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N.J. Retirement Savings Law Goes Live

N.J. Retirement Savings Law Goes Live 150 150 employersassoc

Mar 2022

The New Jersey Secure Choice Savings Program, also called the NJ Auto-IRA Law, is set to go live in March, 2022. Once the program is up and running, employers must comply within nine months or be subject to penalties. While the initial implementation date was March 28, 2021, the program was allowed up to a one year extension due to COVID-19. Accordingly, March 28, 2022, will be the deadline to establish guidelines for businesses, create a website with up-to-date information, govern risk management, determine investment options, and implement the program.
 
Join EANJ on March 15th to learn about how the new retirement savings law will impact your business and how to stay compliant with the new regulations. Details & Registration here.

The New Jersey Secure Choice Savings Program: What Employers Should Do Now

The New Jersey Secure Choice Savings Program: What Employers Should Do Now 150 150 employersassoc

Approximately one million full-time workers in New Jersey don’t have access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan, according to the American Retirement Association. To help make retirement planning more convenient for both employers and employees, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signed New Jersey Secure Choice Savings Program Act into law in March 2019.
 
The state-run retirement option requires businesses with 25 or more employees that do not provide a qualified retirement plan such as a 401(k) to offer an automatic payroll deduction for employees, which will be paid into an IRA.
 
The Program is mandatory for employers – for-profits and nonprofits – that have 25 or more employees in New Jersey without a current employee retirement plan, such as a 401(k) or 403(b). Employers with fewer than 25 employees may participate in the program, but will not be required to. While regulations have not been issued, the enabling legislation provides that the program will affect employers who have been in business for at least two years.
 
“We know that employers play a vital role in helping employees save and plan for retirement but many small businesses are unable to sponsor a retirement savings plan,” says John Sarno, president of the Employers Association of New Jersey (EANJ).
 
However, the best evidence suggests that small businesses do not sponsor retirement savings plans because of administrative burdens, fiduciary and legal issues, an absence of in-house expertise, costs and fees, employee turnover and/or a high percentage of part-time workers, the uncertainly of the company’s future and higher priorities.
 
But employers that compete for skilled talent and therefore are more likely to invest in that talent can make a big difference if they have access to affordable, high quality retirement savings plans.
 
That’s why EANJ formed an Association Retirement Savings Plan.
 
Through the plan, EANJ members help their employees achieve retirement security by participating in a customizable, fiduciary-managed, high-quality 401(k) and profit-sharing plan.
 
It allows employers of any size to have the same advantages as large corporations with thousands of employees. For example, big corporations with thousands of employees benefit by having much lower costs and fees per employee for their retirement plans due to the size of plan assets and economies of scale. Likewise, through the Association Plan, small and mid-sized employers can access best-in-class retirement savings funds while enjoying the lowest fees by leveraging the assets of the entire Plan to gain access to premium funds that would otherwise be closed to them because they cannot meet high minimum investment thresholds.
 
EANJ formed its plan under existing federal guidelines and has been in operation since 2015. It is administrated at the highest fiduciary standards and beneficiaries have the same legal protections as any 401K plan sold in the market.
 
Funds are also managed by investment advisors as the costs are shared among the participating employers.
 
For small employers the value is immediate, as they would not be able get access to the best plans because their assets are too small. For large employers with 100 or more plan participants, thousands of dollars are saved because the Plan files the necessary documents and spreads the costs of mandatory audits, legal and administrative expenses.
 
Join EANJ on March 15th to learn about how the new retirement savings law will impact your business and the availability of EANJ’s Association plan.  Details & Registration.

Vaccine Information Session – February 2nd

Vaccine Information Session – February 2nd 150 150 employersassoc

Feb 2022

EANJ members are invited to join the Governor’s Office and the N.J. Department of Health for a one-hour vaccine information session on Wednesday, February 2nd at 12:00pm.  With much in the news about new variants, third doses and boosters, we thought it might be a good time to provide you with an update of the status of vaccines in New Jersey.

