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THE D&S TRUST FUND MUST BE PROPERLY FUNDED IN ORDER TO REMAIN THE
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BENEFITS.
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DETAILED AND LENGTHY
HISTORY OF THE DISABILITY AND SURVIVORSHIP PLAN
(D&S PLAN) By Ev Gost
Revised 5/17/10
The information contained in this article
is based upon the research and opinions of the author. No warrantees are
made or implied as to the accuracy of the information contained herein.
Prior to
1972, financial protection against disability normally was obtained
through the purchase of loss of license insurance from either the Air
Line Pilots Association (ALPA) or private insurance companies. In 1972,
Delta Air Lines, with a plan to provide disability and survivorship
benefits to the non-contract employees, offered the concept of such a
plan to ALPA as part of the contract negotiations that were in progress
at that time. Consequently, the Delta Pilot Disability and Survivorship
Plan (D&S Plan) was established to provide disability benefits for
disabled pilots and survivors’ benefits for eligible family members of
deceased active and retired pilots. A separately funded IRS 501 (c) (9)
trust, the Delta Pilots Disability and Survivorship Trust (D&S Trust),
was established to pay benefits under the Plan.
Although
ALPA did not initially propose to establish the D&S Plan, ALPA agreed to
contractual concessions in order to obtain conservative actuarial
assumptions and desired provisions in the D&S Plan. Assessing the rate
at which pilots would become disabled was difficult because very little
historical data existed. One of the actuarial assumptions established an
assumed interest rate of 6.5% versus the Delta proposal of 10%.
ALPA’s
insistence upon the usage of conservative actuarial assumptions resulted
in plan contributions that far exceeded plan expenses in the early years
of the Plan. The assets of the D&S Trust grew over time to exceed plan
liabilities. In fact, in the period 1994-1995 when Delta adopted SFAS
112, which required the recognition of liabilities for post employment
benefits, Delta recorded an after-tax transition benefit in the amount
of $114 million primarily due to the over-funded status of the Company’s
D&S Plans. The favorable funding level of the D&S Trust was attributable
to the conservative actuarial assumptions, assumptions that arguably may
be considered to have been “bought and paid for” through contractual
concessions in the 1972 and subsequent Pilot Working Agreements.
The D&S
Plan, the first of its kind in the airline industry, included three
provisions that were not common in many disability and survivorship
plans adopted by some other legacy carriers. First, the plan established
a disability benefit (50% of recent earnings) that did not terminate
upon retirement, but continued for the pilot’s lifetime or until he
regained his license to fly as an airline pilot. The plan was designed
to provide the greater of either the disability or the retirement
benefit. To accomplish this goal, the disability benefit was reduced
dollar for dollar (but not below zero) by the amount of any retirement
benefits actually received by the disabled pilot. Secondly, the plan
provided for a survivors’ benefit that was distinct from, and in
addition to, any joint life annuity that was elected under the
retirement plan. Thirdly, the disability and survivorship benefits
included a variable feature on one-half of the initial benefit payable
under the D&S Plan. Accordingly, favorable investment performance of the
D&S Trust could provide for increases in the variable benefit over time.
The new defined benefit retirement plan had a similar variable feature.
There are
several aspects of the 1972 contract negotiations that may have
influenced the final design of the D&S Plan. First, Delta proposed
transitioning the pilots from the existing combination of defined
benefit and defined contribution retirement plan to only a defined
benefit retirement plan. Secondly, the merger between Delta and
Northeast necessitated consolidation of the pilot working agreements.
An
understanding of the changes that were made to the retirement plans is
helpful in understanding the formulation of the D&S Plan. The Delta
Pilots Retirement Plan (DPRP) (established in 1972) provided for a
defined retirement benefit in the amount of 60% of the final average
earnings. The DPRP also contained a minimum benefit for pilots
previously hired by Delta or Northeast Air Lines. In the case of married
pilots, the minimum retirement benefit required a joint life and
survivorship reduction even though a joint life
annuity was not provided by the retirement plan.
In the
1990’s this reduction allegedly ranged from $1,000 to $4,000 per
month.
In 1996,
the ALPA Delta MEC explained the reduction by stating, “Under the terms
of the minimum benefit negotiations in 1972, the company receives credit
for survivors’ benefits from the D&S Plan by applying an automatic Joint
Life and Survivorship (J&S) reduction if the pilot is married at
retirement.” Accordingly, the reduction appears to inextricably tie D&S
Plan survivors’ benefits to the pension plan, an aspect that may support
the concept of a vested benefit. It is difficult to imagine that the D&S
Plan Survivors’ Benefit for which certain minimum benefit retired pilots
have paid a healthy price can be subject to modification or termination.
A
brief review of single life and joint annuities may be helpful at this
point. A single life annuity is payable for the lifetime of the
annuitant (the retiring pilot in this case). When the pilot dies, the
annuity ceases. A 50% joint life and survivorship annuity is payable at
a reduced amount for the lifetime of the annuitant (retiring pilot) and
payable at one-half of the reduced amount for the lifetime of the
surviving spouse.
