In this case we are asked to consider whether an award of future pension benefits in a wrongful discharge claim under Michigan law is precluded by the preemption provision of § 514 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 USC 1144(a). We conclude that the erisa does not expressly1 preempt Michigan law in this area. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate that portion of the trial court’s amended judgment awarding future pension benefits.2
i
The plaintiff was first employed by defendant Park West Galleries on August 1, 1976, at the age of forty-four. She was initially hired as a part-time bookkeeper but was given a full-time position after two months. In 1978, the plaintiff was promoted to executive assistant and instructed by the owner of Park West Galleries, Albert Scaglione, to hire an assistant to perform her former bookkeeping functions. In subsequent years, as the business grew, the plaintiff was given the position of director of marketing, auction, and sales. Albert Scaglione assured the plaintiff at various times during her employment that her position was a secure one which would be available for her lifetime if she continued to perform well. In 1980, the plaintiff qualified for participation in Park West Galleries defined benefit pension plan. On June 19, 1981, at *206the age of forty-nine, the plaintiff was discharged from her employment at Park West Galleries.
The plaintiff filed a claim in circuit court on July 27, 1982, alleging, inter alia, that she had been wrongfully discharged in violation of her contract of employment. The plaintiff claimed damages in the nature of past and future compensation, including future pension benefits. The plaintiff’s claims were tried before a jury on January 17-26, 1984. At the close of proofs, the defendants moved for a directed verdict on the claim for pension benefits,3 citing the preemption provision of the erisa, 29 USC 1144(a). The trial court denied the motion but submitted the question of pension benefits to the jury for a special verdict. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, finding damages for lost pension benefits in a present value amount of $89,220.4 The trial court subsequently denied the defendants’ alternative motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial on the same erisa preemption ground.
The defendants appealed the trial court’s ruling in the Michigan Court of Appeals, raising the single issue of preemption. In a decision dated July 22, 1986, the Court of Appeals reversed, ruling that the erisa preempted the award of damages for lost pension benefits.5 We granted leave to appeal in an order dated March 24, 1987._
*207II
A. THE STATUTE
The erisa, as explained by the United States Senate Committee on Finance,
[i]s designed to make pension profit-sharing, and stock bonus plans more effective in providing retirement income for employees who have spent their careers in useful and socially productive work. It encourages provision for the retirement needs of many millions of individuals. At the same time, the committee recognized that private retirement plans are voluntary on the part of the employer, and, therefore, it has carefully weighed the additional costs to the employer and minimized them to the extent consistent with minimum standards for retirement benefits.
In broad outline, the bill is designed—
(1) to increase the number of individuals participating in retirement plans;
(2) to make sure that those who do participate in such plans do not lose their benefits as a result of unduly restrictive forfeiture provisions or failure of the plan to accumulate and retain sufficient funds to meet its obligations; and
(3) to make the tax laws relating to such plans fairer by providing greater equality of treatment under such plans for the different taxpaying groups involved. [93d Cong (2d Sess), 1974 US Code Cong & Admin News, p 4890.]
To accomplish these goals, the statute imposes participation, funding, and vesting requirements on pension plans. It also sets various uniform standards for reporting, disclosure, and fiduciary responsibility under both pension and welfare plans. However, the erisa does not mandate that employers provide any particular benefits. Shaw v Delta Air Lines, Inc, 463 US 85, 91; 103 S Ct 2890; 77 L Ed 2d 490 (1983).
*208Of principal interest in this appeal is the preemption provision of the erisa in which Congress declared:
[T]he provisions of this title and title IV shall supersede any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan described in section 4(a) and not exempt under section 4(b). [88 Stat 897.]
The issue we address is the scope of this provision. The remedies available to the plaintiff under Michigan contract law6 appear to "relate to” her defined benefit pension plan. On the other hand, in the United States Supreme Court’s rulings on the erisa preemption provision, it is presumed that Congress did not intend to preempt areas of traditional state regulation. See, e.g., Metropolitan Life Ins Co v Massachusetts, 471 US 724, 740; 105 S Ct 2380; 85 L Ed 2d 728 (1985). Thus, we must determine more precisely what related areas of state law are preempted by the erisa and whether the plaintiff’s claims fall within one or more of those areas.
