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Posted on March 31, 2009June 27, 2018

New Jersey State Official Took $1.9 Million in Bribes From Staffing Firms

A senior investigator with the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development pleaded guilty Monday, March 30, to accepting almost $1.9 million in bribes from at least 20 owners and operators of temporary staffing firms and tax evasion, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey.


One staffing worker pleaded guilty to paying bribes.


The investigator, Joseph Rivera, 53, of Winslow, New Jersey, was responsible for inspecting temporary labor firms in southern New Jersey for compliance with state wage and hour laws and other regulations.


However, in exchange for bribes, Rivera agreed to not inspect the firms, and falsely certified them, according to the office. He also recommended them to other businesses as firms that should be hired.


Rivera calculated the amount of bribe payments by multiplying by 25 cents the total number of hours worked by a temporary staffing firm’s employees, according to the office.


Rivera also admitted that he claimed taxable income of approximately $89,696 in 2007 when his total taxable income was $499,176.


Rivera will forfeit money and property equal to almost $1.9 million as part of his plea, according to the office. Those items include $120,400 in cash; two Ocean City, New Jersey, properties; a Fort Lauderdale, Florida, property; a 2008 Lexus ES 350; eight gold plates; and gold and silver coins.


He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years on the bribery charge and a fine of $250,000 or twice any gain to the defendant or loss to any victim, whichever is greater. The tax evasion charge carries a maximum sentence of five years and a $250,000 fine.


Also Monday, Yohan Wongso, 27, of Philadelphia, pleaded guilty to paying bribes to Rivera and James Peyton, another field investigator for the New Jersey Department of Labor.


Wongso faces up to 10 years on the bribery charge and a fine of $250,000 or twice any gain to the defendant or loss to any victim, whichever is greater.


The U.S. Attorney’s Office also said that it filed charges against Peyton, 71, with one count of solicitation and acceptance of a bribe.


Peyton allegedly began accepting bribes in 2005 and took as much as $8,000 in cash per quarter. Peyton’s responsibilities included auditing employer books and records.


The office also said it filed charges against Channavel “Danny” Kong, 37, and Thuan Nguyen, 37, both of Philadelphia, with making bribes to Rivera to avoid audits of their temporary staffing firms.


Kong operated a firm called Sunrise Labor. Nguyen operated N&T Staffing Inc. and was also involved with the firms JNT General Services Inc. and K&B Staffing Inc.


—Staffing Industry Analysts


Posted on March 31, 2009June 27, 2018

Supreme Court Refuses to Stay San Francisco Health Spending Law

U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy on Monday, March 30, denied a request from a San Francisco-area restaurant trade association for an emergency order to halt enforcement of San Francisco’s health care spending law.


The Golden Gate Restaurant Association sought the order in the wake of a ruling earlier this month by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals not to review a unanimous 2008 decision by a three-judge appeals court panel upholding the legality of San Francisco law.


In denying the request, Justice Kennedy did not comment.


The outcome of the litigation is important not just to employers in San Francisco, who since January have been told how much they must spend on workers’ health care to avoid fines.


Under the law, large employers must make health care expenditures of $1.85 per hour in 2009 for every eligible employee working at least eight hours a week. Expenditures can include payment of group health insurance premiums, health savings accounts and health reimbursement arrangement contributions, or payments to the city.


The case also is being watched by employers nationwide who fear that the San Francisco law, if upheld, would open the floodgates to a wave of new health care spending laws by other cities and states looking for ways to expand coverage.


Benefits experts say a patchwork of such laws would result in higher health care and administrative costs for employers, as well as make it impossible for multistate employers to offer uniform health care benefit plans.


Golden Gate Restaurant Association executive director Kevin Westlye earlier said the group would seek a review of the 9th Circuit ruling by the Supreme Court.


Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business Insurance, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on March 31, 2009June 27, 2018

Congressmen’s IRA Advice Proposal Irks Some Independent Financial Advisors

A congressman’s suggestion that only independent financial advisors be permitted to give advice to participants in the small-company individual retirement accounts proposed by President Barack Obama may not go far enough, according to some financial advisors.


“It’s too narrow. It’s really missing the point,” said Scott Leonard, a senior economist with Trovena, a family office in Redondo Beach, California, that supervises about $500 million.


“The real issue is you want people who are legal fiduciaries [who will] put clients’ interests ahead of their own and disclose conflicts of interest,” he said.


Leonard’s comments came in response to remarks by Rep. Robert Andrews, D-New Jersey, chairman of the House Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions Subcommittee, which has oversight over retirement issues.


At a hearing last week, Andrews said that advisors who provide advice on IRAs should be independent of companies that sell investments.


In an interview, the congressman said that he will push to ensure that regulations governing IRAs are similar to those in the Employment Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. The act generally prohibits advisors affiliated with companies who sell investments from providing direct advice to pension plan participants.


