State Finance Law §§ 5, 5(2)(a), 5(2)(b), 5(2)(e), 5(2)(h), 5(3), 5(3)(b), 5(3)(c); Internal
Revenue Code § 457(b); United States Code §§ 26, § 457(b), 26, § 457(e); N.Y.C.R.R.
§§ 9, § 9000.1, 9, § 9003.5(a), 9, § 9005.1; Canal Law § 10; Energy Law § 8-106;
General Business Law § 803
The Deferred Compensation Board is not obligated to investigate, monitor, or enforce
compliance by local deferred compensation plans.
December 21, 2017
David E. Fischer Formal Opinion
Executive Director No. 2017-F2
Deferred Compensation Plan
Empire State Plaza Concourse—North
Room 124
P.O. Box 2103
Albany, NY 12220-2103
Dear Mr. Fischer:
The Deferred Compensation Board (Board) oversees the deferred
compensation plan established for state employees. A local governmental entity1 can
make a deferred compensation plan available to its employees by participating in the
state deferred compensation plan or by establishing its own deferred compensation
plan. You have asked about the Board’s responsibility with respect to local
governmental employers that establish their own deferred compensation plan.
Specifically, you have asked whether the Board is obligated to take affirmative action
to investigate, monitor, or enforce compliance by the local plans (a) with the
regulations the Board has adopted regarding the standards and requirements of
plans established under State Finance Law § 5 or (b) with section 457(b) of the federal
Internal Revenue Code, under each of the following circumstances:
In the absence of any notice of potential non-compliance,
1 We will use “local governmental entity” or “local governmental employer” to refer to the non-State
public employers that are authorized to establish a deferred compensation plan. These include “a
county, city, town, village or any other political subdivision as defined in section one hundred thirty-
one of the retirement and social security law or civil division of the state; a school district or any
governmental entity operating a public school, college or university; a public improvement or special
district; a public authority, commission or public benefit corporation; any other public corporation,
agency or instrumentality or unit of government which exercises governmental powers under the
laws of the state or any instrumentality jointly created by this state and any other state or states.”
State Finance Law § 5(3)(b).
After becoming aware of non-compliance (for example, through an
inquiry from a local plan or through media reports), or
After providing written or oral advice to a local plan.
As explained below, we are of the opinion that the Board is not obligated to
investigate, monitor, or enforce local plans’ compliance with the Board’s regulations
or section 457(b) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Section 457(b) authorizes a state or local governmental unit to establish and
maintain a deferred compensation plan for its employees. 26 U.S.C. § 457(b),(e).
Participation in such a plan allows an employee to defer federal income taxation on
retirement savings into future years. Plans that do not comply with the requirements
of section 457, however, jeopardize the tax-deferred status of participants’
contributions. The Internal Revenue Service enforces compliance with the
requirements of section 457 of the Internal Revenue Code and its associated
regulations.
The New York Legislature enacted section 5 of the State Finance Law to
authorize the establishment of deferred compensation plans, for state and local
government employees, that conform to the requirements of section 457. State
Finance Law § 5(2)(a),(3). Section 5 of the State Finance Law creates the framework
for a deferred compensation plan for state employees (“State Plan” or “Plan”) and
other plans for local governmental employees (“local plans”). Section 5 also lays out
the Board’s powers and duties with respect to those plans, which differ with respect
to the different plans.
The Board was responsible for establishing the State Plan. State Finance Law
§ 5(2)(a). And the Board is required to promulgate rules and regulations for its
appropriate administration. State Finance Law § 5(2)(a). The Board is authorized
to contract with financial organizations to administer the State Plan and to invest
funds held under the Plan. Id. § 5(2)(b). The Board also is authorized to hire
employees deemed necessary and prudent to assist with administration. State
Finance Law § 5(2)(h). In short, the Board is responsible for operating and overseeing
the State Plan.
With respect to the local plans, the Board is charged with establishing the
framework within which they operate—for example, the Board must adopt
regulations addressing the selection of financial organizations both to participate in
the plans and for investment purposes, State Finance Law § 5(2)(e)—but the Board
is not responsible for administering or overseeing the local plans. Instead, the
sponsoring local governmental employer administers or arranges for the
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administration of a local plan. State Finance Law § 5(3)(c). Section 5 does not give
the Board any oversight responsibility with respect to local plans.
The Board has adopted standards that apply to both the State Plan and local
plans. 9 N.Y.C.R.R. § 9000.1. According to these standards, for example, a contract
between the Board or a local governmental employer and an entity providing
administrative services must be in writing and cannot exceed five years, and both the
State Plan and local plans must file certain financial statements annually. 9
N.Y.C.R.R. §§ 9003.5(a), 9005.1.
In light of the scheme established by State Finance Law § 5, we conclude that
the Board is not obligated to investigate, monitor, or enforce compliance by local plans
with the regulations it promulgated or the Internal Revenue Code. The Board is a
creature of statute and, as such, has only the powers the Legislature granted it and
those necessarily implied from that grant. In re Flynn v. State Ethics Com’n, 87
N.Y.2d 199, 202 (1995). The authority granted to the Board relates to administering
or overseeing the administration of the State Plan and to establishing the standards
by which the State Plan and local plans will operate. The Legislature did not
expressly grant the Board the power to initiate investigations into or to monitor or
enforce compliance of local plans with those standards—powers the Legislature has
explicitly granted in other contexts to specific state entities. See, e.g., Canal Law
§ 10 (powers of the Canal Corporation include “[i]nvestigat[ing] all matters relating
to the administration and operation of the canal system and its personnel” and
“[e]nforc[ing] compliance with laws, rules and regulations relating to posting of
limited loads and clearances” on certain bridges); Energy Law § 8-106
(administration and enforcement of State Lighting Efficiency Standards for Existing
Public Buildings Act); General Business Law § 803 (Secretary of State’s powers, with
respect to hearing aid dispensers, to investigate and examine for compliance with
state law). Nor, in our opinion, is such power necessarily implied from the relatively
narrow authority the Legislature did grant: the Board can fulfill its statutory
mandate without investigating or enforcing compliance with the regulations it
promulgated or the Internal Revenue Code.
We therefore conclude that the Board is not obligated to investigate, monitor,
or enforce compliance with the regulations it promulgated or the Internal Revenue
Code.
Very truly yours,
ERIC T. SCHNEIDERMAN
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