As employers struggle with the cost of providing health coverage to employees, more businesses are turning to private health insurance exchanges. Inspired by public exchanges under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), in a private exchange, a company’s employees or retirees can compare and select from a variety of health plans. The employer contributes the same

The Cadillac Tax is one of the least popular parts of the Affordable Care Act. In a nutshell, the law creates a 40 percent tax on the cost of health insurance premiums to the extent they exceed certain threshold amounts — currently $850 a month ($10,200/year) for individual coverage and $2,325 a month ($27,500/year) for

A recently decided Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals case provides employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) fiduciaries and others with an example of how not to undertake an ESOP transaction.

When an employee stock ownership plan purchases the stock of a closely held corporation, the duty of a fiduciary is to act solely in the

In reaction to the U.S. Treasury Department’s recent rejection of its proposed pension rescue plan, the Central States pension plan’s sponsor is calling on Congress to find a solution to its pending insolvency.

The Treasury Department rejected the Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Plan’s application on May 6, 2016, because the proposed suspension

On May 16, 2016 the EEOC issued final rules amending the regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) with respect to employer wellness programs. These changes clarify that employers may use incentives to encourage participation in wellness programs

Employee benefit plans and executive compensation arrangements are subject to a staggering amount of regulation. The laws, regulations and other guidance regarding these plans and arrangements are complex and often confusing. Audits and enforcement actions by governmental agencies against plan sponsors and fiduciaries — as well as class-action lawsuits by plan participants — have become