The EBSA educates and assists 149 million workers, retirees and their families covered by approximately 685,000 private retirement plans, 2.2 million health plans, and similar numbers of other welfare benefit plans with $9.3 trillion in assets.2 The EBSA had a fiscal 2016 enacted budget of $181 million and 946 full-time equivalents. The assistant secretary has a deputy assistant secretary for program operations and a deputy assistant secretary for policy, and oversees several offices, including the Office of Exemption Determinations, the Office of Enforcement, the Office of Policy and Research, the Office of Health Plan Standards and Compliance Assistance, the Office of Regulations and Interpretations, the Office of the Chief Accountant, the Office of Technology and Information Services, the Office of Outreach Education and Assistance, the Office of Program Planning Evaluation and Management and seven regional offices.3
• Exercises executive leadership in protecting the pension health and other benefits of participants in employee benefits plans
• Ensures that workers get the information they need to protect their benefit rights, assists plan officials to understand the requirements of the relevant statutes in order to meet their legal responsibilities; oversees the development of policies and regulations that encourage the growth of employment-based benefits; and deters and corrects violations of the relevant statutes through voluntary compliance and civil and criminal enforcement actions
• Oversees the following functions:
• Administration of responsibilities under Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) (fiduciary responsibilities)
• Interaction with and provision of assistance to private-sector employers, pension industry leaders and representatives, unions, participants and beneficiaries through speeches, sponsorship of meetings and conferences, and publication of research and other information compiled by EBSA
• Coordination with other federal agencies in developing and analyzing policies and legislation that affect the financial well-being of employee-benefit plans
• Provision of technical support to the secretary of labor and deputy secretary of labor in the area of ERISA policies and programs, and pension-benefit systems and plans
• Provision of policy guidance and technical assistance to congressional committees and other federal entities dealing with significant pension and benefit issues
• Administration of the secretary’s responsibilities under the Federal Employees’ Retirement System Act
• Administration of the secretary’s responsibilities under the Affordable Care Act
• Provides support for and serves as the secretary’s representative on the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation Board
• Provides support for and represents the secretary in his role as member of the board of trustees of the Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance program (commonly known as Social Security) and Medicare Trust funds4