General qualification for benefits
18. - (1) Membership
of the Scheme entitles the member to benefits under this Chapter only if-
(2) Paragraph (1) does not apply-
Calculations
19. - (1) The amount
of any benefit payable as a result of a person's membership is generally calculated
by multiplying his final pay by the appropriate multiplier.
(2) Unless another multiplier is indicated, the appropriate
multiplier for a pension is-
the member's total membership.
|
(3) Unless another multiplier is indicated, the appropriate multiplier for
a retirement grant is-
3 × the member's total membership.
|
(4) However, benefits payable on or after the death of a pensioner member are calculated by multiplying the amount of his former retirement pension by the multiplier specified for the benefit in question.
(4A) Benefits payable to a person who remains in service after his 65th birthday
as referred to in regulation 24A(1) shall be increased
at such a rate as is shown as appropriate in guidance issued by the Government
Actuary in respect of each day that payment of benefit is delayed between his
65th birthday and the date of his retirement. (SI2000/199)
(5) Unless otherwise indicated, references to the amounts
of pensions are to their annual rate.
(6) The amount of a deceased person's former retirement
pension is the amount of the pension he would have received immediately before
his death, but for-
(7) Periods are measured in years and fractions of
a year (calculated as specified in regulation 10).
(8) A pensioner member includes a person who would have
been entitled to a pension but for regulation 110
(application of abatement policy in individual cases).
(9) Paragraph (8) does not stop a person to whom it
applies from also counting as an active member.
Final pay
20. - (1) A
member's final pay for an employment is his pay for as much of the final pay
period as he is entitled to count as active membership in local government employment
(but see paragraphs (3) to (10), regulations 21
and 22(2) and Schedule 4).
(2) A member's final pay period is the year ending with
the day on which he stops being an active member (but see paragraph (9) and
regulations 21 and 22).
(3) In the case of part-time employment, the final pay
is the pay which would have been paid for a single comparable whole-time employment.
(4) However, in calculating death grant or the rate
of surviving spouse's or children's short-term pension payable on the death
of an active member, actual pay in part-time employment is to be used
in part-time employment, the member's final pay is his actual pay for his final
pay period (SI2000/199).
(5) Any reduction or suspension of a member's pay during
the final period because of his absence from work owing to illness or injury
must be disregarded for this Chapter.
(6) If a member's final pay period includes reserve
forces service leave, his final pay is-
(7) If a member is absent from work for any other
reason during his final pay period, he is to be treated for this Chapter as
having received the pay he would otherwise have received only if he has made
the appropriate contributions under Chapter III for
the period he is absent.
(8) If in any case where regulation
12(5) (collective pay agreements) applies to a member's pay during any part
of the final pay period-
(b) his final pay would be greater if determined using those earnings,
it is to be determined using them.
(9) If a member is only entitled to count part of the
year specified in paragraph (2) as a period of active membership in relation
to the employment which he ceases to hold, his final pay is his pay during that
part multiplied by 365 and divided by the number of days in that part.
(10) Final pay does not include any pension in payment.
Other final pay periods
21. - (1) Where
the whole or part of a member's pay consists of fees, his final pay period for
them is not the period specified in regulation 20(2) but-
(2) However, if he was only entitled to receive fees
during part of the period mentioned in paragraph (1)(a), that part is substituted
for the period referred to in that paragraph.
(3) If a member has been absent from work during any
part of the year specified in regulation 20(2), his final
pay period is the last 365 days he is entitled to count as a period of active
membership.
(4) A member to whom paragraph (5) applies may elect
that instead of his final pay period being determined under regulation
20(2) or paragraph (1), (2) or (3) above, it should be-
(b) as respects so much of his pay as consists of fees, that period of three
years.
(5) This paragraph applies to a member whose pay in
the period which he would elect as his final pay period if he made an election
under paragraph (4) is higher than his pay in a final pay period determined
under regulation 20(2) or paragraph (1), (2) or (3).
(6) Where paragraph (1) or (2) applies or a member elects
for the period specified in paragraph (4)(b), as respects so much of his pay
as consists of fees his final pay is the annual average of his fees during his
final pay period.
(7) An election under this regulation by a member must
be made by notice in writing given to the appropriate administering authority
before the expiry of the period of one month beginning with the day on which
he is notified of his entitlement to a benefit.
(8) Where a member has died without having made an election
under this regulation, the appropriate administering authority may make an election
on his behalf (whether or not the period within which he could have elected
has expired).
