Second Regular Session Seventieth General Assembly STATE OF COLORADO INTRODUCED LLS NO. 16-0167.02 Nicole Myers x4326 HOUSE BILL 16-1403 HOUSE SPONSORSHIP Pettersen and Buckner, Danielson, Duran, Esgar, Winter SENATE SPONSORSHIP Todd and Donovan, House Committees Senate Committees Finance A BILL FOR AN ACT Concerning the creation of the Colorado secure savings plan. Bill Summary (Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced and does not reflect any amendments that may be subsequently adopted. If this bill passes third reading in the house of introduction, a bill summary that applies to the reengrossed version of this bill will be available at http://www.leg.state.co.us/billsummaries.) The bill establishes the Colorado secure savings plan (plan), which is a retirement savings plan for private-sector employees in the form of an automatic enrollment payroll deduction individual retirement account. Employers with a specified number of employees in the state are required to participate in the plan, but any employer may choose to participate in the plan. The Colorado secure savings plan board of trustees (board) is created and consists of the state controller, the director of the governor's office of state planning and budgeting, and 7 additional trustees with certain experience who are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the senate. The trustees on the board have a fiduciary duty to the plan's enrollees and beneficiaries and are required to: Establish investment options that offer employees returns on contributions without incurring debt or liabilities to the state; Establish the process for allocating investment earnings and losses to individual plan accounts on a pro rata basis; Make and enter into contracts and hire staff as necessary for the administration of the plan; Conduct a periodic review of the performance of any investment vendors; Cause moneys in the Colorado secure savings plan fund (fund) to be held and invested together in trust; Establish the process for an enrollee to contribute a portion of his or her wages to the plan for automatic deposit and establish the process by which the participating employer forwards those contributions to the plan; Establish the process for enrollment in the plan including the process by which an employee can opt not to participate in the plan; Accept gifts, grants, and donations from specified entities and pursue options for bank loans or a line of credit to cover the start-up costs of the plan; Procure, as needed, insurance against loss in connection with the property, assets, or activities of the plan; Allocate administrative fees to individual retirement accounts in the plan on a pro rata basis; Set minimum and maximum contribution levels; Facilitate education and outreach to employers and employees; Ensure that the plan complies with all applicable state and federal laws; Deposit all gifts, grants, donations, fees, and earnings from investment of moneys in the fund into the fund and pay the administrative costs and expenses for the creation, management, and operation of the plan from moneys in the fund; Determine any nominal and reasonable assistance that may be provided to businesses to offset the initial costs of enrolling employees in the plan; Prepare or cause to be prepared certain annual audits and annual reports regarding the plan; and Develop a process to ensure that employers are in compliance with the requirements of the plan and develop a penalty structure for employers who fail, without reasonable cause, to enroll employees in the plan. The bill specifies the process by which the board is required to engage an investment manager to invest the assets of the plan and specifies the investment options that the board is required to create. The bill creates the Colorado secure savings plan fund as a trust outside of the state treasury, specifies that the fund will include the individual retirement accounts of enrollees in the plan, and allows the board to use a certain percentage of moneys in the fund for the administrative expenses of the plan. The moneys in the fund are not property of the state and cannot be commingled with state moneys. The board is required to design and disseminate to all employers that are required to or that choose to participate in the plan employer and employee information packets regarding the plan and the options for employee participation in the plan. The bill dictates the timing for the board to implement the plan and a time frame for employers to establish a system by which enrollees in the plan can remit payroll deduction contributions to the plan. Employers are required to automatically enroll employees in the plan unless an employee has opted out of participation in the plan. Enrollees may select an investment option and contribution level or use the default investment option and contribution amount established by the board. The bill specifies that the state and employers do not have any duty or liability to any party for the payments of any retirement savings benefits accrued by any individual through the plan. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Colorado: SECTION 1. Legislative declaration. (1) The general assembly hereby finds and declares that: (a) More than thirty-nine million working-age American households do not have any retirement assets. For near-retirement households, the median retirement account balance is only fourteen thousand five hundred dollars and the average working-age household has a median account balance of only two thousand five hundred dollars. (b) Only one in four women aged sixty-five and older and almost four in ten men aged sixty-five and older receive any income from pensions and retirement savings. Women receive an average of nine thousand dollars per year and men receive an average of fifteen thousand three hundred ninety-six dollars per year. (c) Minority households have too little accumulated wealth to tap for retirement. White households have over seven times as much saved in retirement accounts as Hispanic and African-American households. The median household net worth of Hispanic and African-American households is less than nine percent of the median net wealth of white households, which translates into an average net worth of one hundred thirty-four thousand eight dollars for the average white family, compared to nine thousand two hundred twenty-nine dollars for Hispanic families and eleven thousand one hundred eighty-four dollars for African-American families. (d) Coloradans are less prepared for retirement today than in previous decades, and the overwhelming majority of people in the state are concerned about their ability and their children's ability to retire; (e) Older workers are working longer and delaying their retirement. Many of today's seniors rely on their children, who are already struggling to raise their own families, or on other social services that are underfunded. (f) Almost five out of ten Coloradans, aged twenty-five to sixty-four, working in the private sector lack access to a retirement plan at work; (g) Colorado's younger workers are disproportionately affected, with forty-nine percent of workers between the age of twenty-five and twenty-nine, forty-five percent of workers between the age of thirty and thirty-four, and forty-eight percent of workers between the age of thirty-five and thirty-nine, lacking access to a retirement plan at work; (h) Minority workers in Colorado are also disproportionately affected, with forty-nine percent of African-American workers and fifty-seven percent of Hispanic workers lacking access to a retirement plan at work; (i) Colorado's lowest wage workers are also less likely to have access to a workplace retirement savings plan. Seventy-six percent of Colorado's workers in the lowest income quintile and fifty-two percent of Colorado's workers in the second lowest income quintile have no access to a retirement plan at work. (j) The major reason many workers do not participate in retirement savings plans is their employers do not offer them. Experts on retirement recommend that the best way to increase retirement savings is to offer a workplace savings plan to all workers, and enroll them automatically with the right to opt out. (k) For decades, Americans have built their retirement with traditional pensions, social security, and individual savings, but America's retirement system has unraveled. About half of Colorado workers in the private sector do not have any type of employer-sponsored retirement plan, and individual savings plans are not filling the gap and have proved risky and unreliable. (l) The future of Colorado's economic growth relies on our aging population having sufficient income in retirement so they can afford to live independently and have quality healthcare. Our seniors contribute significantly to local economies throughout the state, and their retirement investment spending provides stability to those communities. (m) Colorado needs a remedy to the retirement security crisis so that Coloradans can look forward to a retirement free from financial anxiety or hardship; and (n) Coloradans have a history of creating unique solutions to the challenges that the state faces. The state has an opportunity to craft a plan for the future that can ensure all Coloradans have the ability to save for retirement. (2) The general assembly further finds and declares that it is therefore in the best interest of the state to establish the Colorado secure savings plan to provide a workplace savings plan for all Colorado workers whose employers do not provide such a plan. SECTION 2. In Colorado Revised Statutes, add article 54.3 to title 24 as follows: ARTICLE 54.3 Colorado Secure Savings Plan Act 24-54.3-101. Short title. The short title of this article is the "Colorado Secure Savings Plan Act". 24-54.3-102. Definitions. As used in this article, unless the context otherwise requires: (1) "Board" means the Colorado secure savings plan board established in section 24-54.3-104. (2) "Employee" means any individual who is eighteen years or older, who is employed by an employer, and who earns wages subject to income tax pursuant to section 39-22-104, C.R.S. (3) "Employer" means a person or entity engaged in a business, industry, profession, trade, or other enterprise in the state, whether for profit or not for profit, that: (a) (I) Employs the following number of employees in the state: (A) For the first year of operation of the plan, one hundred or more employees at any time during the previous calendar year; (B) For the second year of operation of the plan, fifty or more employees at any time during the previous calendar year; and (C) For the third year of operation of the plan and for every year of operation of the plan thereafter, five or more employees at any time during the previous calendar year; (II) Has been in business at least two years; and (III) Has not offered a qualified retirement plan, including, but not limited to, a plan qualified under sections 401(a), 401(k), 403(a), 403(b), 408(k), 408(p), or 457(b) of the federal "Internal Revenue Code of 1986", as amended, in the preceding two years; or (b) Employs fewer than the number of employees specified in subparagraph (I) of paragraph (a) of this subsection (3) for the applicable year of operation of the plan, has not offered a qualified retirement plan as specified in subparagraph (III) of paragraph (a) of this subsection (3), and that chooses to participate in the plan. (4) "Enrollee" means any employee who is enrolled in the plan. (5) "Fund" means the Colorado secure savings plan fund created in section 24-54.3-110. (6) "Internal revenue code" means the federal "Internal Revenue Code of 1986", as amended, or any successor