Kevin Grant, vice president of retirement plans at Higginbotham & Associates in Dallas, said that requiring advisors to act as fiduciaries if they provide advice on IRAs is more important than requiring that links between advisors and financial service companies be severed.


“A fiduciary standard is a good way to go,” said Grant, whose firm manages about $500 million.


“You’re either a fiduciary or you’re not. If you’re going to be a fiduciary advisor, I don’t care who you’re connected to. I don’t think that’s the relevant issue,” Grant said.


The lawmaker’s push is rooted in President Obama’s fiscal 2010 budget proposal, which would require all employers that do not offer retirement plans to automatically enroll employees in IRAs unless the workers specifically opt out. The requirement aims to increase retirement savings for the estimated 75 million workers who do not have access to retirement plans.


“I don’t think somebody should be giving advice on your retirement money if they serve two masters, whether it’s your 401(k), your IRA or your defined-contribution account,” said Andrews, whose subcommittee is part of the House Education and Labor Committee.


“I want to be sure that the advice is motivated by what’s best for you, and not because their commissions are going to be higher or their incomes are going to be higher,” he said.


“By removing the link to products, you sort of get that, but not completely. It doesn’t mean that somebody doesn’t have some other agenda,” Leonard said. “The goal is to remove agendas other than giving your best advice.”


While many advisors welcome the prospect of requiring all advisors who work with retirement accounts to be independent of mutual funds, brokerage firms, insurance companies and other entities that sell financial products, some worry that the mechanism is not in place to serve additional consumers who need help managing an IRA.


“The infrastructure isn’t there to provide advice for all people who need it,” said Milo Benningfield, the principal of Benningfield Financial Advisors, a fee-only investment advisory firm in San Francisco that manages about $33 million.


“The number of independent advisors out there is a small fraction of the total advisors. The number of people who need advice is just enormous,” Benningfield said.


Requiring all advisors to be independent of companies that sell investments could lead to an increase in the number of independent advisors, Andrews said.


“More advisors would qualify and register as independent advisors. That’s kind of the point,” Andrews said. “There’d be a ready source of income for those advisors. The supply would meet the demand.”


Other advisors say that prohibiting advisors who sell their company’s products from offering advice on retirement plans is counterproductive.


“Who are they suggesting has the knowledge and education to sell these things, and to stay on top of it?” asked Jon Ten Haagen, a certified financial planner who is founder and principal of Ten Haagen Financial Group in Huntington, New York, which manages about $35 million.


Advice given by representatives who sell their company’s retirement products “can be conflicted, there’s no question,” he said. “But is [the restriction] necessary? I don’t think so.”


Bringing IRAs under the types of restrictions that 401(k)s are subject to under ERISA could make it more difficult to move ahead with President Obama’s automatic-enrollment proposal for IRAs, said Liz Varley, managing director for government affairs in the Washington office of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, which has offices in New York and Washington.


“That would be a great way to kill their auto-IRA proposal,” she said.


ERISA applies to employers that offer retirement plans and sets requirements for employers to act as fiduciaries of the plans. However, IRAs that are owned individually, rather than through employers, would not have an employer in the role of fiduciary, Varley said.


If IRA automatic enrollment is mandated, “there’s a little bit more of an argument if you’re talking about an employer offering, or requiring, a payroll deduction arrangement,” she acknowledged.


But the need for regulatory protection must be weighed against the impact that added regulations would have on businesses, Varley said.


If the Obama plan becomes law, “you’re mandating on these small employers that they offer these arrangements, Varley said. “And on top of that, [are you] going to have the employers accept full ERISA fiduciary responsibility? It may not be in the interest of keeping their business running.”


Filed by Sara Hansard of Investment News, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on March 31, 2009June 27, 2018

Sex-Bias Claim Against WellPoint Can Proceed

A WellPoint Inc. employee with four children who was told she did not get a promotion because there was “a lot on your plate” can pursue a sex discrimination claim against her employer, a federal appeals court has ruled.


According to the decision last week by the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Laurie Chadwick v. WellPoint Inc., Chadwick—who at the time had 6-year-old triplets and an 11-year-old son—applied for a position as a recovery specialist lead at the health insurer in 2006. The position involved supervising the recovery of overpayment claims and third parties’ reimbursement claims in a three-state region.


Chadwick had more experience than her competitor, another woman. She was told by her supervisor when she did not get the position that “it was nothing you did or didn’t do. It was just that you’re going to school, you have the kids, and you just have a lot on your plate right now.”


The supervisor also told her that she and the other two managers who had interviewed her would feel overwhelmed if they were in her position.


The supervisor later said Chadwick was denied the position because she had interviewed poorly, and that she had made that comment “to soften the blow,” according to the decision.


