All scheme rules articles – Page 2
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News
Seven-year scam poses ‘serious questions’ for TPR
The Pensions Ombudsman has finally brought to a close a seven-year case that left members of three pension schemes looking to recoup losses in excess of £14m. However, questions have been raised about the effectiveness of the Pensions Regulator in this case.
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News
High Court rules ‘drafting errors’ sufficient to justify switch to CPI
A High Court decision has found in favour of a pension scheme switching to the consumer price index from the retail price index, but only because of a drafting error in the scheme’s rules.
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Opinion
Schemes should be alert to Supreme Court’s part-time ruling
The UK government is facing a compensation bill of hundreds of millions of pounds following the Supreme Court’s ruling in Miller and others v Ministry of Justice.
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News
Lawyers demand simpler system to rectify drafting mistakes
Lawyers are urging reform to ease the correction of obvious drafting mistakes in pension scheme rules, after Lloyds Bank was forced to go to the High Court to avoid a £25m hit to its liabilities.
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News
Scheme goes to court to avoid £10m rules drafting mistake
An orthotics and prosthetics manufacturer has been forced to go to court to amend a word in pension scheme rules drafted 20 years ago, which if left unchanged would have cost the plan £10m.
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News
BA wins appeal over discretionary increase
The trustees of the Airways Pension Scheme went beyond their remit in granting a 0.2 per cent discretionary increase to members’ pensions in 2013, the Court of Appeal has ruled.
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Opinion
What to consider before agreeing a switch to CPI
The appropriateness of the retail price index as a measure of inflation has been increasingly challenged in recent years. However, around three quarters of the UK’s 6,000 defined benefit schemes still link their annual pension increases to RPI.
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Features
Go-Ahead pension scheme moves from RPI to CPI
Transport operator Go-Ahead has cut its pension liabilities by about £40m by changing the inflation measure used for its bus workers’ final salary scheme.
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News
High Court backs employers in Wedgwood dispute
The High Court has ruled in favour of participating employers in the Wedgwood Group Pension Plan, who terminated their liability to contribute to the scheme in 2006.
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Opinion
What we can learn from recent legal cases
Trustee decision-making has never been under such close scrutiny, and will be even more so once the court publishes the judgment in the long-running case between British Airways and its pension scheme trustees.
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News
Court of Appeal lessens burden on FDR in rule change dispute
A High Court judgment on the method for increasing pension payments where a power of amendment was improperly applied has been overturned by the Court of Appeal, lessening the burden on the corporate sponsor.
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Opinion
How to protect yourself from complaints and litigation
From the blog: Pensions and their governance framework are becoming increasingly complex while, at the same time, the role of scheme trustees is coming under extra scrutiny.
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News
'Rules lottery' continues after Court of Appeal's RPI/CPI judgment
Trustees of the Barnardo Staff Pension Scheme will not be allowed to provide indexation of benefits in line with the consumer price index, according to a Court of Appeal decision earlier this week.
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Opinion
An alternative way to correct mistakes in scheme documents
Mistakes in pension scheme documentation are usually corrected by applying to the court for an order rectifying the document in question to reflect the intended terms.
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Features
Fallout from contracting-out continues at Bombardier
Workers at engineering company Bombardier are considering industrial action over employer plans to pass on the cost of contracting-out cessation to members of two of its defined benefit schemes, while sharing the cost for the Railways Pension Scheme.
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Opinion
Ill-health pensions – What you need to know
The award of ill-health early retirement pensions can be a challenging and emotive subject for members and decision-makers alike, so it is no surprise that a substantial number of member complaints relate to ill-health pensions.
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News
Scottish ruling creates confusion for pensions lawyers
Pensions lawyers need guidance on how to treat antiquated or onerous scheme rules, experts have said, after Scotland’s highest appeal court ruled that a legal firm must pay more than £62,000 to the Scottish Solicitors Staff Pension Fund.
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Opinion
The end of short-service refunds: Some quirks to look out for
Changes to the rules on short-service refunds come with some quirks trustees need to be aware of. Adeline Chapman, associate at law firm Sackers, explains what they are.
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News
How scrapping short-service refunds affects DC and employer costs
Trustees and sponsors of workplace defined contribution schemes need to review their scheme rules, administrative processes and member communications to reflect the abolition of short-service refunds on October 1.
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News
July's top stories in 3 minutes
In this inaugural Pensions Expert Vizcast, editor Maxine Kelly and senior reporter Tom Dines provide a whistle-stop tour of the month's most significant news and case studies, covering derisking exercises and the Summer Budget (3:10).
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