law. (7) "IRA" means a Roth individual retirement account authorized pursuant to section 408A of the internal revenue code or, if an employee is ineligible to enroll in a Roth individual retirement account based on his or her income, "IRA" means a traditional individual retirement account. (8) "Participating employer" means an employer that provides a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement as provided for in this article for its employees who are enrollees in the plan. (9) "Payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement" means an arrangement by which a participating employer allows enrollees to remit payroll deduction contributions to the plan. (10) "Plan" means the Colorado secure savings plan created in this article. (11) "Wages" means any compensation within the meaning of section 219(f)(1) of the internal revenue code that is received by an enrollee from a participating employer during the calendar year. 24-54.3-103. Colorado secure savings plan - established. A retirement savings plan in the form of an automatic enrollment payroll deduction IRA, known as the Colorado secure savings plan, is hereby established. The board shall administer the plan for the purpose of promoting greater retirement savings for private-sector employees in a convenient, low-cost, and portable manner. 24-54.3-104. Colorado secure savings plan board - creation - composition. (1) There is hereby created the board of trustees of the plan, which shall have the responsibilities, duties, and authorities set forth in this article. (2) The board shall consist of the following nine trustees: (a) The state controller, or his or her designee; (b) The director of the governor's office of state planning and budgeting, or his or her designee; and (c) Seven trustees appointed by the governor and confirmed by the senate as follows: (I) Four public representatives with expertise in investment or retirement savings plan administration, including the day-to-day operations of plans, maintaining individual accounts, and keeping track of transactions and assets at the individual participant account level; (II) A representative of participating employers; (III) A representative of enrollees or potential enrollees; and (IV) A retired Colorado resident. (3) The initial appointments for the governor's appointees shall be two public representatives for four years; the representative of participating employers and the retired Colorado resident for three years; and two public representatives and the representative of enrollees or potential enrollees for two years. Thereafter, all of the governor's appointees shall be for terms of four years. (4) In making appointments to the board, the governor shall make a concerted effort to include members of diverse political, racial, cultural, income, and ability groups and members from urban and rural areas of the state. (5) The trustees shall elect from among themselves a chairperson and any other officers as may be necessary for the board to carry out its duties and responsibilities. (6) A vacancy in the term of an appointed board trustee shall be filled for the balance of the unexpired term in the same manner as the original appointment. (7) Trustees of the board shall serve without compensation but may be reimbursed for necessary travel expenses incurred in connection with their board duties from moneys in the fund. (8) No person can be or can continue to be a trustee of the board who has been adjudicated of having violated any provisions of this article or who has been convicted of a felony or any crime involving the misappropriation of funds. 24-54.3-105. Standard of conduct - fiduciary duty. (1) The trustees of the board, any other agents appointed or engaged by the board, and all persons serving as plan staff shall discharge their duties with respect to the plan solely in the interest of the plan's enrollees and beneficiaries as follows: (a) For the exclusive purposes of providing benefits to enrollees and beneficiaries and defraying reasonable expenses of administering the plan; (b) By investing with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the prevailing circumstances that a prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiar with relevant matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like aims; and (c) By using any contributions paid by employees and employers into the trust fund exclusively for the purpose of paying benefits to the enrollees of the plan, for the cost of administration of the plan, and for investments made for the benefit of the plan. (2) The trustees of the board shall not engage in any activities that might result in a conflict of interest with their functions as fiduciaries for the plan. 24-54.3-106. Additional duties of the board. (1) In addition to the other duties and responsibilities specified in this article, the board shall: (a) Cause the plan to be designed, established, and operated in a manner that: (I) Is in accordance with best practices for retirement savings vehicles and is based on the results of a financial feasibility study, conducted pursuant to paragraph (v) of this subsection (1), to ensure that the plan is self-sustaining; (II) Maximizes participation, savings, and sound investment practices; (III) Maximizes simplicity, including ease of administration for participating employers and enrollees; (IV) Provides an efficient product to enrollees by pooling investment funds; (V) Ensures the portability of benefits; and (VI) Provides for the deaccumulation of enrollee assets in a manner that maximizes financial security in retirement; (b) Explore and establish investment options pursuant to section 24-54.3-109, that offer employees returns on contributions and the conversion of individual retirement savings account balances to secure retirement income without incurring debt or liabilities to the state; (c) Establish