B. THE FEDERAL DECISIONS
In Alessi v Rayhestos-Manhattan, Inc, 451 US 504; 101 S Ct 1895; 68 L Ed 2d 402 (1981), the United States Supreme Court first considered the scope of the erisa’s preemption provision. The state law at issue was a section of New Jersey’s workers’ compensation act prohibiting a setoff of workers’ compensation benefits against employee retirement pension benefits. Id., pp 507-508. The New Jersey set-off provision precluded a reduction in workers’ compensation payments, not pension *209payments. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court held that the New Jersey provision was preempted because it ultimately affected the administration of pension funds by indirectly interfering with the integration method for calculating benefits.7 Id., p 524. Unfortunately for our purposes, the Alessi Court declined an invitation to determine the outer boundaries of erisa preemption. Id., pp 524-525.
Erisa preemption was next considered by the United States Supreme Court in the context of New York statutes forbidding discrimination in employment, including discrimination in employee benefit plans on the basis of pregnancy. Shaw v Delta Air Lines, Inc, supra, p 88. The Shaw Court unanimously held that New York law was preempted by the erisa. The Court reasoned that the words "relate to” were used by Congress in a broad sense, including laws which directly regulated employee benefit plans as well as those affecting employee benefit plans by implication. Id., pp 96-99. Since the obvious implication of the New York statutes was to require disbursements under employee benefit plans for otherwise noncompensable, pregnancy-related disability, the state law did fall within the general erisa preemption provision.8 The Shaw Court was careful to note, however, that_
*210[s]ome state actions may affect employee benefit plans in too tenuous, remote, or peripheral a manner to warrant a finding that the law "relates to” the plan. Cf. American Telephone and Telegraph Co v Merry, 592 F2d 118, 121 (CA 2, 1979) (state garnishment of a spouse’s pension income to enforce alimony and support orders is not preempted). [Shaw, supra, p 100, n 21.]
Two years later, in Metropolitan Life, supra, a Massachusetts statute, requiring certain minimum mental health care benefits in general health insurance policies, was upheld in a challenge under the erisa preemption provision.9 Again, the United States Supreme Court had no difficulty in finding that the statute fell within the general preemption provision of the erisa, 29 USC 1144(a), in that the state law did "relate to” employee benefit plans. However, the Court also found an exception for insurance regulation to be applicable. See 29 USC 1144(b)(2)(A).10 The Metropolitan Life Court acknowledged that certain "disuniformities” from state to state would result from its ruling, but concluded that these inevitably flowed from the decision of Congress to preserve local insurance regulation. Id., p 747.
In Pilot Life Ins Co v Dedeaux, 481 US 41; 107 S Ct 1549; 95 L Ed 2d 39 (1987), a complaint was filed for tortious breach of contract, breach of *211fiduciary duties, and fraud in the inducement on the basis of Pilot Life’s termination of Dedeaux’s long-term disability benefits under a group plan. Pilot Life was both the insurer and administrator of the plan. Id., pp 43-44. All of Dedeaux’s claims were based upon an allegedly improper processing of its claims under the plan. Dedeaux’s complaint stated causes of action only under state law. None of the causes of action available under the erisa was asserted by Dedeaux against Pilot Life. See 29 USC 1132. The unanimous Pilot Life Court held that Dedeaux’s complaint did "relate to” an employee benefit plan and did not fall within any erisa preemption exception. The Court concluded that the erisa’s civil enforcement provisions were Dedeaux’s exclusive remedy against the plan and its fiduciaries. Id., p 57.
