APS Pension - About APS Introduction
Trustee Administrative Requirements
Each year, a SIMPLE IRA trustee
must provide the employer sponsoring
the SIMPLE IRA with a summary
description including the following information:
1. The name and address of the
employer and the trustee,
2. The requirement for eligibility for
participation,
3. The benefits provided with respect
to the arrangement,
4. The time and method of making
elections with respect to the
arrangement, and
5. The procedures for, and effect of,
withdrawals (including rollovers)
from the arrangement.
Because the summary description
must be included with the employer
notification requirements listed above,
the trustee must provide this information to the employer in a timely manner.
If this information is not provided
to the employer, the trustee will incur
a $50 penalty for each day the information is not provided unless the trustee
can show reasonable cause for the failure. Considering that each employee
may elect his or her own financial institution to act as trustee, each plan
may have multiple trustees and, therefore, multiple summary descriptions
which create further confusion.
In addition to providing information
to the employer, the trustee also must
provide information to participants.
Within 30 days after the end of each
calendar year, the SIMPLE IRA
trustee must provide each individual
who has an existing account with the
trustee a statement showing the status
of the account at the close of the year
and all account activity during the
year. Failure to comply with this
requirement also incurs a $50 penalty
for each day of noncompliance.
As you can see, 401(k) "SIMPLE"ification has come a long way.The IRS
is constantly coming out with additional guidance on the new SIMPLE plans.
Many of the confusing and burdensome
issues will be clarified in the coming
months, making the new plans even
more attractive. Until then, we should
consider the SIMPLE plans viable
alternatives to retirement plans for
smaller companies concerned with the
costs and complexities of currently
available retirement plan designs.
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