New Update: Rising Oil Costs are Affecting Retirement Plans. Will you be impacted?
Company:
San Diego Gas & Electric
Plan Administrator:
488 8th ave
San Diego, CA
92101-7123
619-696-2000
According to Principal Financials' 2026 Well-Being Index, 65% of businesses surveyed anticipate a recession in the next six months, and 63% report having already been negatively impacted by inflation and want to cut costs such as employee benefits. As a San Diego Gas & Electric employee, it is imperative to account for this information and plan ahead as to ensure the welfare of you and your family.
benefitshttps://secure02.principal.com/publicvsupply/GetFile?fm=EE12520&ty=VOP
Why?
As a potential recession looms, increase in job changes, additional training, inflation, and an older workforce has forced employers to cut health and maternity leave benefits. If you are a San Diego Gas & Electric employee dependent on these benefits, it is essential to account for this transition and adjust your spending accordingly.
One method employers use to quickly reduce costs is reducing these benefits back to FMLA requirements of about 12 weeks rather than offering more than the requirement.
U.S. employers expect health benefit costs per employee to rise 5.6% on average in 2026, according to early results from Mercer’s National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans 2026 released Aug. 10. According to MarketWatch, the average couple retiring at age 65 can expect to spend $300,000 on health care in retirement, which does not include long-term care needs. As a San Diego Gas & Electric employee planning to retire, you may want to consider these values and determine if it is a good idea to start saving more money to supplement your future medical bills.
https://www.marketwatch.
“So, the expectation is that health care costs will accelerate in the coming years regardless of what happens to inflation,†he says. Mercer’s research also found that employers were not looking to put the brunt of rising health care costs on employees, such as raising deductibles or copays. Just 36% of survey respondents are making cost-cutting changes in 2026, down from 40% in 2026 and 47% in 2026.Â
So, Â who is cutting benefits?
Some San Diego Gas & Electric companies are cutting benefits such as life insurance and death benefits. San Diego Gas & Electric employees feel their former employer is reneging on a promise made when they were hired 20-30 years earlier. As many find that these cuts don't apply to top executives, who have life insurance under a separate company-paid program, which the company can't reduce without their permission.
These companies state that the cuts for other retirees will bring their benefits more in line with the benefits at other large employers, and that only a handful of Fortune  100 companies still offer most employees life insurance that continues after retirement. If you are a San Diego Gas & Electric employee, you may want to consider planning in accordance to these cuts as to not be taken by surprise in the event they are implemented at your workspace.
Can San Diego Gas & Electric legally cut benefits
As we mentioned in prior articles the Allstate case discusses companies' options with respect to terminating benefits. Â
In the early 1980s, Allstate distributed booklets to employees that described the retiree life insurance benefit as being provided at 'no cost.' Starting in 1990, Allstate distributed summary plan descriptions (SPDs) that, unlike the earlier booklets, reserved 'the right to change, amend or terminate the plan or the provisions of the plan at any time.'
The US 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in Klass v. Allstate Insurance Co.  that Allstate did not violate the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) when it terminated retiree life insurance benefits.  After this ruling we saw other companies pursue terminating retiree life insurance benefits.  https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca11/20-14104/20-14104-2021-12-28.html
https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/USCOURTS-ca11-20-14104
Can Retiree Health Benefits Provided by San Diego Gas & Electric Be Cut?
For employees and retirees who work or worked at San Diego Gas & Electric that provide post-employment health care benefits, an important question to ask is under what circumstances can the company reduce or terminate these benefits.Â
San Diego Gas & Electric employees and retirees should know that private-sector employers are not required to promise retiree health benefits. Furthermore, when employers do offer retiree health benefits, nothing in federal law prevents them from cutting or eliminating those benefits—unless they have made a specific promise to maintain the benefits. The key to understanding your San Diego Gas & Electric retiree health benefits lies in the documents governing your plan.
https://robertsdisability.com/eleventh-circuit-affirms-allstate-retirees-are-not-entitled-to-lifetime-life-insurance-benefits/
Prudential Freeze on Retiree Benefits Left Some Feeling 'Betrayed'
In 2026 Prudential Financial will stop contributing to retirement medical savings accounts for current, according to a letter sent to employees in December. In addition, Prudential retirees must now use all the money accrued in the accounts over 20 years, rather than over their lifetime, and any remaining balance reverts back to Prudential life. https://www.inquirer.com/business/prudential-financial-retiree-medical-savings-accounts-healthcare-costs-20211215.html
Before finalizing any estate plan, it is worth examining how San Diego Gas & Electric's employer-sponsored benefits fit into the broader picture. According to publicly available information, San Diego Gas & Electric maintains an active defined benefit pension plan, which provides retirement income based on factors such as years of service and compensation history. San Diego Gas & Electric also offers retiree healthcare benefits to eligible employees, which can provide meaningful coverage for those who retire before reaching Medicare eligibility at age 65. Because the specifics of your pension formula, vesting schedule, and benefit eligibility depend on your individual employment history and plan documents, We encourage you to review your Summary Plan Description (SPD) or speak with San Diego Gas & Electric's HR or benefits team for the most current details.
For more information you can reach the plan administrator for San Diego Gas & Electric at 488 8th ave San Diego, CA 92101-7123; or by calling them at 619-696-2000.
https://www.sdge.com/documents/pension-plan-2022.pdf - Page 5, https://www.sdge.com/documents/pension-plan-2023.pdf - Page 12, https://www.sdge.com/documents/pension-plan-2024.pdf - Page 15, https://www.sdge.com/documents/401k-plan-2022.pdf - Page 8, https://www.sdge.com/documents/401k-plan-2023.pdf - Page 22, https://www.sdge.com/documents/401k-plan-2024.pdf - Page 28, https://www.sdge.com/documents/rsu-plan-2022.pdf - Page 20, https://www.sdge.com/documents/rsu-plan-2023.pdf - Page 14, https://www.sdge.com/documents/rsu-plan-2024.pdf - Page 17, https://www.sdge.com/documents/healthcare-plan-2022.pdf - Page 23
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