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OCR Page 1 of 710/16/00
16:41
002
10/12/2090
THU
04
:
44
FAX
AARP
Peunni
October 11, 2000
The Honorable Lawrence Summers
Secretary of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, D.C. 20220
Dear Secretary Summers:
As we enter the final days of the Congressional session, AARP continues to have
concerns with some of the pension provisions contained in H.R. 1102, the Retirement
Security and Savings Act of 2000. Both the House and Senate versions of the bill fail to
provide protection for older workers harmed by cash balance conversions - with the
Senate bill actually more harmful to older workers - and both bills reduce the protections
provided by the current nondiscrimination rules, particularly the "top-heavy" rules.
AARP has urged Congress to clarify that "wearaway" is prohibited when an employer
converts a traditional pension plan to a cash balance plan. Wearaway, which has its
greatest impact on older workers, is the freezing of benefit accruals for what can be over
10 years. Freezing the bencfit accruals of older workers as they are nearing retirement
undermines the opportunity to earn a more adequate and secure retirement benefit. We
are pleased that in addition to supporting the need for greater disclosure of plan changes,
the Administration shares our views on wearaway. Unfortunately, the Senate bill protects
only normal retirement benefits. and not early retirement benefits. Given that in practice
it is generally the early retirement benefit that is wom away, the Senate bill fails to protect
older workers. Worse yet, by protecting only normal retirement benefits, the Senate bill
implies that wearaway of early retirement benefits is valid, thus undermining legal actions
currently pending in the courts and at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
AARP urges you to ensure that in the event any pension bill or other tax vehicle moves
forward, wearaway of both normal and early retirement benefits is prohibited.
As we discussed in extensive comments submitted to the IRS earlier this year; AARP
continues to believe that under current law, cash balance conversions violate age
discrimination prohibitions contained in the Internal Revenue Code, the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and the Age Discrimination in Employment
Act (ADEA). Moreover, while the courts deal with the larger legal challenges posed by
cash balance plans. Congress should not interfere with the employees who have sought
redress for the harm suffered in these plans. Thus, any legislation should not include any
language validating age discriminatory cash balance plans. The Senate bill would
currently undercut the holdings of two recent federal Circuit Court decisions by carving
cash balance plans out of some of the current rules governing defined benefit plans.
601 E Street, NW Washington, DC 20049 (202) 434-2277 www.aarp.org
Esther "Tess" Canja, President
Horace B. Deets, Executive Director
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