Toronto Star

AT&T overpaid some pensioners. Now it wants money back

Telecom giant has enlisted collection agency, a step others have declined to take

- THEO FRANCIS

When James Mizelle retired in 2001, he started drawing a pension from his 27year career with AT&T and other phone companies.

Fifteen years later, he got a letter saying his benefits were miscalcula­ted and demanding he repay $32,116.05. Mr. Mi- zelle, living in Round Hill, Va., replied that he couldn’t repay. Within weeks, he heard from a collection agency.

“That money had been spent,” says Mr. Mizelle, 70, who had incurred medical bills in a battle with prostate cancer. “I could not pay it back.” The former programmer and humanresou­rces worker is among potentiall­y hundreds of ex-employees whom AT&T Inc. has dunned in recent years for what it calls pension “overpaymen­ts.” AT&T sometimes has enlisted a collection agency to recover the money, a move retiree advocates, pension lawyers and some former Treasury Department officials call unusual. Among them are 17 retirees from whom AT&T and Fidelity Investment­s, the pension plan’s recordkeep­er, have demanded a combined $1 million and who have contacted lawyers working with the Pension Rights Center, a retiree-advocacy nonprofit in Washington, D.C., or related groups around the country, the center says.

An AT&T spokesman says the pension overpaymen­ts affect “significan­tly less than 1/10th of 1%” of its about 517,000 participan­ts, with “a very small percentage” referred to collection­s. He declines to say how the company identified the errors or how much money is at stake.

A Fidelity spokesman says the firm helped zero in on errors at AT&T’s direction, including some predating Fidelity’s role. AT&T and Fidelity decline to address the individual cases in this article.

Companies for years have been taking measures to recoup pension overpaymen­ts, an issue federal tax officials have tried to address going back to the1990s with a series of refinement­s to rules governing when and how companies must rectify such errors.

AT&T appears to have gone a step beyond many other large companies by sticking to its demands of full repayment and hiring a collection agency in some cases, even where retirees make the case that they lack the wherewitha­l to repay.

Sydney Smith, a former AT&T informatio­n-technology analyst living in the St. Louis area, received a letter in July 2016 saying she owed AT&T’s pension plan $19,306.95—money she had received, the company later told her, because she provided a date in the pensionben­efit calculatio­n that the plan’s website shouldn’t have let her use.

Ms. Smith says she told Fidelity she didn’t have the money. A single mother, she had cashed out her pension to pay debts and living expenses. “I used it,” says Ms. Smith, 42. “It’s gone.”

She asked about a repayment plan and was told she could make two payments of nearly $10,000 each, she says. She didn’t have that. Days after the plan denied her appeals, Ms. Smith says, she began getting calls from Lyon Collection Services Inc., the same agency that demanded repayment of Mr. Mizelle. “They started to call pretty constantly.”

Ms. Smith enlisted Roger Curme, a lawyer with the South Central Pension Rights Project, a legal-assistance service funded in part by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. “We haven’t seen that before,” Mr. Curme says of a big company’s using a collection agency. “These tactics that AT&T is using…they’re kind of harsh.”

Ms. Smith filed a claim with the plan asking it to waive repayment but was denied. The plan also denied her subsequent appeal. She hasn’t heard from the company since February, she says, and is hopeful she won’t. Yet, she adds, “it’s not resolved—it’s still up in the air.”

Lyon Collection President Rick Mantin says his firm follows laws governing consumer collection­s and his employees are persistent without harassing customers. He declines to comment on individual cases or clients and says the company doesn’t focus on retirees. “Debtors have the right to request that Lyon cease any further communicat­ion with them,” he says, “which we immediatel­y honor.”

In general, pension lawyers say, it is legal for a company to demand back pension overpaymen­ts. Pension-plan sponsors and administra­tors have an obligation to safeguard a plan’s assets. Companies for years have interprete­d that obligation to include not just stopping overpaymen­ts but also requiring repayment. Often, plans recoup what they can by reducing retirees’ remaining benefits.

“Not recouping the monies would mean that there would be fewer funds available for distributi­on to other participan­ts,” the Fidelity spokesman says.

Pension lawyers say that in recent years some employers and plan administra­tors have grown skittish about giving retirees a pass for even small overpaymen­ts. They point to Internal Revenue Service guidance that suggested plans had to pursue repayments vigorously or risk losing key tax benefits, such as deductions for employer contributi­ons and taxfree investment returns.

Among companies recently requesting paybacks is Fiat Chrysler’s U.S. unit, which says that in 2016 it notified several hundred retirees that their pension checks were incorrect. About 300 people, or 0.3% of its pension recipients, received more than they were supposed to, it says.

The company says it followed federal regulation­s when asking retirees to return overpaymen­ts. On average, it says, those getting extra payments were re- ceiving benefits of $24,000 a year. Three-quarters of them were asked to repay $3,000 or less. Of the rest, the average recovery the company sought was 3.7% of the retiree’s monthly benefit, and none was more than 8%.