In the companion case of Metropolitan Life Ins Co v Taylor, 481 US 58; 107 S Ct 1542; 95 L Ed 2d 55 (1987), the United States Supreme Court considered the more specific, procedural question of removal jurisdiction under the erisa in cases alleging improper administration of employee benefit plans. Taylor had filed common-law claims for breach of contract and "mental anguish” against Metropolitan Life as the administrator of his group disability plan. Taylor joined those claims with additional claims against his employer, General Motors, for wrongful termination and failure to promote on the basis of the alleged, disability. The claims against both defendants were originally filed in state court. Metropolitan Life and General Motors petitioned for removal to federal court, alleging federal question jurisdiction over the disability benefits claims and pendent jurisdiction over the remaining claims. The United States Supreme Court upheld the removal, ruling that the erisa preempted Taylor’s common-law claims *212and also displaced them with the erisa’s own civil enforcement provisions. See 29 USC 1132. It is important to note, however, that the Taylor Court was not required to address the question of erisa preemption of the claims against the employer, since removal jurisdiction was not based upon those claims.11 See Taylor v General Motors Corp, 826 F2d 452 (CA 6, 1987) (addressing the pendent claims on remand).
Most recently, in the watershed opinion of Fort Halifax Packing Co, Inc v Coyne, 482 US 1; 107 S Ct 2211; 96 L Ed 2d 1 (1987), the United States Supreme Court rejected an erisa preemption challenge to a Maine statute requiring a one-time severance payment to employees in the event of a plant closing. Fort Halifax is particularly significant for two reasons. First, it is the first United States Supreme Court opinion in which a statute survived an express erisa preemption challenge without reference to a specific erisa preemption exception and therefore represents the first United States Supreme Court opinion defining the outer boundaries of the general erisa preemption provision. Second, Fort Halifax contains the most detailed and explicit United States Supreme Court discussion of the purposes underlying the erisa preemption provision.
The Fort Halifax Court emphasized that an erisa preemption analysis must be guided by respect for the separate spheres of governmental authority preserved in our federal system. Fort *213Halifax, supra, 482 US 19. Citing Alessi, supra, the Court explained the federal interest as follows:
Erisa’s preemption provision was prompted by recognition that employers establishing and maintaining employee benefit plans are faced with the task of coordinating complex administrative activities. A patch-work scheme of regulation would introduce considerable inefficiencies in benefit program operation, which might lead those employers with existing plans to reduce benefits, and those without such plans to refrain from adopting them. Preemption ensures that the administrative practices of a benefit plan will be governed by only a single set of regulations. See, e.g., HR Rep No. 93-533, p 12 (1973) ("[A] fiduciary standard embodied in Federal legislation is considered desirable because it will bring a measure of uniformity in an area where decisions under the same set of facts may differ from state to state”). [Fort Halifax, supra, 482 US 11.]
On the other hand, the Court also noted a state interest in the serious economic consequences of plant closings. Id., 482 US 19, n 13.
The Fort Halifax Court found that federal and state interests were properly reconciled in the Maine statute, explaining:
Fort Halifax found no need to respond to passage of the Maine statute by setting up an administrative scheme to meet its contingent statutory obligation, any more than it would find it necessary to set up an ongoing scheme to deal with the obligations it might face in the event that some day it might go bankrupt. The company makes no contention that its statutory duty has in any way hindered its ability to operate its retirement plan in uniform fashion, a plan that pays retirement, death, and permanent and total disability benefits on an ongoing basis. . . . The obligation imposed by the Maine statute thus differs radically in *214impact from a requirement that an employer pay ongoing benefits on a continuous basis.
The Maine statute therefore creates no impediment to an employer’s adoption of a uniform benefit administrative scheme. Neither the possibility of a one-time payment in the future, nor the act of making such a payment, in any way creates the potential for the type of conflicting regulation of benefit plans that erisa preemption was intended to prevent. As a result, preemption of the Maine law would not serve the purpose for which erisa’s preemption provision was enacted. [Fort Halifax, supra, 482 US 14-15.]
