The Minister for Regional Growth and Local Government (Luke Hall):
The Government are committed to public service pensions which are
fair to public sector workers. In 2014, reforms were made to the
local government pension scheme in England and Wales (the LGPS) to
make the scheme more sustainable and affordable for the longer
term. These reforms followed the prior recommendations of the
Independent Public Service Pensions Commission and were part of
similar reforms made across the public...Request free trial
The Minister for Regional Growth and Local Government
(): The Government are committed to public
service pensions which are fair to public sector workers. In 2014,
reforms were made to the local government pension scheme in England
and Wales (the LGPS) to make the scheme more sustainable and
affordable for the longer term. These reforms followed the prior
recommendations of the Independent Public Service Pensions
Commission and were part of similar reforms made across the public
sector. The Government believe the 2014 changes to the LGPS
balanced the interests of local government workers, employers and
taxpayers fairly, and it remains the right package of benefits for
the sector.
In July 2020, MHCLG consulted on changes to the local
government pension scheme in England and Wales (LGPS). That
consultation outlined proposals to amend LGPS “transitional
protections” following a December 2018 Court of Appeal finding that
similar provisions in the judicial and firefighters’ pension
schemes gave rise to unlawful discrimination. Transitional
protections had been introduced by the Government to exempt scheme
members nearest to retirement from the impact of the reforms made
to public service pensions in 2014 and 2015.
In the LGPS, transitional protection was provided through an
“underpin”, providing protected members with the higher of their
pension under the reformed, career average scheme and the pension
they would have been entitled to under the previous final salary
scheme. In our consultation, we proposed extending underpin
protection to younger qualifying members.
The Government received responses from a variety of
stakeholders. These were detailed and varied, and the Government
are grateful for the consideration and thought given to the issues
covered in the consultation. Responses were largely supportive of
the key elements of the proposals.
After consideration of the responses, we can now confirm the
key elements of the changes to scheme regulations which will be
made in due course. The overarching aim is that the changes will
address the findings of the courts and provide protection to all
qualifying members when their benefits are drawn from the scheme.
The key points are:
Underpin protection will apply to LGPS members who meet the
revised qualifying criteria, principally that they were active in
the scheme on 31 March 2012 and subsequently had membership of the
career average scheme without a continuous break in service of more
than five years.
The period of protection will apply from 1 April 2014 to 31
March 2022 but will cease earlier where a member leaves active
membership or reaches their final salary scheme normal retirement
age (normally 65) before 31 March 2022.
Where a member stays in active membership beyond 31 March
2022, the comparison of their benefits will be based on their final
salary when they leave the LGPS, or when they reach their final
salary scheme normal retirement age, if earlier.
Underpin protection will apply to qualifying members who
leave active membership of the LGPS with an immediate or deferred
entitlement to a pension.
A “two stage process” will apply for assessing the underpin
so that, where there is a gap between a member’s last day of active
membership and the date they take their pension, members can be
assured they are getting the higher benefit.
Scheme regulations giving effect to the above changes will be
retrospective to 1 April 2014.
A full Government response, containing further detail on the
matters addressed above, and on other issues which were covered in
the consultation, will be published later this year. This will
include the Government’s decision on whether members will be
expected to meet the underpin qualifying criteria in a single
period of scheme membership for the underpin to apply.
It is anticipated that regulations giving effect to these
changes will be made after new primary legislation in relation to
public service pensions has completed its passage through
Parliament, and the Government’s intention is that regulations will
come into force on 1 April 2023.
Ensuring that future pension accrual for all LGPS members is
on a career average basis from 1 April 2022 will mean that local
government workers continue to receive some of the best pension
scheme benefits available in the UK, but that provision is more
sustainable for the long term and more affordable for the
taxpayer.