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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

House passes pension reform

Jim Abrams Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The House approved an ambitious overhaul of the nation’s pension laws late Friday, hoping to prolong the traditional employer-based pension plans relied upon by millions while also promoting new savings options and protecting the government from taxpayer bailouts.

The reforms in the bill “represent the most sweeping changes to America’s pension laws in more than 30 years,” said House Majority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio.

He said the bill “will ensure that workers and retirees can continue to count on their hard-earned pension benefits.”

The 279-131 vote came only hours before the House was expected to begin a five-week summer break.

The legislation now moves to the Senate, which is expected to take it up next week before it departs for its August recess, sending it to the president for his signature.

The legislation, which tightens controls on companies that fall behind in their contributions to defined-benefit plans, gives special repayment breaks to the airline industry and is of particular urgency for several airlines threatening to terminate their plans.

The 900-page pension bill, the product of several years of congressional effort, would force employers that have fallen behind in their defined-benefit pension payments to catch up within seven years and close loopholes that have allowed companies to underfund their plans by an estimated $450 billion. The measure also promotes pension alternatives, such as 401(k) plans, through such steps as automatic enrollment. It would give financial firms greater latitude in steering investors toward high-earning savings programs.

The legislation would give airlines that have frozen their pension plans, Northwest Airlines Corp. and Delta Air Lines, an additional 10 years to meet pension obligations. American and Continental, the only two major airlines with active defined-benefit plans, would get an extra three years.

The fear is that if they abandon their plans it will add billions in deficit to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., which already has amassed a deficit of $22.8 billion.

The PBGC now operates on premiums and interest earnings, but a big jump in the deficit could shift its burden onto taxpayers. The agency takes over benefit payments for terminated plans.