From the foregoing authority we conclude that a preemptive relationship to an erisa plan is established when state law interferes with a plan by: 1) altering the level of benefits which would be paid out under a given plan from state to state, 2) altering the terms of a plan, such as the requirements for eligibility, or 3) subjecting the fiduciaries of a plan to claims other than those provided for in the erisa itself. Thus, in Alessi, the New Jersey set-off preclusion for workers’ compensation benefits was preempted by the erisa because it altered the level of benefits which would be paid to a beneficiary under a plan in New Jersey. The New York law in Shaw was preempted because it had the effect of altering the terms of a disability plan to include coverage for pregnancies. Finally, in Pilot Life and Metropolitan Life Ins Co, the common-law claims were preempted because they subjected the fiduciaries of the plans to liability apart from that expressly created by the erisa.
Our conclusion that the boundaries of the erisa’s express preemption are demarcated by these relations is consistent with both the purpose and method of Congress in creating the erisa. The purpose, as noted in the United States Senate *215Finance Committee’s report, was to encourage the development of employee benefit plans. However, the method chosen by Congress was not a direct requirement that employers provide certain benefits, Shaw, supra, p 91, but the creation of a uniform national body of law regulating such plans. Id., p 99, quoting 120 Cong Rec 29197, 29933. With these purposes and methods in mind, we turn to the question whether' the erisa preempted this plaintiff’s claim for future pension benefits as damages in her wrongful discharge claim.
C. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LOST FUTURE PENSION BENEFITS IN A WRONGFUL DISCHARGE CLAIM AND THE ERISA
Defendants Park West Galleries and Albert Scaglione initially argue that the award of future pension benefits in the plaintiff’s wrongful discharge claim does "relate to” the Park West pension plan because the damages represent future pension benefits which would have accrued to the plaintiff under the plan. In fact, according to the defendants, the amended judgment entered in this case specifically identifies this portion of the plaintiff’s award as "for the pension.”
The defendants’ argument would be compelling if the award of future pension benefits had been against Park West Galleries, Inc., Defined Benefit Pension Plan. There is, however, no danger of such an award in this case. The plan itself is not and never has been a party to this action. Furthermore, no trustee or administrator of the plan has been joined in a capacity as administrator or trustee. In short, the simple fact that the damage award was based in part on the terms of the plan does not place any fiscal or administrative burden *216upon the plan itself. This relationship to the plan is, in the words of the Shaw Court, too "peripheral” to trigger erisa preemption. Shaw, supra, p 100, n 21.12
The defendants also argue that the award of future pension benefits relates to the pension plan because the plan itself provides a remedy for the loss of future benefits in circumstances of this kind. Article VI, § 5 of the plan does provide for vested credits when an employee’s employment is terminated "for any reason.”13 The defendants additionally assert that the erisa regulations, specifically 29 CFR 2530.200a-2530.200b-3, are incorporated in the Park West plan by law and would provide for the accrual of future pension credits in addition to vested credits upon the basis of a successful claim for lost wages.14_
*217Assuming, arguendo, that the defendants’ interpretations of the plan and relevant erisa regulations are correct, we are nevertheless forced to conclude that the erisa preemption provision is inapplicable. The question of express erisa preemption does not turn upon whether an alternative remedy is offered under the plan or under the erisa.15 Indeed, the Shaw Court implicitly ac*218knowledged that, apart from the New York statutes, no law would preclude plan administrators from discriminating against pregnancy-related disability prior to the effective date of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, 42 USC 2000e(k). Id., p 89. Erisa preemption instead, as discussed above, turns upon whether state law places any fiscal, administrative, or legal burdens upon the plan. In our view, the fact that the plaintiff may have had additional remedies available under the plan does not indicate that pursuit of her remedy against her employer creates a fiscal, administrative, or *219legal burden upon the plan itself.16 Viewed in this light, the defendants’ second argument is merely a more sophisticated version of the earlier argument that the accrual of future pension benefits relates to the plan because the award was calculated on the basis of the terms of the plan.17 Again, we can only conclude that this relationship is too peripheral to trigger erisa preemption. Shaw, supra.