Had they known the correct payment amount, some retirees might have made different life decisions, such as when to retire or where to move, says Jay Kuhnie, president of the National Chrysler Retirement Organizati­on, a retiree-advocacy group. “They might have said, that’s not as much as I thought, I’m going to work another 4 to 5 years,” he says. “The retiree has no way of going back.” AT&T’s collection agency AT&T’s pension plans have $45 billion in assets, enough to pay about 77 cents on every dollar of pension benefits earned so far by all current and former employees and retirees for their full life expectancy, as well as other beneficiar­ies.

Lawyers who work with retirees say they rarely see referrals to collection­s agencies by a large company. Some former Treasury Department officials who worked on recoupment issues say it wasn’t something they had seen before.

“An awful lot of plan sponsors, just as a matter of culture, are not very enthusiast­ic about chasing down their retirees to recover overpaymen­ts,” says Brian Dougherty, co-leader of the plan-sponsor task force at the law firm Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP. The AT&T spokesman says “our approach is common and similar to how most other employers handle this issue” and follows federal pension rules, treating retirees ethically. The Fidelity spokesman says that “having a third party to assist with contacting plan participan­ts in seeking reimbursem­ent is a common practice among many employers in the industry.”

Faced with complaints from retirees whose pension benefits had been reduced, officials at the Treasury Department and the IRS in 2015 issued new guidance, clarifying that plans could recover funds in other ways instead, including from contractor­s responsibl­e for errors. Companies could also replace the missing funds themselves, or modify plan rules retroactiv­ely to accommodat­e the overpaymen­ts, according to the guidance.

“It clarified that plan sponsors were not always required to recoup inadverten­t overpaymen­ts and pursue all available legal remedies to do so,” says Mark Iwry, a Treasury Department official from 2009 to 2017 who worked on retirement policy. The guidance “took a step toward making the system more practical, workable, and humane.”

Some pension experts have concluded that overpaymen­ts essentiall­y never harm plan finances, says Richard Shea, who advises employers as head of the employee-benefits law practice at Covington & Burling LLP. That’s because employers must set aside enough money to cover a lifetime of benefits based on what retirees actually receive, not some earlier estimate.

“The way the funding rules work, you’ve already got it,” he says. “You don’t have to get it back.” Telephone-company pensions may be more prone to mistakes than others, thanks to the federal breakup of the Bell System monopoly in the mid-1980s. Often, workers’ pensions accompanie­d them as they moved among the company’s successors. An operator’s case Some errors AT&T identified amount to double-counting, in which retirees received benefits reflecting their full careers plus additional payments reflecting part of the same history.

Eileen Ralston of Daytona Beach, Fla., joined what was AT&T’s Pacific Telephone in 1970 as an operator. She left telephone work in the mid-1980s, then rejoined the new AT&T in 1986 as an operator.

She began collecting her AT&T pension of $921.83 a month soon after leaving in 1999. Shortly before turning 65, she says, she called AT&T’s pension administra­tors and was surprised to hear she was entitled to another $546.73. “I said, are you sure about this? Because I get an AT&T pension,” says Ms. Ralston, 75. “They said, no, this is your pension for your previous service.”

Just before Ms. Ralston’s September 2017 birthday, Fidelity told her in a letter that the additional benefit was a mistake and that she owed $58,500.11. It was about two years after she suffered a heart attack. “I thought I was going to have another one,” she says. “Every time I get something in the mail from AT&T that says ‘benefits department,’ I get a cold chill up my back.”

AT&T offered to halve her remaining pension to $444.89 a month. After Ms. Ralston consulted a lawyer, she received a letter from AT&T in February reaffirmin­g the debt but adding that “your overpaymen­t informatio­n will not be sent to an outside collection­s agency at this time.”

She hasn’t repaid and worries AT&T might come after her again.

Claudia Jones worked for Bell South and then AT&T for about 16 years, she says, before being laid off in 2015. She took her pension in a lump sum and invested it in an annuity that pays about $600 a month.

In March, she got a letter from AT&T and Fidelity saying her benefit had been miscalcula­ted and that she would have to repay $45,300.17. “Say they did miscalcula­te,” says Ms. Jones, 66. “We shouldn’t be punished for that.”

In late June, she says, she started receiving calls from Lyon Collection. She can’t afford to pay, she says, and isn’t sure what she’ll do.

AT&T left Mr. Mizelle, too, in limbo. Fidelity in a letter wrote that “the Plan will recover the excess benefit amount by any means that are available.”

He enlisted a lawyer to file a claim with the plan, arguing that he no longer had the additional money and that requiring repayment would cause him financial hardship. The plan rejected his claim.

The committee that denied his subsequent appeal wrote him reiteratin­g the debt but saying it “decided not to pursue further collection attempts of the overpaymen­t amount at this time, without waiving any rights to resume the collection process in the future.”

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 ?? JACK PLUNKETT/BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO ?? An AT&T spokespers­on says “our approach is common and similar to how most other employers.”
JACK PLUNKETT/BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO An AT&T spokespers­on says “our approach is common and similar to how most other employers.”

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