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News in Brief: Labor Department’s Top Employee Benefits Official Quits, Returns to Private Sector
  

Labor Department’s Top Employee Benefits Official Quits, Returns to Private Sector
Ann Combs, head of the Employee Benefits Security Administration and the U.S. Labor Department’s top employee benefits official, will leave next month.
September 29, 2006
Labor Department’s Top Employee Benefits Official Quits, Returns to Private Sector
The U.S. Labor Department’s top employee benefits official will leave next month to return to the private sector, the agency has announced.

Assistant Secretary of Labor Ann Combs joined the Labor Department as head of the Employee Benefits Security Administration in May 2001, making her the longest-serving head of EBSA, which regulates more than 6 million employee benefit plans covered by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.

Combs was involved on behalf of the Bush administration in the negotiations that led to last month’s passage of comprehensive pension funding reform legislation, as well as the recovery of more than $220 million for Enron Corp. pension plan participants.

More recently, Combs guided the development of proposed regulations to help shield employers from liability for offering automatic enrollment in their 401(k) and other participant-directed defined-contribution plans.

Prior to joining the Labor Department, Combs was a vice president and chief counsel for pensions and retirement at the American Council of Life Insurers and a principal at William M. Mercer Inc.

President Bush has not announced a successor for Combs, who will depart October 27. The position is subject to Senate confirmation.

Jerry Geisel
Geisel is a reporter for Workforce Management sister publication Business Insurance, where this article first appeared.

 


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