Finally, we reject the Court of Appeals reasoning that sound policy requires erisa preemption of these damages because:
The prospect of jury awards under state law for lost pension benefits is a severe disincentive to the establishment of private pension plans and inconsistent with erisa’s express preemption of all state laws that "relate to” plans under its coverage. [153 Mich App 520, 527; 396 NW2d 210 (1986).][18]
In our view, it is an equally plausible microeconomic hypothesis that employers "buy” labor at market rates and therefore would be required to substitute other, recoverable forms of compensation in the event that they elect to discontinue pension contributions. Moreover, even assuming that the economic analysis of the Court of Appeals is correct, we would find the relationship too remote to trigger erisa preemption. Shaw, supra, p *220100, n 21. Our reading of the erisa preemption provision indicates that there must be a real, if only indirect, relationship between the challenged state law and an employee benefit plan. The relationship posited in the Court of Appeals analysis is merely hypothetical. It might similarly be posited, for example, that an increase in Michigan’s minimum wage19 would discourage the creation of pension funds by simultaneously reducing the amount of an employer’s income allocable to pensions and increasing the level of benefits specified under a pension plan,20 yet we would be loath to rule that state minimum wage law is preempted by the erisa. Such a relationship is, in the language of the Shaw Court, simply too "remote” to trigger erisa preemption. Shaw, supra.21
We agree with the conclusion of the dissent that this wrongful discharge claim has some relationship to the Park West Defined Benefit Pension Plan. However, as made clear by the decisions of the United States Supreme Court, proper analysis of the scope of the erisa preemption provision requires more than an inquiry as to whether state law is logically related to an erisa plan. We reject an all-encompassing view of this legislation which would subordinate the sovereign powers of this state to the limited authority of the federal government. As the United States Supreme Court has explained:_
*221Erisa preemption analysis "must be guided by respect for the separate spheres of governmental authority preserved in our federalist system.” Alessi v Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc, 451 US [504] 522 [68 L Ed 2d 402; 101 S Ct 1895 (1981)]. [Fort Halifax Packing Co, supra, 482 US 19.]
In sum, our review of the defendants’ arguments and the record in this case fails to show that the award of future benefits imposes an administrative, fiscal, or legal burden upon the employee benefit plan. We therefore conclude that the award of future pension benefits is not preempted under the erisa. Finding no merit in the remaining issue raised by the defendants, we decline to discuss it in this appeal.22
hi
CONCLUSION
Recent federal law establishes that state law is preempted under the erisa, 29 USC 1144(a) when the state law "relates to” an employee benefit plan by; 1) altering the level of benefits which would be paid out under a given plan from state to state, 2) altering the terms of the plan such as requirements for eligibility, or 3) subjecting the fiduciaries of a plan to claims other than those provided in the erisa itself. Furthermore, even state law which relates to an employee benefit plan by imposing a fiscal, administrative, or legal burden upon the employee benefit plan may not be preempted by the erisa if the relationship is so remote as to constitute merely a hypothetical possibility. Since the award of future pension benefits in this wrongful discharge claim was against the *222employer, rather than the pension plan or an administrator or a fiduciary of the plan, it does not relate to a pension plan within the meaning of the erisa. The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the judgment of the circuit court is reinstated.
Brickley, Cavanagh, and Archer, JJ., concurred with Boyle, J.See n 15.
We view the Court of Appeals decision as affirming the balance of the amended judgment entered by the trial court.
The claim for pension benefits was for future benefits, excluding those for which the plaintiff was already vested under the plan at the time of her discharge.
The jury also found damages in the amount of $14,660.80 for front and back pay as well as $500 for slander per se, although those damages are not at issue in this appeal.
A contrary conclusion was reached by another Court of Appeals panel in Sepanske v Bendix Corp, 147 Mich App 819; 384 NW2d 54 (1985).
For the purposes of erisa’s preemption provision, the word "law” is defined so as to include case law. 29 USC 1144(c)(1).
Presumably, the New Jersey statute actually would have increased the resources available to the pension fund for integration and thus was not a financial burden on pension funds. However, the New Jersey law did impose a significant administrative burden because it required a distinct method for the calculation of benefits under the plan for New Jersey workers.
