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Latest Cases & Developments
Date:
Barot v. St. John’s Univ. (E.D. N.Y. Sep. 18, 2025)
Opinion Granting Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiff, a former graduate assistant at St. John’s University, brought claims against the university for breach of contract, arguing he was required to work longer hours than was specified in his graduate assistant contract, and discrimination based on national origin, arguing the university required more work of graduate assistants on F1 visas, than other citizen graduate assistants. The court granted summary judgment for the university on plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim finding (1) plaintiff had waived his breach of contract claim by “repeatedly renew[ing]” the contract over multiple years and continuing to reap its benefits and (2) while a reasonable jury could conclude plaintiff “expressed unhappiness” with his working conditions, he provided no evidence that he believed the university was in breach of the contract. The court also rejected plaintiff’s discrimination claims, reasoning “[w]hile it may be that [the university] was in a position to exploit foreign graduate assistants . . . because of their status, the claim that it did exploit foreign [graduate assistants] or otherwise treated citizen [graduate assistants] preferentially is unsupported by any evidence beyond [plaintiff’s] own conclusory statements.”
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Employee Benefits | Faculty & Staff | Race and National Origin DiscriminationDate:
Democratizing Access to Alternative Assets for 401(K) Investors – White House (Aug. 7, 2025)
Executive Order: Democratizing Access to Alternative Assets for 401(K) investors. This order requires the Secretary of Labor to reexamine the Department of Labor’s (DOL) guidance on a fiduciary’s duties regarding alternative asset investments in ERISA-governed 401(K) and other defined-contribution plans. Current ERISA-governed plan fiduciaries are limited from including alternative assets in their investment offerings. The purpose of the order is to promote retirement security through diversified investments, specifically, access to alternative assets such as private equity, real estate, and digital assets, and to clarify the DOL’s position on alternative assets and the appropriate fiduciary process for asset allocation funds. The White House also issued a Fact Sheet with the order.
Topics:
Employee Benefits | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) | Faculty & StaffDate:
HHS Rescission of 1998 interpretation of Personal and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (Jul. 10, 2025)
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced that it has formally rescinded the 1998 interpretation of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA), reasoning that it improperly extended certain federal public benefits to illegal aliens. The newly revised list of programs now classified as “federal public benefits” under PRWORA include: Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics, Community Mental Health Services Block Grant, Community Services Block Grant (CSBG), Head Start, Health Center Program, Health Workforce Programs not otherwise previously covered (including grants, loans, scholarships, payments, and loan repayments), Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Treatment, Prevention, and Recovery Support Services Programs administered by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness Grant Program, Substance Use Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery Services Block Grant, Title IV-E Educational and Training Voucher Program, Title IV-E Kinship Guardianship Assistance Program, Title IV-E Prevention Services Program, and Title X Family Planning Program. The policy change is intended to align with Executive Order (E.O.) 14218 “Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Open Borders” and in alignment with the Department of Education’s new interpretive rule rescinding the previous 1997 Dear Colleague Letter on PRWORA.
Topics:
Campus Police, Safety, & Crisis Management | Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) | Disability Discrimination | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Distressed & Suicidal Students | Employee Benefits | Employment of Foreign Nationals | Faculty & Staff | Health Care & Insurance | Immigration | International Students | Sexual Misconduct | StudentsDate:
U.S. Department of Labor Rescission of 2022 Cryptocurrency 401(k) Plan Guidance (May 28, 2025)
U.S. Department of Labor (the Department) announced its rescission of 2022 guidance that previously directed plan fiduciaries to exercise “extreme care” before including cryptocurrency options in 401(k) retirement plans. The announcement stated that the 2022 language “deviated from the requirements of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act” (ERISA) and “marked a departure from the department’s historically neutral, principled-based approach to fiduciary investment decisions.” It also framed the 2022 guidance as an “overreach” of federal power and stated that “investment decisions should be made by fiduciaries, not D.C. bureaucrats.” The announcement concluded by stating that the rescission reaffirms the Department’s “neutral stance, neither endorsing, nor disapproving of, plan fiduciaries” who wish to include cryptocurrency in a plan’s “investment menu.”
