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Pensions

AXJ MORATORIUM

AXJ MORATORIUM

Private-sector bank pensions (e.g., from JPMorgan Chase, Bank of New York Mellon, or others) are primarily regulated under federal law by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), overseen by the U.S. Department of Labor and the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. Disputes typically involve individual claims, plan administration issues, or historical matters like “wear-away” effects from plan conversions in the early 2000s.Recent news and official records show:

The NY AG’s office has addressed pensions in contexts like a lawsuit against a hospital/diocese for mismanaging retiree benefits, but nothing related to banks. Their resources direct private pension inquiries to federal authorities.If you have a specific concern about a bank pension (e.g., from Chase), contact the plan administrator directly—former employees can use portals like MyRewards.jpmorganchase.com or call 1-844-ASK-JPMC for details on eligibility and payments. For general ERISA questions, reach the Department of Labor at 1-866-444-3272.

Private-Sector Pensions (e.g., Bank Employee Plans)Private-sector pension plans in the United States, including those offered by banks in New York (such as JPMorgan Chase), are primarily governed by federal law under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). New York State has no substantive laws regulating the structure, funding, vesting, fiduciary duties, or administration of private pension plans.

In summary, for private bank pensions, federal ERISA law exclusively applies, with New York providing no parallel protections or requirements.Public-Sector Pensions (e.g., State/Local Government Employees)Public pensions in New York (e.g., New York State and Local Retirement System – NYSLRS) are governed by New York State law (primarily the Retirement and Social Security Law), not ERISA.

Public pensions often provide stronger guarantees than private ones, as they are not subject to ERISA’s funding rules or PBGC insurance limits but benefit from state-specific protections.

AspectPrivate Pensions (ERISA – Federal)Public Pensions (NY State Law)
Primary RegulatorU.S. Department of Labor / PBGCNY State Comptroller / Retirement and Social Security Law
Preemption/ApplicabilityERISA preempts state lawsERISA does not apply (governmental exemption)
Funding/InsurancePBGC insures defined-benefit plans (with limits)No PBGC; backed by state/local governments
Tax Treatment (NY)Partial exclusion possible ($20,000 max for ages 59½+)Fully exempt from NY state/local taxes
Benefit GuaranteesMinimum standards; subject to plan termination risksOften constitutionally protected against reduction
DisputesFederal courts/remediesState processes; some federal tax/age discrimination overlap
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