Shaw involved two New York statutes, the Human Rights Law, NY Exec Law, §§ 290-301 (McKinney), and the Disability Benefits Law, NY Work Comp Law, §§ 200-242 (McKinney). In addition to holding that these statutes fell within the general erisa preemption provision by virtue of their relation to employee benefit plans, the Shaw Court also considered the statutes under the erisa preemption *210exceptions, 29 USC 1144, which are not at issue in this appeal. Shaw ultimately held that the New York Human Rights Law is preempted by the erisa insofar as it renders the activities of a plan unlawful which are not unlawful under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, 42 USC 2000e et seq. Shaw also held that the New York Disability Benefits Law is preempted insofar as it regulates benefits under a multibenefit plan, but exempt from erisa preemption insofar as it regulates separately administered disability benefit plans.
The Massachusetts statute was also upheld under a National Labor Relations Act preemption challenge.
The plaintiff in this appeal does not assert that any statutory exception to erisa preemption is applicable.
We acknowledge that, in Morningstar v Meijer, Inc, 662 F Supp 555 (ED Mich, 1987), the Taylor holding was viewed as a ruling that the retaliatory discharge claim against the employer was preempted by the erisa and supplanted by the erisa’s civil-enforcement provisions. See 29 USC 1132, 1140. While we decline to embrace this view, we do note that it is consistent with our holding. The plaintiff herein, like Morningstar, has not alleged a retaliatory discharge and would therefore not be subject to erisa preemption.
As the concurring opinion of Chief Justice Riley notes, the sole basis for the plaintiff’s claim of wrongful discharge is a traditional area of Michigan common law. The rights and duties of these litigants have their genesis in a contract of employment. The fact that damages were calculated with reference to the plan does not change the nature of this cause of action. See Lingle v Norge Div of Magic Chef, Inc, 486 US 399; 108 S Ct 1877; 100 L Ed 2d 410 (1988) (the fact that additional, substantive rights are provided to an employee who is the victim of a retaliatory discharge for claiming workers’ compensation benefits does not inextricably link the cause of action to similar rights under the employee’s collective bargaining agreement, nor does it invoke federal preemption under §301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 USC 185). But see also Metropolitan Life Ins Co v Massachusetts, 471 US 724, 747; 105 S Ct 2380; 85 L Ed 2d 728 (1985) (unlike erisa, the nlra contains no statutory preemption provision), and see n 15.
Again we must note that the claim for pension benefits was for future benefits, excluding those for which the plaintiff was already vested under the plan. The parties have agreed that the present value of those vested benefits which were excluded from damages was approximately $5,000.
It is alleged by the defendants and amicus curiae Michigan Manufacturers Association that these erisa regulations would allow the plaintiff to obtain additional accruals under the plan upon the basis of the jury’s award of front and back pay. See n 4. Actually, additional accruals are allowed by regulation only for back pay. 29 CFR 2530.200b-2(a)(3). In addition, no more than 501 hours of service are required to be credited by regulation, 29 CFR 2530.200b-2(a)(2)(i), *217although a particular plan may require that additional hours of back pay "service” be credited. 29 CFR 2530.200a-2. We are apprised of no provision in the Park West Galleries defined pension plan which requires accruals in excess of 501 hours of back pay. The record does not disclose whether the jury considered these regulations in awarding pension benefits, although the record also fails to disclose any attempt by the defendants to have the jury instructed in this regard.