Topics:
Employee Benefits | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) | Faculty & StaffDate:
Cunningham v. Cornell University (Apr. 17, 2025)
Memorandum Opinion Reversing and Remanding. Plaintiffs, a class of current and former Cornell University employees who participated in the University’s retirement plans from 2010-2016, brought suit against the University and other plan fiduciaries alleging that defendants violated §1106(a)(1)(C) by causing the plans to engage in prohibited transactions for recordkeeping services. The Second Circuit found that “the language of §1106(a)(1) cannot be read to demand explicit allegation of ‘self-dealing or disloyal conduct.’” It held the exemptions to §1106(a)’s prohibited transactions contained in §1108 imposed additional pleading requirements, and the exemptions cannot be understood merely as affirmative defenses to the conduct proscribed in §1106(a). The Second Circuit split from the Eighth Circuit, which held that no additional pleading requirements beyond §1106(a)(1) apply to prohibited-transaction claims. Following the circuit split, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide whether a plaintiff can state a claim for relief by simply alleging that a plan fiduciary engaged in a transaction proscribed by §1106(a)(1)(C), or whether a plaintiff must plead allegations that disprove the applicability of the §1108(b)(2)(A) exemption. In reversing the Second Circuit holding, the unanimous Court concluded that plaintiffs need do no more than plead a violation of §1106(a)(1)(C). The Court found that the relevant part of Section 1106 includes three elements: (1) causing the plan to engage in a transaction; (2) that “constitutes…furnishings of…services”; (3) “between the plan and a party in interest.” The Court further reasoned that the proper method of proceeding is for the plaintiff to point to the transaction with the service provider, and for the service provider to point out any particular exemption that might protect it; if a §1108 exemption applies, the §1106(a)(1)(C) claim will ultimately fail.
Topics:
Employee Benefits | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) | Faculty & StaffDate:
Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation (Jan. 28, 2025)
Executive Order: “Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation.” This Executive Order directs that “it is the policy of the United States that it will not fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the … ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another” and that the Federal government “will rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these … life-altering procedures.” The EO (1) denounces the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s “Standards of Care Version 8” guidelines for gender-affirming care for minors; (2) directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to both “publish a review of the existing literature on best practices for promoting the health of children” and “withdraw HHS’s March 2, 2022, guidance document titled ‘HHS Notice and Guidance on Gender Affirming Care, Civil Rights and Patient Privacy;’” and (3) instructs “[t]he head of each executive department or agency [] that provides research or education grants to medical institutions, including medical schools and hospitals, shall, consistent with applicable law and in coordination with the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, immediately take appropriate steps to ensure that institutions receiving Federal research or education grants end the chemical and surgical mutilation of children.”
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Employee Benefits | Faculty & Staff | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Health Care & Insurance | Sex DiscriminationDate:
ACE Amicus Brief in Casey Cunningham v. Cornell University (Jan. 8, 2025)
Amicus Brief from the American Council on Education (ACE) and 13 other higher education associations in Casey Cunningham v. Cornell University. The case turns on whether federal courts should require specific allegations of mismanagement to proceed with a claimed Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) violation, or, if a more lenient pleading standard should apply. Through this amicus brief, the associations ask the Supreme Court of the United States to affirm the Second Circuit’s decision, upholding the lower court’s reasonable pleading standard that allows legitimate claims to proceed while requiring complaints to specifically allege impropriety in an institution’s contract with a third-party service provider. The associations argue that adopting the more relaxed pleading standard proposed by plaintiffs will hinder current effective plan administration, and burden institutions with excessive costs to defend against or settle unwarranted litigation. Argument on the case is set for January 22, 2025.