ERISA,
which became effective in 1974, mandated that a joint life and
survivorship annuity become the standard form of the retirement benefit.
Under ERISA regulations, the option of a single life annuity is
available only if a spouse gives written consent. Even under the ERISA
mandated changes to DPRP, the joint life annuity reduction (in
retirement benefits) remained intact under the minimum retirement
benefit without actually providing a joint life annuity. If the
spouse did not consent to a single life annuity from the retirement
plan, a pilot retiring under the minimum benefit formula was subjected
to an additional joint life annuity reduction in retirement
benefits.
In 1990,
Delta and ALPA agreed to a modification of the retirement plan which
provided each retiring pilot with the option of receiving a lump sum
distribution on the variable portion of the retirement benefit.
Consequently, the D&S Plan began to recognize the actuarial equivalent
of the lump sum distribution as an offset to the disability benefit.
Survivors’ benefits under the D&S Plan remained unchanged.
There were
amendments to the D&S Plan that were related to the merger with Western
Air Lines in 1987 and the acquisition of Pan Am assets in 1991. The D&S
Plan was revised and restated in 1996.
The year
2000 Pilot Working Agreement included a number of provisions that
modified the D&S Plan. Some of those modifications were as follows:
1. Delta
obtained the option of paying the company provided portion of
post-retirement medical and dental claims from accumulated surplus funds
in the D&S Trust. For this purpose, surplus funds are considered to be
those in excess of 110% of the present value of future liabilities.
2.
Documentation of continuing eligibility for disability was modified for
disabling event dates occurring after September 1, 2001.
3. The
remarriage penalty was deleted for survivors of pilots who died after
the effective date of the agreement. Prior to that date, benefits of
survivors of pilots who did not retire directly from active service,
would cease if the surviving spouse remarried.
In early
2002, Delta and ALPA agreed to modify the proof of continuing disability
requirements under the D&S Plan for retirement dates that occurred on or
after October 1, 2002. For disabled pilots whose event dates occurred
after September 1, 2001, and whose retirement was on or after October 1,
2002, proof of continuing disability could be required for up to two
years following the retirement date.
In
November 2004, Delta and ALPA agreed to modify disability benefits for
event dates occurring after November 11, 2004 including the following
modifications:
1.
The monthly disability benefit was defined
to be the lesser of
(a)
80 hours of the composite hourly rate in
effect at the time of the pilot’s event date, or
(b)
50% of the average monthly earnings (highest
12 consecutive months out of the last 36 months).
2.
The reduction to the LTD benefit for
retirement benefits included an actuarial equivalent for the value of
the new defined contribution retirement plan.
3.
Disability benefits were limited to a total
of 24 months for disabilities related to alcoholism, drug abuse or
psychiatric conditions.
During
bankruptcy proceedings Delta and ALPA negotiated Letter of Agreement #51
which included the following changes to the D&S Plan.
1.
Disability benefits cease at the mandatory
FAA retirement age. Alternatively, disabled pilots receive defined
contributions to their retirement account in the amount of 22% of their
LTD benefit.
2.
Offsets to LTD benefits were redefined.
3.
Beginning in Jan 2008, survivorship benefits
under the D&S Plan were replaced with Life Insurance.
4.
Delta was authorized to spend $60 million
annually from the D&S Trust to pay for pilot sick and vacation pay.
5.
Delta became an additional source of payment
of D&S Plan benefits.
6.
Beginning in 2011, if the assets of the D&S
Trust fell below $1.2 billion, Delta would be required to make
contributions to the trust in the amount of 4% of Free Cash Flow, but
not to exceed $60 million annually.
Delta and
the Pilot Committee for Section 1114 agreed to a stipulation that the
provisions of LOA #51 would not be enforceable on retired pilots
(including disabled, but not retired, pilots over age 60) before either
receiving approval of the Section 1114 committee or an order of the
bankruptcy court. Additionally, there was a recognized disagreement
relating to the legality of the annual expenditure of $60 million of D&S
Trust assets to pay pilot sick pay and other legally permissible
benefits.
Delta
subsequently withdrew proposals to alter retiree D&S Plan benefits
(including those contained in LOA#51).
Following
emergence from bankruptcy, there have been additional modifications to
the D&S Plan. The most notable modifications relate to the merger with
Northwest Airlines. Because former Northwest Pilots require additional
expenditures from the D&S Plan to cover disability benefits and life
insurance, Delta is required to reimburse the Plan for such
expenditures.
Historically, modifications to the D&S Plan have been
prospective rather than retrospective. Although the establishment of the
D&S Plan pre-dates ERISA regulations, the D&S Plan now is defined as a
Welfare Benefit Plan. The D&S Plan contains a Right of Revision (ROR)
clause; however, the Pilot Working Agreement restricts amendments to the
Plan.