As we have noted above, the erisa does contain its own civil enforcement mechanism. 29 USC 1132. While it may be asserted that creation of this mechanism carries with it an implied preemption, the question is largely rendered academic by the fact that actions under §1132 generally "relate to” plans in that they impose a fiscal, administrative, or legal burden upon plans. One possible exception to this rule would be retaliatory discharges which are proscribed under 29 USC 1140 and made actionable under 29 USC 1132a(3)(B)(ii), although in our view, even this cause of action carries a high probability of imposing fiscal, administrative, or legal burdens upon a plan. We need not address this issue, since the plaintiff has not pled a cause of action under 29 USC 1132, nor have the defendants argued or briefed the issue of implied preemption. However, we observe no inconsistency between the remedies provided in 29 CFR 2530 and Michigan law in this case. See n 11. Thus, to the extent that the defendants’ argument suggests implied preemption, state law must be treated far more deferentially. As one commentator has explained:
[Wjhere Congress legislates "in a field which the States have traditionally occupied ... we start with the assumption that the historic police powers of the States [are] not to be [ousted] by the Federal Act unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.” Because this test looks to the nature of the subject regulated rather than the character of the federal regulatory scheme, the standards upon which it relies closely parallel those that would be applied if the state regulation or taxation were challenged under the commerce clause. If, under the Cooley doctrine, [Cooley v Bd of Wardens of the Port of Philadelphia, 53 US (12 How) 299; 13 L Ed 996 (1851)], the activity or interest affected by a challenged state action is regarded as "local,” and if the state action contravenes no other commerce clause requirement, then total federal preemption will not be inferred in the absence of an obvious congres*218sional intent to bar state action over the same subject matter. On this basis, the Court ruled in Huron Portland Cement Co v City of Detroit, [362 US 440; 80 S Ct 813; 4 L Ed 2d 852 (1960)], that a municipality may enforce its smoke abatement ordinance against a federally licensed steamship engaged in interstate commerce, even though structural modification of the vessel was required to bring it into compliance with the antipollution statute. Similarly, while federal occupation of the field defined by direct regulation of safety designs for nuclear power plants had been made clear in Pacific Gas & Electric Co [v State Energy Resources Conservation & Development Comm, 461 US 190; 103 S Ct 1713; 75 L Ed 2d 52 (1983)], the Court in Silkwood v Kerr-McGee Corp, [464 US 238; 104 S Ct 615; 78 L Ed 2d 443 (1984)], held that state law providing for compensatory and punitive damages for tort victims, including victims of radiation injuries, was outside the occupied field and therefore not preempted. In reaching this conclusion, the Court was clearly influenced by the long tradition of state concern with the compensation of victims of negligently, recklessly, or intentionally inflicted injury.
On the other hand, if the field is one that is traditionally deemed "national,” the Court is more vigilant in striking down state incursions into subjects that Congress may have reserved to itself. It was not surprising, therefore, that the Court invalidated the state alien registration law in Hines v Davidowitz, [312 US 52; 61 S Ct 399; 85 L Ed 581 (1941)]; the Court was extremely solicitous of the paramount federal interest in matters germane to foreign affairs. [Tribe, American Constitutional Law (2d ed), pp 499-500. Emphasis in the original.]
In our view, the field of individual employment contracts is one which states have traditionally occupied. Since we find no clear and manifest purpose within § 1132 to oust states from this field, we would be reluctant to find a § 1132 remedy exclusive under a theory of implied preemption.
Although the imposition of an administrative burden might suggest preemption, not every state law which imposes an administrative burden upon an erisa plan is preempted. See Mackey v Lanier Collections Agency & Service, Inc, 486 US —; 108 S Ct 2182; 100 L Ed 2d 836 (1988) (state law allowing the garnishment of employee erisa welfare plan benefits not preempted).
To the extent that the argument also implies a duplication of recovery, we hasten to add that this was a question of proofs which might have been submitted in the trial court. In fact, it appears from the record that the future pension benefits awarded to the plaintiff were reduced by her vested amount under the plan.
We are aware that the Court of Appeals analysis in this case was rendered without the benefit of Fort Halifax.
See MCL 408.381 et seq.; MSA 17.255(1) et seq.
In art VI, § 1 of the Park West Galleries, Inc., defined benefit pension plan, for example, the amount of the benefit is directly proportional to wages paid during the years of service.
In Gilbert v Burlington Industries, Inc, 765 F2d 320, 327 (CA 2, 1985), aff'd sub nom Roberts v Burlington Industries, Inc, 477 US 901; 106 S Ct 3267; 91 L Ed 2d 558 (1986), it was explained that when a state statute of general application does not affect the structure, the administration, or the type of benefits provided by an erisa plan, the mere fact that the statute has some economic effect does not require that the statute be invalidated.
The defendants have argued alternatively that a loss of future pension benefits was too remote or speculative to recover as damages for a breach of employment contract.