All articles by Amy Austin – Page 11
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MP requests 6-month extension for British Steel ombudsman claims
On the go: Labour MP Nick Smith is writing to the Pensions Ombudsman to request a six-month extension for former British Steel Pension Scheme members to submit claims, so that the issues involved can be considered in-depth.
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Three in five savers want pensions screened for tobacco investments
On the go: Scheme members want more information about which companies their pensions are invested in, with 60 per cent calling for an active screening approach towards tobacco companies, according to new research.
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Opperman warns providers on dashboard preparations
On the go: Pensions minister Guy Opperman has urged providers to start preparing their data now for the anticipated arrival of pensions dashboards.
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Investigation into state pension age complaints resumes
On the go: The Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman has resumed its investigation into complaints about the state pension age rise for women, following the outcome of a judicial review last year.
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British Steel trustees cleared by Pensions Ombudsman
The Pensions Ombudsman has rejected a number of complaints against the trustees of the old British Steel Pension Scheme, after concluding that communications to members were not misleading and did not amount to scaremongering.
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New rules for pension transfers to cost industry £1m
On the go: New rules to prevent scams are expected to cost the industry and employers about £1m in their first year and impact more than 160,000 pension transfers.
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Hundreds of teachers take legal action against government
On the go: More than 300 teachers are issuing claims to the employment tribunal relating to discriminatory changes made to their pensions in 2015.
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New pension tax rules could be in place by April
On the go: The outcome of the government’s review on the tapered annual allowance is expected to be published in the upcoming Budget, and reforms could be in place from the start of the next tax year, according to the British Medical Association.
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Accountant ordered to pay £5k for misleading pensions regulator
On the go: A former accountant has been ordered to pay £4,987 for providing false or misleading information to the Pensions Regulator over workplace pensions duties.
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Govt urged to scrap tax relief on minimum AE contributions
On the go: Former pensions minister Baroness Ros Altmann suggested the government could make the legal minimum auto-enrolment contributions compulsory and remove tax relief from this amount.
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Pensions dashboards unlikely to go live this year
On the go:Despite pensions dashboards having both industry-wide and government backing, it is unlikely that the technology will be delivered “any time soon”, Sir Steve Webb warned.
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Unilever proposes DB scheme closure to new members
On the go: Unilever is poised to close its defined benefit scheme to new members, in an attempt to reduce increasing costs and allow greater flexibility for employees.
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Calls for NHS pension solution to be extended to armed forces
On the go: The Forces Pension Society has called on the government to extend its temporary fix for pension tax issues for senior clinicians to the armed forces.
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Darren Ryder steps down from TPR
On the go: The Pensions Regulator’s director of auto-enrolment, Darren Ryder, will leave his role next year to help other countries develop their own auto-enrolment programmes.
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Nursery and director fined for failing to enrol staff
On the go: A children’s nursery and its director have been ordered to pay £8,200 by the Pensions Regulator for failing to enrol staff in a workplace pension and misleading the watchdog.
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High Court tells ombudsman to reconsider pension case
A dispute over whether a university employee was entitled to her full pension has been sent back to the Pensions Ombudsman after the High Court disagreed with the initial decision.
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Politicians expected to duck divisive pensions issues
On the go: Radical pensions reforms are likely to be avoided by political parties in their election manifestos, according to Royal London analysis.
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Disability charity boss stole £250k from scheme
On the go: The former head of a charity for the disabled has admitted defrauding its pension scheme out of more than £250,000.