Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2002/04/11/02-8606/employee-elections-to-contribute-to-the-thrift-savings-plan-and-methods-of-withdrawing-funds-from
Timestamp: 2018-07-16 07:22:31
Document Index: 587857400

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 1600', 'art 1650', '§\u20091600', '§\u20091600', '§\u20091600', 'art 1650', '§\u20091650']

Federal Register :: Employee Elections To Contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan and Methods of Withdrawing Funds From the Thrift Savings Plan
A Rule by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board on 04/11/2002
17603-17605 (3 pages)
Analysis of the Amendment to Part 1600
Analysis of the Amendment to Part 1650
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/02-8606 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/02-8606
Start Preamble Start Printed Page 17603
The Executive Director of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (Board) is amending the regulations on employee elections to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) to permit participants to transfer into their TSP accounts tax-deferred balances from an expanded group of eligible retirement plans. The Executive Director is also amending the regulations on loans and withdrawals from the TSP to specify that a participant who is seeking an exception to the spousal signature and notification requirements on the ground that the spouse's whereabouts are unknown must demonstrate that he or she made a good faith effort to locate the spouse in the 90 days preceding submission of the request to the TSP.
Thomas L. Gray on (202) 942-1662; Merritt Willing on (202) 942-1666; or Patrick J. Forrest on (202) 942-1659. The Board's Fax number is (202) 942-1676.
The Board's rules concerning the procedures governing employee contributions to the TSP were first published in the Federal Register (52 FR 45802) as interim rules on December 2, 1987. The final rule was published in the Federal Register (59 FR 55331) on November 4, 1994. On October 27, 2000, Congress passed Public Law 106-361, which amended FERSA to permit the TSP to accept into the Plan any eligible rollover distribution, as that term is defined in section 402(c)(8) of the Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C.), that a qualified trust could accept. 5 U.S.C. 8432(j). Accordingly, on May 2, 2001 (66 FR 22088), the Board amended the final rule to permit participants to transfer into their TSP accounts funds from certain qualified retirement plans and conduit individual retirement accounts (IRAs). On February 27, 2002, the Executive Director published in the Federal Register (67 FR 8908) a proposed rule that, in general, expanded the types of plans into and from which an eligible TSP distribution can be made.
The amendment permits the transfer into existing TSP accounts of certain distributions from eligible retirement plans. The rule, consistent with the Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C.) and the changes made by the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act (EGTRRA) of 2001, defines eligible retirement plans broadly, to include an individual retirement account described at I.R.C. section 408(a); an individual retirement annuity described at I.R.C. section 408(b); a qualified trust; an I.R.C. section 403(a) annuity plan; an I.R.C. section 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity; and an eligible I.R.C. section 457(b) plan maintained by a governmental employer.
In discussing EGTRRA's changes to the Code, the IRS divides these types of plans into “traditional IRAs” (i.e., individual retirement accounts described at I.R.C. section 408(a) and individual retirement annuities described at I.R.C. section 408(b)) and “eligible employer plans” (i.e., qualified trusts, I.R.C. section 403(a) annuity plans, I.R.C. section 403(b) tax-sheltered annuities, and eligible I.R.C. section 457(b) plans). The Executive Director has revised §§ 1600.1 and 1600.31(a) by redefining eligible retirement plan to take these definitions into account and by including definitions of eligible employer plan and traditional IRA.
In order to be eligible for transfer, distributions from a traditional IRA must meet the requirements for a rollover contribution, set forth at I.R.C. section 408(d)(3) (26 U.S.C. 408(d)(3)). Distributions from an eligible employer plan must meet the requirements for an eligible rollover distribution, set forth at I.R.C. section 402(c)(4) (26 U.S.C. 402(c)(4)). The distinctions between these requirements were not set forth in the proposed regulation. Therefore, in the final rule, the Executive Director has revised § 1600.32(c) to make clear the different requirements that distributions from eligible employer plans and traditional IRAs must meet in order to be accepted by the TSP. Participants will have to certify that their transfers meet these requirements before the funds will be accepted by the TSP.
The Executive Director also revised § 1600.31(b) to clarify that the TSP will not transfer any tax-exempt balances from a uniformed services TSP account into a civilian TSP account. Tax-exempt balances arise from contributions from combat zone pay and are not subject to taxation.
The Board received one comment on the proposed rule. The commenter questioned whether a distribution of the tax-deferred portion of the Voluntary Contributory Program (VCP) available to CSRS employees (5 U.S.C. 8343) can be transferred to the TSP. Contributions to the VCP are made from after-tax money; however, the earnings (interest) on those contributions are tax-deferred until they are paid to the employee. The IRS has stated that that portion of a distribution from the VCP that represents earnings is eligible for transfer and thus, under this final rule, may be transferred to the TSP.
With the changes discussed above, the Executive Director is adopting the proposed rule as final.