Chadwick filed suit, claiming sex discrimination. A lower court granted summary judgment in favor of Indianapolis-based WellPoint.


A three-judge appellate court panel overturned that decision.


“Given the common stereotype about the job performance of women with children and given the surrounding circumstantial evidence presented by Chadwick, we believe that a reasonable jury could find that WellPoint would not have denied a promotion to a similarly qualified man because he had ‘too much on his plate’ and would be ‘overwhelmed’ by the new job, given ‘the kids’ and his schooling.”


The case was remanded to the lower court for further proceedings.


A South Portland, Maine-based spokesman for Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield in Maine, a WellPoint unit, said the decision was a disappointment.


“Our position has been, and continues to be, that Chadwick was not subject to any discrimination as it relates to her employment,” the spokesman said.


“We will continue to vigorously defend our case,” he added, but would not reveal whether the insurer planned to appeal the decision.


Chadwick’s attorney could not be reached for comment.


Filed by Judy Greenwald of Business Insurance, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on March 31, 2009August 3, 2023

PBGC Takes Over Plan of Bankrupt Bus Manufacturer

The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. has taken over a pension plan sponsored by Patton Corp. of Ann Arbor, Michigan, for 1,800 employees and retirees of the company’s General Automotive Corp. and Flxible Corp. bus-manufacturing affiliates, according to a PBGC news release.


Patton, an insolvent commercial real estate holding company, ceased operations in 2006, and Flxible and General Automotive were liquidated in bankruptcy proceedings in 1997 and 1998, respectively, the news release said.


The GAC/Flxible plan is about 58 percent funded, with assets of $19.8 million and liabilities of $33.8 million, the news release said. The PBGC expects to cover the entire $14 million shortfall, the release said.


Filed by Doug Halonen of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on March 30, 2009June 27, 2018

H-1B Visa Window Opens Amid Recession

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will start accepting petitions Wednesday, April 1, for H-1B visas for foreign workers in specialty occupations that require a bachelor’s degree or higher.


The limit on H-1B visas is 65,000, but last year the cap was reached in one day.


The Law Offices of Morley Nair, a Philadelphia immigration law firm, reported that 163,000 petitions were filed in the first five days of filing last year. However, it reported there could be fewer filings this year because of the recession and layoffs, but the cap could still be reached quickly with those who didn’t receive H-1B visas last year applying again as well as new graduates in the past year.


This year the Employ American Workers Act requires that any employers that received funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, go through extra procedures when hiring H-1B workers—the same rules presently faced by companies designated “H-1B-dependent employers.”


The April 1 deadline is for the 2010 fiscal year, which begins in October.


—Staffing Industry Analysts


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.


 

Posted on March 30, 2009August 3, 2023

AFSCME Fund Wants Citigroup Directors Ousted

The American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees Pension Plan has called on shareholders to vote against the re-election of directors involved with risk management at Citigroup Inc., according to a statement from the $860 million Washington-based pension fund.


The directors—chairman C. Michael Armstrong, Alain J.P. Belda, John M. Deutch, Andrew N. Liveris, Anne M. Mulcahy and Judith Rodin—are longtime members of the Citigroup board’s audit and risk management committee, which oversees risk management.


Armstrong is the former committee chair and Belda is a former member of the committee.


“During these committee members’ tenures, the [Citigroup board’s] audit and risk management committee failed to protect shareholders from excessive exposure to credit, market, liquidity and operational risk,” the statement said.


“Citi’s board failed to effectively manage risk, helping cause the company’s current instability and increasing volatility in the global financial markets.”


Citigroup’s annual meeting takes place April 21.


Filed by Barry B. Burr of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on March 27, 2009August 3, 2023

Advisors Named in Vick Lawsuit


The Department of Labor is suing Michael Vick and his former financial advisors for $1.35 million, alleging they improperly tapped into more than $1 million from the retirement plan of a business owned by the former National Football League star.


In a suit filed Wednesday, March 25, the Labor Department said Vick made a series of prohibited transfers from a pension plan sponsored by MV7, his celebrity marketing company.


The department alleges that he violated his duties as trustee of the plan, which covered nine current or former MV7 employees, and that Mary Wong and David Talbot—Vick’s former financial advisors—helped facilitate some of these transfers.


Along with Vick, the DOL named Wong and Talbot as defendants in the suit.


Talbot is already the subject of a lawsuit filed in August by the New Jersey Bureau of Securities, alleging that he conned members of a New Jersey church.


Jeffrey Lichtman, an attorney representing Talbot, said that his client “did not add to any of Michael Vick’s financial or legal troubles, and only served as his trusted advisor.”


Wong could not be immediately reached.


Mark Lichtenstein, a partner at New York-based law firm Crowell & Moring who is representing Vick, declined to comment.


