A new benefit plan will become eligible for enrollment for employees on July 1, in the middle of the current plan year. What steps do you take to ensure the plan is implemented and eligibility is controlled correctly?
A.
Create the benefit plan as of July 1, but introduce the new plan during the next plan year.
B.
Create a benefit plan year definition with the starting date of July 1, including the new benefit plan.
C.
Future date the benefit plan as of July 1 and add it to the existing benefit plan year definition for employees to enroll.
D.
Add the benefit plan to the existing plan year definition without setting any eligibility rules, as eligibility will automatically be controlled.
The correct answer is C because Workday allows benefit plans to be introduced mid-year by using effective dating on the plan and associating that plan with the existing benefit plan year definition . Since the plan must become available on July 1 within the current plan year , the correct approach is to configure the plan with a future effective date of July 1 and ensure it is included in the current plan year so eligible workers can enroll when the plan becomes active.
Option A is incorrect because delaying the plan until the next plan year does not meet the stated requirement for a mid-year rollout. Option B is also incorrect because creating a separate plan year beginning July 1 is not the standard solution when the organization is already operating within an existing plan year. Option D is incorrect because eligibility is not automatically controlled simply by adding the plan to a plan year; eligibility must still be governed through the appropriate benefit group and plan eligibility configuration. Effective dating plus inclusion in the current plan year provides the correct structure for controlled mid-year implementation.
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