the process by which interest, investment earnings, and investment losses are allocated to individual plan accounts on a pro rata basis and are computed at the interest rate on the balance of an enrollee's account; (d) Make and enter into contracts necessary for the administration of the plan and fund, including, but not limited to, retaining and contracting with investment managers, private financial institutions, public entities, other financial and service providers, consultants, actuaries, counsel, auditors, third-party administrators, and other professionals as necessary; (e) Conduct a review of the performance of any investment vendors every four years, including, but not limited to, a review of returns, fees, and customer service. The board shall make the results of the reviews conducted pursuant to this paragraph (f) available to the public. (f) Determine the number and duties of staff members needed to administer the plan and assemble such a staff, including, as needed, employing staff and appointing a plan administrator. The board may contract with third parties, including state agencies, to assist in administering the plan. (g) Cause moneys in the fund to be held and invested together in trust pursuant to section 24-54.3-110, with the intent to achieve cost-savings through efficiencies and economies of scale; (h) Evaluate and establish the process by which an enrollee is able to contribute a portion of his or her wages to the plan for automatic deposit of those contributions and the process by which the participating employer provides a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement to forward those contributions and related information to the plan, including, but not limited to, contracting with financial service companies and third-party administrators with the capability to receive and process employee information and contributions for payroll deposit retirement savings arrangements or similar arrangements; (i) Design and establish the process for enrollment pursuant to section 24-54.3-113, including the process by which an employee can opt not to participate in the plan, select a contribution level, select an investment option, and terminate participation in the plan; (j) Evaluate and establish the process by which an individual may voluntarily enroll in and make contributions to the plan; (k) Accept any gifts, grants, and donations, or other moneys from the state, any unit of federal, state, or local government, or any other person, firm, partnership, or corporation that has operations in the state to cover start-up costs of the plan. The board may also pursue options for bank loans or a line of credit to cover the start-up costs of the plan. (l) Evaluate the need for, and procure as needed, insurance against any and all loss in connection with the property, assets, or activities of the plan, and indemnify as needed each member of the board from personal loss or liability resulting from a member's action or inaction as a member of the board; (m) Make provisions for the payment of administrative costs and expenses for the creation, management, and operation of the plan. All administrative costs of the plan, including repayment of any start-up moneys provided by the state, shall be paid only out of moneys in the fund; except that any gifts, grants, or donations received pursuant to paragraph (k) of this subsection (1) to implement the plan until the fund is self-sustaining shall not be repaid unless those moneys were offered contingent upon the promise of such repayment. (n) Allocate administrative fees to IRAs in the plan on a pro rata basis; (o) Set minimum and maximum contribution levels in accordance with limits established for IRAs by the internal revenue code; (p) Facilitate education and outreach to employers and employees; (q) Facilitate compliance by the plan with all applicable requirements for the plan under the internal revenue code, including tax qualification requirements or any other applicable law and accounting requirements; (r) Carry out the duties and obligations of the plan in an effective, efficient, and low-cost manner; (s) Exercise any and all other powers reasonably necessary for the effectuation of the purposes, objectives, and provisions of this article; (t) Deposit into the fund all gifts, grants, donations, fees, and earnings from investments from the fund that are used to recover administrative costs. All expenses of the board shall be paid from the fund. (u) Determine any nominal and reasonable assistance that may be provided from moneys in the fund to businesses to offset the initial costs of enrolling employees in the plan; and (v) Conduct or cause to be conducted a financial feasibility study to ensure that the plan will be self-sustaining. 24-54.3-107. Risk management. The board shall annually prepare and adopt a written statement of investment policy that includes a risk management and oversight program. This investment policy shall prohibit the board, plan, and fund from borrowing for investment purposes. The risk management and oversight program shall be designed to ensure that an effective risk management system is in place to monitor the risk levels of the plan and fund portfolio, to ensure that the risks taken are prudent and properly managed, to provide an integrated process for overall risk management, and to assess investment returns as well as risks in order to determine if the risks taken are adequately compensated compared to applicable performance benchmarks and standards. The board shall consider the statement of investment policy and any changes in the investment policy at a public hearing. 