The filing further complicates Vick’s bankruptcy case, which has gradually moved along in Newport News, Virginia, while Vick served a 23-month prison term in the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas.


Vick has apparently left the prison. The judge presiding in the bankruptcy case has ordered him to testify in person at next week’s hearing on confirmation of his Chapter 11 plan.


U.S. Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman Felicia Ponce said Wednesday that Vick was at an Oklahoma prisoner transfer facility but added that she could not disclose the inmate’s ultimate destination.


There was no indication of when Vick left Leavenworth or when he would arrive in Virginia.


Filed by Mark Bruno of Investment News, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


 

Posted on March 27, 2009August 3, 2023

Ex-House Staffer Tapped for Labor Department Benefits Post

Phyllis C. Borzi, a former longtime congressional pension and health care staffer, has been nominated as the Labor Department’s top benefits regulator, the Obama administration said Thursday, March 26.


Borzi, who served 16 years as a pension and a benefits counsel for the House Education and Labor Committee’s Labor-Management Relations subcommittee, has been nominated by President Barack Obama to be assistant secretary of labor for the Employee Benefits Security Administration.


In her former position as a staffer for Democratic committee members, she was involved in drafting several pension and health care measures, including one that makes it more difficult for employers to deny coverage for new employees’ pre-existing medical conditions.


In 1993, she served on several working groups that were part of a presidential task force chaired by then-First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton that put together a comprehensive health care reform package that Congress later rejected.


Borzi, a one-time high school English teacher, left Capitol Hill in 1995 after Republicans took control of the House of Representatives, joining the Department of Health Policy at George Washington University’s School of Public Health and Health Services in Washington as a research professor. She also is of counsel at Washington law firm O’Donoghue & O’Donoghue.


Borzi is widely known for her pro-organized labor positions.


In 2006, for example, she wrote a letter to the Service Employees International Union defending a Maryland law that required large employers in the state to spend a specific percentage of payroll on health care coverage or pay the difference to a state fund providing coverage to the low-income uninsured. The law, which was backed by the AFL-CIO, was written in such a way that it applied only to Wal-Mart Stores Inc.


In the letter, Borzi said it could be “reasonably argued,” based on Supreme Court precedent, that the Maryland law was not pre-empted by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. While ERISA pre-empts state and local laws that relate to employee benefit plans, Borzi wrote that the Maryland law did not require employers to set up an ERISA plan or dictate the design of any health care plan it offered.


The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled later that the Maryland law “directly clashes” with ERISA pre-emption and would have resulted in other states attempting to impose their own rules.


The ultimate result would have been that multistate employers would have to comply with varying benefit requirements, which ERISA pre-emption was intended to prevent, the court ruled.


The nomination is subject to Senate confirmation.


Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business Insurance, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter


Posted on March 27, 2009June 27, 2018

Five More Plans Seek Lead Status in Bank of America Lawsuit

Five pension plans are jointly seeking lead plaintiff status in several shareholder class-action lawsuits filed against Bank of America Corp. and company executives, according to a motion filed in U.S. District Court in New York.


The plans are the $49.7 billion Ohio State Teachers Retirement System; $60 billion Ohio Public Employees Retirement System; $104.9 billion Texas Teacher Retirement System; €66.8 billion ($90.8 billion) Stichting Pensioenfonds Zorg en Welzijn, represented by PGGM Vermogensbeheer BV (formerly PGGM Investments); and the 164.7 billion Swedish kroner ($20.4 billion) Fjarde AP4.


The motion comes one day after the $167.3 billion California Public Employees’ Retirement System and $113.7 billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System, both in Sacramento, filed a joint motion also seeking lead-plaintiff status.


The cases allege that Bank of America officials withheld material information when the company obtained shareholder approval for its merger with Merrill Lynch.


The group of five plans declined to comment on why they filed a competing motion for appointment as lead plaintiff beyond statements in a news release issued Thursday, March 26, said Ted Hart, spokesman for the group.


Johan van der Ende, chief information officer of PGGM, said in the release that Zorg en Welzijn “suffered significant losses due to the alleged misrepresentation and non-disclosure of the relevant facts by Bank of America. … Apart from this, we believe we have a duty to represent global investors’ interests by striving for adequate loss recovery for all shareholders and essential corporate governance restructuring of this company.”


“Anyone can file to be named lead plaintiff. This is all part of the normal process in class actions. The court will choose from those interested in being lead plaintiff,” said Sherry Reser, CalSTRS spokeswoman, in an e-mail response to questions.


CalPERS officials had no comment, spokesman Brad Pacheco wrote in an e-mail in response to questions.


No court date has been set to select lead plaintiffs, Reser and Pacheco both confirmed.


Filed by Arleen Jacobius of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter


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