***MEDIA ADVISORY*** TOMORROW: Subcommittee to Examine Impact of Department's Fiduciary Proposal on Workers and Retirees

***MEDIA ADVISORY*** TOMORROW: Subcommittee to Examine Impact of Department's Fiduciary Proposal on Workers and Retirees

The following was published by the House Committee on Education and Labor on July 25, 2011. It is reproduced in full below.

On Tuesday, July 26 at 10:00 a.m., the Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions, chaired by Rep. Phil Roe, M.D. (R-TN), will hold a hearing entitled “Redefining ‘Fiduciary’: Assessing the Impact of the Labor Department’s Proposal on Workers and Retirees." The hearing will take place in room 2175 of the Rayburn House Office Building.

Fiduciaries play an important role in retirement investment. Since 1975, federal law has used a five part test to determine whether someone who provides retirement services is held to a fiduciary standard of care. This long-standing framework has provided certainty to pension plan sponsors (i.e. employers) and service providers, as well as workers and retirees.

Recently, the Department of Labor issued a proposed regulation that would substantially expand the definition of fiduciary. If finalized, the cost of administering certain retirement plans may increase and the return on workers’ investments may decrease. Additionally, the proposal could reduce the availability of important financial education and investment options for workers and retirees.

Members on both sides of the aisle have urged the department to withdraw its current proposal. To date, these bipartisan calls have been rejected and the department has stated its intent to move forward with its current proposal. Tuesday’s hearing will give members an opportunity to examine the impact the department’s proposal may have on the retirement security of workers and retirees, and question the department’s plan to finalize its current proposal.

To learn more about this hearing, visit www.republicans-edlabor.house.gov/hearings.

WITNESS LIST

Panel I

Phyllis Borzi

Assistant Secretary of Labor

Employee Benefits Security Administration

Washington, D.C.

Panel II

Kenneth Bentsen

Executive Vice President, Public Policy and Advocacy

Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association

Washington, D.C.

Kent Mason

Partner

Davis & Harman LLP

Washington, D.C.

Donald Myers

Partner

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, LLP

Washington, D.C.

Jeffrey Tarbell

Director

Houlihan Lokey

San Francisco, CA

Norman Stein

Senior Policy Counsel

Pension Rights Center

Washington, D.C.

Source: House Committee on Education and Labor