Court Looks Beyond Simple Meaning of Church Plan

Catholic Health Initiatives has won a lawsuit challenging its pension plan's church-plan status.

U.S. District Judge Robert E. Blackburn with the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado has found that Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) is a “church” for purposes of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act’s (ERISA’s) church-plan exemption.

The plaintiff in the case Medina v. Catholic Health Initiatives argued that the court should use the plain meaning of “church” as simply “a house of worship.” But, Blackburn said reliance on a plain meaning interpretation ignores other plain meanings of the term “church,” which evince richer and more meaningful denotations and connotations of that term. He said it is equally plain that the term “church” can and may be used to denote “the whole body of Christian believers,” or “any division of this body professing the same creed and acknowledging the same ecclesiastical authority,” as well as an “ecclesiastical organization, power, and affairs, as distinguished from the state.”                           

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Blackburn found these broader conceptions of the term find parallels in definitions of the Roman Catholic Church in particular. “Under this more resonant definition, the court has little trouble in concluding that CHI is, at the very least, a constituent part of the Catholic Church,” he wrote in his opinion.

Investigating the history of CHI, Blackburn found that in June 1991, the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, a department of the Holy See in the Vatican, approved a petition to confer public juridic personality on Catholic Health Care Federation (CHCF). The opinion explains that public juridic persons are the official constitutive parts of the Catholic Church and the primary means through which the Church acts in the world. However, they are creatures of canon law, and thus have no ability to act or own property in the United States on their own. To do so, they require a civil law counterpart.

CHI was formed in 1996 through the consolidation of three health care systems representing 10 congregations of Catholic sisters. It is expressly “organized and operated . . . exclusively for the benefit of, to perform the functions of, and/or to carry out the religious, charitable, scientific, and educational purposes . . . of Catholic Health Care Federation.”  In other words, Blackburn said, “as conceived by the Church itself, CHCF and CHI are seen as the church and civil counterparts of a single entity.”

NEXT: DB plan committee has ties to the Catholic Church

In addition, Blackburn noted, CHI is listed in The Official Catholic Directory, “the definitive compilation of Roman Catholic institutions in the United States.”  And, in an Internal Revenue Service General Counsel Memorandum in July 1, 1983, the agency said, “[a]ny organization listed in [The Official Catholic Directory] is considered associated with the Roman Catholic Church in the United States,” and an employee of any such organization “is considered as an employee of the Roman Catholic Church of the United States for purposes of the church plan rules.” 

Blackburn also found CHI’s ties to the Catholic Church extend downward to its defined benefit plan subcommittee, which manages and administers the plan. All members of the subcommittee are appointed by CHI’s governing body, the Board of Stewardship Trustees (BOST). All expenses of plan administration are paid by CHI.

In administering the plan and carrying out its duties, a document governing the subcommittee says it must “be mindful of the Employer’s Philosophy and Mission, and the teachings and tenets of the Roman Catholic Church and of the Sponsoring Congregations of Catholic Health Initiatives.” Blackburn says this shows the subcommittee plainly is “associated” with the Catholic Church.

He concluded that CHI is a church for purposes of ERISA section 1002(33)(A), because the evidence more than adequately demonstrates that the CHI Plan satisfies the requirements of section 1002(33)(C), which says a plan may qualify for the church-plan exemption if it is “maintained by an organization, whether a civil law corporation or otherwise, the principal purpose or function of which is the administration or funding of a plan or program for the provision of retirement benefits or welfare benefits, or both, for the employees of a church or a convention or association of churches, if such organization is controlled by or associated with a church or a convention or association of churches.”

A number of lawsuits have challenged retirement plan’s church-plan status. The courts have issued differing opinions in the cases. The three cases finding against “church plan” status for the defendants have appealed to the 9th, 3rd, and 7th Circuits. In the Medina case, Blackburn rejects a recommendation by a U.S. magistrate judge that the court enter a declaratory judgment holding that the CHI Retirement Plan is not a church plan within the meaning of ERISA, as well as a declaratory judgment holding that the CHI Plan must comply with ERISA, to the extent that it currently does not comply.

What to Know About Women Plan Participants

Women plan participants and investors face special challenges.

Women in the workplace face special challenges. Over a lifetime’s career, they make less because of lower wages and sometimes stepping out of the workforce to care for children or parents. They lack confidence, but they are interested in saving and learning to invest for their futures.

Women could use a nudge to complete certain retirement planning activities, according to a report from the LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute. LIMRA research consistently shows that the top financial concern for both sexes is saving enough money for retirement (83% of women, compared with 77% of men). But women seem to have an especially difficult time getting ready for retirement, with just 20% of women surveyed saying they are comfortable with their level of financial knowledge.

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According to a Vanguard survey, women are better 401(k) savers than men, but men’s average account balances are more than 50% larger. The report found women are 14% likelier to participate in their workplace savings plan and save at higher rates than men. Across all income levels, women save at rates that are 7% to 16% higher than men’s.

Investing styles for men and women are also different, with men likelier to kick back and relax about saving and investing, while women exhibit higher levels of anxiety. Most women—eight in 10—are concerned about saving enough for retirement, with the majority, 54%, saying they are “very concerned,” according to a study on women’s retirement planning perspectives by the Insured Retirement Institute (IRI).

Despite saving at higher levels, though, women’s balances are lower than men’s, with a FinancialFinesse analysis showing a 26% gap in the shortfall between men’s and women’s retirement savings. In general, working women will need to save more—and at a much faster pace—than men to satisfy the average cost of expenditures in retirement, the report advised.

NEXT: Some women are super savers

The report factored in median incomes, deferral rates, retirement savings, life expectancies, and projected health care costs to determine how much the median 45-year-old man and woman would need to save in order to replace 70% of their income in retirement.

Women are pretty competent at managing their finances and saving for retirement, but when it comes to judging their own performance, confidence takes a nosedive. A major finding of Fidelity’s Money FIT Women Study is that women greatly lack confidence in their own financial ability. They’re concerned they won’t have enough money to live on in retirement, but they want to learn, says Alexandra Taussig, senior vice president for marketing and business strategy at Fidelity Investments. Since most women will be solely responsible for their finances at some point in their lives, she notes, their willingness to step up engagement in active learning about finance is positive.

Some women, however, are bucking the trends, according to research from BlackRock, which identified a segment of “smart savers,” women who have accumulated five times the savings of all American women. This group holds an average $112,500 in savings, compared with a $21,200 median savings. Most have dedicated retirement savings, are likelier to invest in equities and hold less cash, and perhaps most important, these savers frequently engage with financial tasks and topics—the typical smart saver spends more than seven hours per month reviewing and making changes to their savings and investments, and 56% classify themselves as active investors.

It is possible The Women’s Pension Protection Act, introduced earlier in December by Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Illinois) and Senator Patty Murray (D-Washington), will strengthen women’s ability to save for retirement with a range of provisions, including increased spousal protections extended to defined contribution plans, an amended current minimum participation standard to boost retirement coverage for long-term, part-time workers, and grants to promote financial literacy for women of working or retirement age, among other proactive moves.

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