โIRSโ) issued Revenue Procedure (โRev. Proc.โ) 2019-19 โthe most recent comprehensive official guidance to the IRSโs Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (โEPCRSโ). EPCRS generally permits 401(k) plan sponsors to correct certain operational and other plan mistakes or failures, thereby continuing to provide employees with retirement benefits on a tax-favored basis, as opposed to risking plan disqualification or incurring fines or other sanctions.
Among other things, the new Rev. Proc. substantially increases the scope of corrections under the Self-Correction Program (โSCPโ), instead of the Voluntary Correction Program (โVCPโ) or Audit Closing Agreement Program (โAudit CAPโ) under EPCRS.ย For example, corrections made under SCP do not require advance IRS approval or payment of a user fee, unlike corrections made under VCP or Audit CAP.
Rev. Proc. 2019-19 supersedes the previous official EPCRS guidance, Rev. Proc. 2018-52.ย The IRS has summarized these changes, including a user-friendly summary chart that should prove helpful to both 401(k) plan administrators and ERISA practitioners. The new guidance is effective as of the date of publication โApril 19, 2019.
Expanded Corrections Under SCP.
In general, assuming all relevant SCP criteria are met, the new Rev. Proc. expands SCP to permit correction of the following failures:
Consistent with past guidance, SCP cannot be used to correct a failure to initially adopt a new plan document, or to timely adopt a discretionary amendment (for example, an amendment intended solely to add a desired 401(k) plan design feature, such as hardship withdrawals).
Electronic VCP Filing Now Mandatory.ย
In another new development, the new Rev. Proc. specifies that all VCP submissions must be made electronically in accordance with the guidance, beginning as of April 1, 2019. In fact, the IRS warns that any paper VCP submissions postmarked after March 31, 2019, will be returned to the applicant.
Takeaway.
The significant reductions in staffing and funding of the IRS may be at least partially responsible for the push towards increased self-correction methods.ย Additionally, expanding the scope of self-corrective mechanisms seems consistent with the IRSโs original goal in establishing EPCRS, which was to encourage 401(k) plan administrators to proactively seek out and correct operational errors before being โcaughtโ by the IRS on audit or otherwise. Self-correction is the least onerous available correction method, so its expanded availability should, in theory, lead to increased operational compliance with the law.
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The information and content contained in this blog post are for general informational purposes only, and does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice. Specific questions about corrections under SCP or any other component of EPCRS should be directed to your ERISA counsel or other professional benefits advisors.