24-54.3-108. Investment firms. (1) The board shall engage, after an open bid process, an investment manager or managers to invest the fund and any other assets of the plan. Moneys in the fund may be invested or reinvested by the investment managers selected by the board. In selecting the investment manager or managers, the board shall take into consideration and give weight to the investment manager's fees and charges in order to reduce the plan's administrative expenses. (2) The investment manager or managers shall comply with all applicable federal and state laws, rules, and regulations, as well as all rules, policies, and guidelines promulgated by the board with respect to the plan and the investment of moneys in the fund, including, but not limited to, the investment policy. (3) The investment manager or managers shall provide such reports as the board deems necessary for the board to oversee each investment manager's performance and the performance of the fund. 24-54.3-109. Investment options. (1) The board may establish the following investment options: (a) A low-risk investment portfolio; and (b) A diversified portfolio that offers long-term growth potential. (2) The diversified portfolio that offers long-term growth potential shall be the default investment option for enrollees who fail to elect an investment option unless the board designates by rule a new investment option as the default pursuant to subsection (4) of this section. (3) Under no circumstances shall the board, plan, fund, the state, or any participating employer assume any liability for investment or actuarial risk. The board shall determine whether to establish such investment options based upon an analysis of their cost, risk profile, benefit level, feasibility, and ease of implementation. (4) If the board elects to establish a low-risk investment portfolio, the board shall determine whether such option will replace the diversified portfolio that offers long-term growth potential as the default investment option for enrollees who do not elect an investment option. In making such determination, the board shall consider the cost, risk profile, benefit level, and ease of enrollment in the low-risk investment portfolio. The board may at any time thereafter revisit this question and, based on an analysis of these criteria, establish the low-risk investment portfolio as the default for enrollees who do not elect an investment option. 24-54.3-110. Colorado secure savings plan fund - creation. (1) (a) The Colorado secure savings plan fund is hereby established as a trust outside of the state treasury. The board shall be the trustee of the fund. The fund shall include the individual retirement accounts of enrollees, which shall be accounted for as individual accounts. (b) The fund shall consist of moneys received from enrollees and participating employers pursuant to automatic payroll deductions, contributions to savings made under this article, and any gifts, grants, or donations received pursuant to this article. (c) For the first five years of the operation of the plan, the board may use up to one percent of the moneys in the fund to pay for the administrative costs that it incurs in the performance of its duties under this article, including start-up administrative expenses. In the sixth year of the operation of the plan and in each year thereafter, the board may use up to seventy-five one hundredths percent of the moneys in the fund for such administrative purposes. (d) The fund shall be operated in a manner determined by the board, and the board shall ensure that the fund is operated so that the accounts of enrollees established under the plan meet the requirements for IRAs. (2) Moneys deposited in the fund shall not constitute property of the state and the fund shall not be construed to be a department, institution, or agency of the state. Amounts on deposit in the fund shall not be commingled with state funds and the state shall not have any claim to or against, or interest in, such funds. (3) Except to the extent necessary to administer the plan in accordance with the internal revenue code and the state tax laws, all information contained in the accounts of individual enrollees of the plan, including but not limited to names, addresses, telephone numbers, personal identification information, amounts contributed, and earnings on amounts contributed, shall be kept confidential by the board and by any person or entity working on behalf of the board. This section shall not apply if an individual enrollee of the plan expressly agrees in writing that certain information contained in his or her account may be disclosed. 24-54.3-111. Benefits. Interest, investment earnings, and investment losses shall be allocated to individual plan accounts as established by the board pursuant to section 24-54.3-106 (1) (c). An individual's retirement savings benefit under the plan shall be an amount equal to the balance in the individual's plan account on the date the retirement savings benefit becomes payable. The state shall not have liability for the payment of any benefit to any participant in the plan. 24-54.3-112. Employer and employee information packets - disclosure forms. (1) Prior to the opening of the plan for enrollment, the board shall design and disseminate to all employers an employer information packet and an employee information packet, which shall include background information on the plan and appropriate disclosures for employees. (2) The board shall determine the contents of both the employee information packet and the employer information packet. (3) The employee information packet shall include a disclosure form that explains the following: (a) The benefits and risks associated with making contributions to the plan; (b) The mechanics of how to make contributions to the plan; (c) How to opt out of the plan; (d) How to participate in the plan with a level of employee contributions other than five percent of the employee's wages; (e) The process to withdraw retirement savings; (f) How to obtain additional information about the plan; (g) That employees seeking