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What happened. The employees of several companies in the Northeast--Equitable, Verizon, Citigroup, and J.P. Morgan Chase in New York, and FleetBoston and AT&T in Connecticut--all sued, charging that their retirement plans violate the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). All their employers had converted from traditional to cash balance plans, and employees felt that older employees received smaller benefits when they retired than they would have earned under traditional plans.
In federal district courts, four judges (ruling against four of the companies) ruled that cash balance plans do discriminate against older retirees, while the other two judges, in the Equitable and Verizon suits, ruled in favor of the employers. The Equitable plaintiffs appealed to the 2nd Circuit, which covers Connecticut, New York, and Vermont, and appellate judges combined their suit with that of the Verizon plaintiffs.
What the court said. The basic issue with the plans is whether, by potentially allowing younger employees to accrue greater benefits because they have participated in the plans for longer has the effect of reducing older employees' benefits and thus violating ERISA. Fortunately for 2nd Circuit judges, three other circuits confronted the question during 2006 and 2007--the 3rd (DE, NJ, PA), 6th (KY, OH, MI, TN), and 7th (IL, IN, WI)--and all had ruled the same way. ERISA, they found, bars age-based reductions in the "rate" of benefit accrual, but "the fact that the ultimate benefit might grow to be larger for younger employees ? would not be relevant to the comparison of accrual rates." So cash balance plans in the 2nd Circuit are not age discriminatory. Hirt et al. v. Equitable & Bryerton et al. v. Verizon, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, Nos. 06-4757-cv (L), 06-5190-cv (XAP), 07-1680-cv (2008).
Point to remember: Judges also defined the issue this way: The proper reading of ERISA is to look at "inputs" that an employer makes to a cash balance plan, rather than at the "outputs" employees will receive at retirement. A related factor is that the values of both 401(k)-type and cash balance accounts are subject to market fluctuations, while traditional, defined benefit pension accounts are not. And, cash balance accounts are portable, while traditional pensions are not.