The Pension Rights Center is urging the Labor Department to withdraw its proposed electronic disclosure rule, saying the plan makes it harder for workers to get the information they need to prepare for retirement and monitor their pension and 401(k) plans.
"The new DOL proposed regulation is a consumer nightmare," said Karen Friedman, the executive vice president of the Pension Rights Center, in a statement. "Instead of ensuring that people get the information that enables them to protect themselves, the agency has created an Alice in Wonderland scheme of electronic notifications that will have millions of workers and retirees and spouses scrambling down a rabbit hole of confusion to find documents – they now may never find again."
The comment period on the plan, the Default Electronic Disclosure by Employee Pension Benefit Plans Under ERISA, ends Friday.
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act requires administrators of retirement plans "to furnish understandable, important disclosures to workers, retirees and spouses so that they know their rights, know what benefits they're entitled to, are aware of the fees they're being charged, and can observe whether or not the plan is being managed to protect their interests. These disclosures are critical to helping workers plan for and achieve retirement security," the group states in their comment letter.
"Currently, unless employees work at a computer — are 'wired at work' as the Labor Department calls it — or have told their employer that they want to go 'paperless,' they receive information about their plan on paper through the mail," the group wrote.