financial advice should contact financial advisors, that participating employers are not in a position to provide financial advice, and that participating employers are not liable for decisions employees make pursuant to this article; (h) That the plan is not an employer-sponsored retirement plan; (i) That the plan fund is not guaranteed by the state; and (j) Any other information deemed necessary by the board. (4) The employee information packet shall also include a form for an employee to note his or her decision to opt out of participation in the plan or elect to participate with a level of employee contributions other than five percent of the employee's wages. (5) Participating employers shall supply the employee information packet to employees upon launch of the plan. Participating employers shall supply the employee information packet to new employees at the time of hiring, and new employees may opt out of participation in the plan or elect to participate with a level of employee contributions other than five percent of the employee's wages at that time. 24-54.3-113. Plan implementation - enrollment. (1) Except as otherwise provided in section 24-54.3-119, the plan shall be implemented, and enrollment of employees shall begin, within twenty-four months after the effective date of this article. (2) Each employer shall establish a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement to allow each employee to participate in the plan as follows: (a) For an employer that employs one hundred or more employees at any time during the calender year immediately preceding the year in which the plan is operating, the employer shall establish a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement within nine months after the implementation date of the plan; (b) For an employer that employs fifty or more employees at any time during the calender year immediately preceding the second year in which the plan is operating, the employer shall establish a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement within one year and nine months after the implementation date of the plan; and (c) For an employer that employs five or more employees at any time during the calender year immediately preceding the third year in which the plan is operating or in any succeeding year in which the plan is operating, the employer shall establish a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement within two years and nine months after the implementation date of the plan. (3) Employers shall automatically enroll in the plan each of their employees who has not opted out of participation in the plan and shall provide payroll deduction retirement savings arrangements for such employees and deposit, on behalf of such employees, these funds into the plan. Any employer may, but is not required to, provide payroll deduction retirement savings arrangements for each employee who elects to participate in the plan. (4) Enrollees may select a contribution level into the fund. This level may be expressed as a percentage of wages or as a dollar amount up to the deductible amount for the enrollee's taxable year under section 219(b)(1)(A) of the internal revenue code. Enrollees may change their contribution level at any time, subject to rules promulgated by the board. If an enrollee fails to select a contribution level, then he or she shall contribute five percent of his or her wages to the plan, provided that such contributions shall not cause the enrollee's total contributions to IRAs for the year to exceed the deductible amount for the enrollee's taxable year under section 219(b)(1)(A) of the internal revenue code. (5) Enrollees may select an investment option from the permitted investment options specified in section 24-54.3-109. Enrollees may change their investment option at any time, subject to rules promulgated by the board. In the event that an enrollee fails to select an investment option, that enrollee shall be placed in the investment option selected by the board as the default pursuant to section 24-54.3-109. If the board has not selected a default investment option pursuant to section 24-54.3-109, then an enrollee who fails to select an investment option shall be placed in the diversified portfolio that offers long-term growth potential. (6) Following initial implementation of the plan pursuant to this section, at least once every year, participating employers shall designate an open enrollment period during which employees who previously opted out of the plan may enroll in the plan. (7) An employee who opts out of the plan who subsequently wants to participate through the participating employer's payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement may only enroll during the participating employer's designated open enrollment period or, if permitted by the participating employer, at an earlier time. (8) Employers shall retain the option at all times to establish any type of employer-sponsored retirement plan, such as a defined benefit plan or 401(k), simplified employee pension (SEP) plan, or savings incentive match plan for employees (SIMPLE) plan, or to offer an automatic enrollment payroll deduction IRA, instead of having a payroll deposit retirement savings arrangement to allow employee participation in the plan. (9) An employee may terminate his or her participation in the plan at any time in a manner prescribed by the board. 24-54.3-114. Payments. (1) Employee contributions deducted by the participating employer through payroll deductions shall be paid by the participating employer to the fund using one or more payroll deposit retirement savings arrangements established by the board pursuant to section 24-54.3-106 (1) (h) either: (a) On or before the last day of the month following the month in which the compensation would have otherwise been payable to the employee in cash; or (b) Before such later deadline prescribed by the board for making such payments, but not later than the due date for the deposit of tax required to be deducted and withheld relating to collection of income tax on wages or for the deposit of tax required to be paid under the unemployment insurance system for the payroll period to which such payments relate. 