Register in advance for this webinar: https://www.zoomgov.com/webinar/register/WN_4KHc4soYShOZTSKnopW-VQ

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.  Please save your confirmation email as it has the link to join the meeting.

 

While COVID Vaccine Mandate Resuscitates, What Should Employers Do Now?

While COVID Vaccine Mandate Resuscitates, What Should Employers Do Now? 150 150 employersassoc

As some employers were taking measures to comply with OSHA’s Emergency Temporary Standard requiring employers with 100 or more employees to administer Covid-19 vaccine-or-testing rules, a divided U.S. Supreme Court enjoined the enforcement of standard, for now, although permitting the healthcare industry to implement the rule.

For John Sarno, president of the Employers Association of New Jersey, many employers are relieved but many others are in a quandary.

“To deny the impact of the coronavirus on the workforce would be extremely callous,” says Sarno. “Employers have to do something to convey their concern for workers health and safety or risk a group of disgruntled and disgusted workers quitting or just doing the very least on the job,” he adds.

On the other hand, some employers are uncomfortable or unable to process the complex information required to implement the right policies and practices.   “Many of them quietly said, if the mandate … was upheld, we could at least tell our employees, ‘They’re making us do this’ and so shift some of the blame, some of the frustration,” said Sarno.

Now it’s up to employers. With so many workers calling out sick and the omicron variant still fueling high COVID-19 caseloads, it’s a tough decision. Regardless of size, employers must continue to stay apprised of the latest information on infection rates, testing and vaccine availability other information form the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other credible sources.

Since the court decision, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, has withdrawn  the emergency temporary standard effective January 26, 2022. However, the agency has not withdrawn the standard as a proposed rule as the court gave its approval to regulate risks associated with working in particularly crowded or cramped environments.   

At present, both the CDC and OSHA strongly encourage vaccination of workers against the continuing dangers posed by COVID-19 in the workplace.

Recent surveys suggest that most employers do not affirmatively require workers to get vaccinated as a condition of employment.

“It’s a mixed bag of reasons,” says Sarno.  “Some are concerned about employee push-back and others don’t like keeping records or tracking employees.  Others are doing the basics like working from home and requiring masks so that’s enough for them.  But I think the main reason is that implementation of a vaccine policy is labor intensive and time consuming and that means training and paying people to implement the policy.”

And some companies have changed policies dramatically, confusing workers and customers.  Before the court decision, Starbucks announced that it was requiring its U.S. employees to be vaccinated against Covid-19 or submit to regular testing, one of the first large restaurant chains to take such a step ahead of potential federal vaccination mandates for large employers.

After the court decision, employees were told in a memo that they would no longer be required to be fully vaccinated or submit to weekly coronavirus testing.

Despite the change, Starbucks is still encouraging that all workers be vaccinated.

Still most experts and employment lawyers are recommending that employers implement, or continue to administer, robust policies and practices. And employer can implement vaccine requirements if it wants to.

For example, employers may choose to have a mandatory vaccination policy for one subset of employees and an optional vaccination policy with testing and face coverings for another subset of employees. And employers may also have to provide reasonable accommodations for the COVID-19 testing and face covering obligations due to disabilities and sincerely held religious beliefs.

Employers may determine and record each employee’s COVID-19 vaccination status, including if an employee is partially or fully vaccinated, and require and preserve acceptable proof of vaccination status of all employees who are vaccinated, including if they are partially or fully vaccinated.

Employers can maintain rosters that indicate, for each employee, whether they are fully or partially vaccinated or not vaccinated at all.

“The pandemic has not repealed the laws of human nature,” says Sarno.  “If employers are getting by with working from home and wearing masks on site and business is getting done without requiring workers to get vaccinated, and if its not broke, why fix it.”