The Board's rules concerning withdrawals are set forth in 5 CFR part 1650. Those rules require that the spouse of a FERS participant or Start Printed Page 17604uniformed services member consent to an in-service withdrawal and waive his or her entitlement to a joint and survivor annuity in the case of a different post-employment withdrawal election; the spouse of a CSRS participant is entitled to be given notice when the participant applies for a withdrawal. The requirements can be waived by the Executive Director if a participant can establish that the spouse's whereabouts cannot be determined. On February 27, 2002, the Executive Director published in the Federal Register (67 FR 8908) a proposed rule that requires a participant's efforts to locate the spouse must have been made within the 90 days preceding submission to the TSP of a request for an exception to the spousal signature or notice requirements.
The Board received no comments on the proposed rule. Accordingly, the Executive Director adopts the provisions of the proposed rule as the final rule.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 5, chapter VI, Code of Federal Regulations, is amended as set forth below:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432(b)(1)(A), 8432(j), 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).
2. Section 1600.1 is amended by adding in alphabetical order new definitions to read as follows:
Eligible employer plan means a qualified trust; an annuity plan described in I.R.C. section 403(a) (26 U.S.C. 403(a)); an annuity contract described in I.R.C. section 403(b) (26 U.S.C. 403(b)); and an eligible deferred compensation plan described in I.R.C. section 457(b) (26 U.S.C. 457(b)) which is maintained by an eligible employer described in I.R.C. section 457(e)(1)(A) (26 U.S.C. 457(e)(1)(A)).
Eligible retirement plan means an eligible employer plan or a traditional IRA.
3. Section 1600.31 is revised to read as follows:
(a) A participant who is entitled to receive (or receives) an eligible rollover distribution, within the meaning of I.R.C. section 402(c)(4) (26 U.S.C. 402(c)(4)), from an eligible employer plan or a rollover contribution, within the meaning of I.R.C. section 408(d)(3) (26 U.S.C. 408(d)(3)), from a traditional IRA may cause to be transferred (or transfer) that distribution into his or her existing TSP account. This option is not available to participants who have already made a full withdrawal of their TSP account after separation from service or who are receiving monthly payments.
4. Section 1600.32 is revised to read as follows:
(a) Trustee-to-trustee transfer. Participants may request that the administrator or trustee of their eligible retirement plan transfer any or all of their account directly to the TSP by executing and submitting a Form TSP-60 or TSP-U-60, Request for a Transfer Into the TSP, to the administrator or trustee. The administrator or trustee must complete the appropriate section of the form and forward the completed form and the distribution to the TSP record keeper.
(b) Rollover by participant. Participants who have already received a distribution from an eligible retirement plan may roll over all or part of the distribution into the TSP in accordance with the following requirements:
(1) The participant must complete Form TSP-60 or TSP-U-60, Request for a Transfer Into the TSP.
(2) The administrator or trustee of the eligible retirement plan must certify on the Form TSP-60 or TSP-U-60 the amount and date of the distribution.
(3) The participant must submit the completed Form TSP-60 or TSP-U-60, together with a certified check, cashier's check, cashier's draft, money order, or treasurer's check from a credit union, made out to the “Thrift Savings Plan,” for the entire amount of the rollover. A participant may roll over the full amount of the distribution by making up, from his or her own funds, the amount that was withheld from the distribution for the payment of Federal taxes.
(4) The transaction must be completed within 60 days of the participant's receipt of the distribution from his or her eligible retirement plan. The transaction is not complete until the Start Printed Page 17605TSP record keeper receives the Form TSP-60 or TSP-U-60, executed by both the participant and administrator, trustee, or custodian, together with the guaranteed funds for the amount to be rolled over.
(vi) If not transferred or rolled over, would be includible in gross income for the tax year in which the distribution is paid.
§§ 1650.60, 1650.61 and 1650.62
6. Sections 1650.60(b), 1650.61(b) and (c)(1)(ii), and 1650.62(b) and (c) are amended by removing the words “one year” and adding in their place the words “90 days'.
7. Section 1650.63(a)(3) and (b) are revised to read as follows:
(3) Statements by the participant and two other persons that meet the following requirements:
(i) The participant's statement must give the full name of the spouse, declare the participant's inability to locate the spouse, state the last time the spouse's location was known, explain why the spouse's location is not known currently, and describe the good faith efforts the participant has made to locate the spouse in the 90 days preceding submission to the TSP of the request for an exception. Examples of attempting to locate the spouse include, but are not limited to, checking with relatives and mutual friends or using telephone directories and directory assistance for the city of the spouse's last known address. Negative statements, such as, “I have not seen nor heard from him” or, “I have not had contact with her”, are not sufficient.
(ii) The statements from two other persons must support the participant's statement that the participant has made attempts within the preceding 90 days to locate the spouse and that the participant does not know the spouse's whereabouts.
(iii) All statements must be signed and dated and must include the following certification: “I understand that a false statement or willful misrepresentation is punishable under Federal law (18 U.S.C. 1001) by a fine or imprisonment or both.”.
(b) A withdrawal election received within 90 days of an approved exception may be processed so long as the spouse named on the form is the spouse for whom the exception has been approved.
8. Section 1650.64(c) is amended by removing the words “one-year period” and adding in their place the words “90-day period''.
[FR Doc. 02-8606 Filed 4-10-02; 8:45 am]