Topics:
Employee Benefits | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) | Faculty & StaffDate:
Whetstone v. Howard Univ. (D. D.C. Sep. 12, 2024)
Memorandum Opinion and Order granting-in-part and denying-in-part Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a former employee at Howard University brought claims under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act alleging violations of the joint and survivor annuity (JSA) actuarial equivalence requirement and the definitely determinable rules requirement, as well as breach of fiduciary duty against the University and the University’s Retirement Plan Committee. Plaintiff asserted that the University violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 by using outdated formulas to calculate benefits paid out to eligible University retirees. Plaintiff alleged that the University’s retirement Plan used “antiquated actuarial assumptions” while reliance upon “reasonable actuarial assumptions” in the form of the Treasury Department’s preferred numbers to make a horizontal conversion would increase his monthly payout by $17.99 (about 3%). The court permitted plaintiff’s claims for violation of JSA actuarial equivalence requirements to proceed, finding a narrow challenge to the horizontal conversion from a straight life annuity (SLA) to a JSA sufficient to allege financial harm. In allowing plaintiff’s breach of fiduciary duty requirements to proceed, the court found “a violation of one of ERISA’s substantive requirements-like the actuarial equivalence standard-can constitute a breach of fiduciary duty.” The court dismissed plaintiff’s claim for violation of the definitely determinable rules requirement under ERISA as time barred.
Topics:
Employee Benefits | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) | Faculty & StaffDate:
Kadel v. Well (4th Cir. Apr. 29, 2024)
Opinion affirming judgments of the district courts. Appellees in cases consolidated on appeal, transgender individuals who are beneficiaries of either the North Carolina State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees (NCSHP) or the Medicaid program in West Virginia, brought equal protection and Medicaid Act and ACA claims against their respective States and relevant officials, challenging the exclusion of coverage for medically necessary services for treatment of gender dysphoria. The district courts granted summary judgment in favor of the appellees and enjoined enforcement of the coverage exclusions. In affirming summary judgment in favor of appellees on their equal protection claims, the Fourth Circuit found that the exclusions of treatments for gender dysphoria, though they target only a subset of transgender individuals, discriminate on the basis of a proxy for gender identity and do so facially. Further, because some patients are eliminated from coverage of certain types of treatments (e.g., mastectomies or chest-reconstruction surgeries) based on their sex assigned at birth and gender stereotypes about how men and women should present, the court found this was also sex discrimination. The court then found that this treatment could not survive intermediate scrutiny because the States’ anecdotal evidence challenging only some of appellees’ contentions was insufficient to show that the treatments in this developing area of medicine are ineffective. The court also held that these exclusions violate the Medicaid Act’s availability and comparability provisions and the ACA’s anti-discrimination provision.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Employee Benefits | Faculty & Staff | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Health Care & InsuranceDate:
Sellers v. Trs. of Bos. Coll. (D. Mass. Apr. 11, 2024)
Memorandum of Decision granting-in-part and denying-in-part Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiffs, two former or current participants in 401(k) plans at Boston College from 2016 to the present, brought this class action against the College and its Plan Investment Committee alleging that they did not act prudently with respect to certain Plan recordkeeping fees and certain investments and that they did not follow the Plan Investment Policy Statement (IPS) or properly monitor Plan fiduciaries and service providers. The court dismissed the recordkeeping fee claims related to 2016 to 2018 for lack of evidence of loss, but it permitted the claims related to fees from 2018 to the present to proceed, finding genuine disputes as to whether it was prudent not to consolidate to a single recordkeeper, whether the Committee was aware of a distinction among fees, and whether Committee members had a conflict of interest warranting recusal. The court permitted plaintiffs to proceed regarding the prudence of the challenged investments, finding factual disputes as to whether the Committee sufficiently discussed and considered alternatives to two investment accounts, but it dismissed their claim that the Committee failed to monitor these investments. It also dismissed the claim that the Committee failed to follow the Plan IPS, finding that the IPS permitted the Committee significant discretion on whether to change investments and that the Committee had met the IPS’s documentation requirements.
Topics:
Employee Benefits | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) | Faculty & Staff
NACUA Annual Conference
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