COVID Resources here

 

Court Blocks OSHA Testing Mandate for Private Employers, Leaves Open Industry-Specific Rules

Court Blocks OSHA Testing Mandate for Private Employers, Leaves Open Industry-Specific Rules 150 150 employersassoc

Jan 2022

In a divided decision, the U.S. Supreme Court enjoined the enforcement of OSHA’s Emergency Temporary Standard  requiring employers with 100 or more employees to administer Covid-19 vaccine-or-testing rules, holding that “OSHA’s indiscriminate approach fails to account for this crucial distinction—between occupational risk and risk more generally – and accordingly the mandate takes on the character of a general public health measure, rather than an “occupational safety or health standard.”   The Court did allow the mandate for healthcare facilities that participate in Medicare and Medicaid.
 
We anticipate new industry-specific rules in the future, as the Court expressly stated, “Where the virus poses a special danger because of the particular features of an employee’s job or workplace, targeted regulations are plainly permissible. OSHA could regulate risks associated with working in particularly crowded or cramped environments. But the danger present in such workplaces differs in both degree and kind from the everyday risk of contracting COVID–19 that all face.”  
 
We have already gotten questions, one of which is, “Can a private employer still implement vaccine mandate without an OSHA rule?” Answer: Yes
 
Employer COVID Resources here

Read Court decision here
 

 

 

Public Health Emergency Reinstated in New Jersey – Vaccines and Masking: What Employers Should Know

Public Health Emergency Reinstated in New Jersey – Vaccines and Masking: What Employers Should Know 150 150 employersassoc

Jan 2022

On Tuesday, January 11th, Governor Phil Murphy re-instituted the Public Health Emergency, via executive orders, allowing the state to continue vaccine distribution, vaccination or testing requirements in healthcare and other settings, the collection of COVID-19 data, implementation of any applicable recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to prevent or limit the transmission of COVID-19, staffing and resource allocation, and other critical components of the State’s COVID-19 response. The new orders also reauthorize existing orders requiring masking in school and daycare settings to remain in effect.

Executive Order No. 280, please click here.
Executive Order No. 281 please click here.
 
Government Contractors: Vaccination or Test Mandate
 
Under the Executive Orders, new contracts, new solicitation for a contract, extension or renewal of existing contracts, and exercise of an option on existing contracts, must include a clause that the contractor or any subcontractors, at any tier, that is party to the contract, must maintain a policy that requires all covered workers to either provide adequate proof to the covered contractor that they have been fully vaccinated or submit to COVID-19 testing at minimum one to two times weekly.
 
CDC Masking Guidance for Employers
 
In response to the rapidly spreading Omicron variant and the increased infection rates for vaccinated and non-vaccinated employees alike, it is suggested that all employees regardless of vaccination status mask up at work.  All counties in NJ currently have “extremely high” transmission rates.  Masking guidance can be found here.
 
Status of OSHA Vaccination/ Testing Mandate
 
While the OSHA Vaccine Mandate remains under consideration at the Supreme Court, the court did not block its implementation.   As of Monday, January 10th, employers with 100 or more employees were required to have a database of their workers’ vaccination status, post their company vaccine policy, provide paid leave to workers getting the vaccine and require unvaccinated employees to wear a mask at work.  OSHA has said it won’t issue penalties for noncompliance with the testing mandate until Feb. 9, which is the deadline for employers to implement the weekly COVID-19 testing alternative for unvaccinated workers.   The agency has said it will not issue citations until Feb. 9th if employers are making good faith efforts to comply.  How will OSHA know? Employee complaints.  On the other hand, the court’s decision is expected soon, perhaps this week. So, many employers with 100 or more employees remain waiting in a holding pattern.

Free COVID Testing is Available in New Jersey

Free COVID Testing is Available in New Jersey 150 150 employersassoc

Jan 2022

With many employers requiring employees to get COVID tests, hundreds of testing locations are available across the state.  Home tests are also available.

Order a free saliva-based PCR test, shipped directly to your home at no cost.
Find a list of free, public testing sites, including pop-up testing sites

 

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