24-54.3-115. Duty and liability - state. (1) The state shall not have any duty or liability to any party for the payment of any retirement savings benefits accrued by any individual under the plan. Any financial liability for the payment of retirement savings benefits in excess of funds available under the plan shall be borne solely by the entities with whom the board contracts to provide insurance to protect the value of the plan. (2) No state board, commission, agency, or any officer or employee thereof is liable for any loss or deficiency resulting from particular investments selected under this article. 24-54.3-116. Duty and liability - participating employers. (1) Participating employers shall not have any liability for an employee's decision to participate in, or opt out of, the plan or for the investment decisions of the board or of any enrollee. (2) A participating employer shall not be a fiduciary, or considered to be a fiduciary, over the plan. A participating employer shall not bear responsibility for the administration, investment, or investment performance of the plan. A participating employer shall not be liable with regard to investment returns, plan design, and benefits paid to plan enrollees. 24-54.3-117. Audit and reports. (1) The board shall prepare or cause to be prepared, the following on an annual basis: (a) An annual audited financial report, prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, on the operations of the plan during the previous calendar year; (b) A report that includes, but is not limited to, a summary of the benefits provided by the plan, the number of enrollees in the plan, the percentage and amounts of investment options and rates of return for the plan, and such other information that is relevant to make a full, fair, and effective disclosure of the operations of the plan and the fund; and (c) An audit to be made by an independent certified public accountant chosen by the board that shall include, but is not limited to, direct and indirect costs attributable to the use of outside consultants, independent contractors, and any other persons for the administration of the plan during the previous calendar year. (2) One year after the inception of the plan, and on such date each year thereafter, the board shall submit the reports and the audit required in this section to the governor, the state controller, the state treasurer, and the general assembly. (3) In addition to any other statements or reports required by law, the board shall provide annual reports to participating employers, reporting the names of each enrollee employed by the participating employer and the contribution amounts made by the participating employer on behalf of each employee during the reporting period, as well as annual reports to enrollees, reporting contributions and investment income allocated to, withdrawals from, and balances in their plan accounts for the reporting period. Such reports may include any other information regarding the plan as deemed necessary by the board. 24-54.3-118. Penalties. (1) The board shall develop a process and contract with third parties, which may include state agencies, to ensure that businesses are in compliance with the requirements of this article. (2) The board shall determine a penalty structure for employers who fail, without reasonable cause, to enroll employees in the plan within the time specified in section 24-54.3-113; except that under no circumstance shall the penalty imposed on an employer exceed two hundred fifty dollars for each employee for each calendar year or portion of a calendar year during which an employee was neither enrolled in the plan nor had opted out of participating in the plan. (3) The board shall develop a process for employees to report employer non-compliance with the provisions of this article. An employer shall not take disciplinary action or otherwise retaliate against an employee who reports, in accordance with the process established by the board, his or her employer's non-compliance with the provisions of this article. 24-54.3-119. Delayed implementation. If the board does not obtain adequate moneys to implement the plan within the time specified in section 24-54.3-113, the board may delay the implementation of the plan. 24-54.3-120. Federal considerations. (1) The board may not implement the plan if the IRA arrangements offered under the plan fail to qualify for the favorable federal income tax treatment ordinarily accorded to IRAs under the internal revenue code or if it is determined that the plan is an employee benefit plan and state or employer liability is established under the federal "Employee Retirement Income Security Act", 29 U.S.C. sec. 1001 et seq. (2) The board shall ensure that the plan complies with any applicable labor regulations promulgated by the federal department of labor. SECTION 3. Act subject to petition - effective date. This act takes effect at 12:01 a.m. on the day following the expiration of the ninety-day period after final adjournment of the general assembly (August 10, 2016, if adjournment sine die is on May 11, 2016); except that, if a referendum petition is filed pursuant to section 1 (3) of article V of the state constitution against this act or an item, section, or part of this act within such period, then the act, item, section, or part will not take effect unless approved by the people at the general election to be held in November 2016 and, in such case, will take effect on the date of the official declaration of the vote thereon by the governor.