Permanent reductions in pay: certificates of protection of pension benefits
22. - (1) Where
a certificate has been issued as respects a member's pay under paragraph (3)
or (5) and the date of reduction or, as the case may be, restriction specified
in the certificate is not more than 10 years before the date on which he ceases
to be an active member, he may elect that his final pay period should be-
(b) any three consecutive years-
(2) Where a member elects for the period specified
in paragraph (1)(b), his final pay is the annual average of his pay during that
period.
(3) If, otherwise than by virtue of a member's own circumstances-
he is entitled to be issued with a certificate to that effect by the employing
authority (but see paragraph (5)).
(4) A member is not entitled to be issued with a certificate
under this regulation if the reduction in his rate of pay-
(5) The employing authority may issue a certificate
without an application from the member, but need not issue a certificate if
he does not apply for one within 12 months after the date of reduction or restriction.
(6) A certificate issued under this regulation must
specify the date of the reduction or restriction.
(7) The employing authority must send a copy of the
certificate to the member's appropriate administering authority.
(8) The employing authority must keep a record of the
certificate including such information as would be necessary for applying paragraph
(1) for the period of 10 years beginning with the date of reduction or restriction
specified in it.
(9) An election under this regulation by a member must
be made by notice in writing given to the appropriate administering authority
before the expiry of the period of one month beginning with the date on which
he is notified of his entitlement to a benefit.
(10) Where a member has died without having made an
election under this regulation, the appropriate administering authority may
make an election on his behalf (whether or not the period within which he could
have elected has expired).
Revenue limits
23. Schedule 4 contains restrictions on the amounts of benefits to which a member is
entitled under the Scheme.
(5) A member's "normal retirement age" is his age
on his NRD.
(6) If a member's NRD or normal retirement age needs
to be determined before he attains that age, it must be assumed that his local
government employment and membership of the Scheme will be continuous.
(SI2000/199) Retirement after age
65
24A. - (1) A member
who with the consent of his employing authority remains in service after his
65th birthday is entitled to a pension and retirement grant when he retires
from service.
(2) The pension and retirement grant are payable immediately
on retirement.
he is entitled to a pension and retirement grant.
(2) The pension and grant are payable immediately.
(3) However, a person who is notified under regulation
11 of the Local Government (Compensation for Redundancy or Premature Retirement
on Reorganisation) (Scotland) Regulations 1995 about compensation due because
regulation 7 of those Regulations applies to his retirement may waive his right
to immediate payment by notice in writing to his employing authority.
(4) In paragraph (1) "redundancy" includes retirement
in the interests of efficiency, or because the member held a joint appointment
which has been ended because the other holder has left it.
Ill-health
26. - (1) Where
a member leaves a local government employment by reason of being permanently
incapable of discharging efficiently the duties of that employment or any other
comparable employment with his employing authority (SI2000/199)
because of ill-health or infirmity of mind or body, he is entitled to an ill-health
pension and grant (but see paragraph (3)).
(2) The pension and grant are payable immediately.
(3) A member-
is entitled to an ill-health grant (but not a pension), unless paragraph (4)
applies to him.
(4) This paragraph applies to a member if-
(5) In paragraph (1)-
Amounts of ill-health pension and grant
27. - (1) Where
the member's total membership is at least five years the multiplier for an ill-health
pension or grant is by reference to the member's enhanced membership period
instead of his total membership.
(2) A member's enhanced membership period is-
(3) However, the enhanced membership period must not
exceed 40 years or the total membership the member would have had if he had
continued as an active member until he was 65, whichever is the shorter.
(4) If the member became entitled to ill-health benefits
under the Scheme before he was in the employment from which he has retired,
his enhanced membership period must be calculated by including in his total
membership his total membership in the previous employment.
(5) The maximum period which may be added to a member's
total membership to calculate his enhanced membership period in respect of all
his local government employment is 10 years.
(6) Where membership includes membership in part-time
employment, the enhanced membership period must be calculated by first working
out what it would be if the employment were all whole-time, and then reducing
the resulting period by the appropriate fraction (but see paragraph (9)).
(7) The appropriate fraction is the fraction of which
the numerator is the member's total membership and the denominator is the period
which would be his total membership if his employment had all been whole-time.
(8) In the case of a member in part-time employment
with non-cyclical fluctuating contractual hours, that fraction must be determined
by making separate calculations for each period over which averaging of the
member's hours occurs in calculating his contractual hours.
(9) If the member's total membership includes a period
of at least 13 121/365 13 122/365 (SI2000/199)
years in whole-time employment, paragraph (6) does not apply and his enhanced
membership period must be calculated by reference to that period of whole-time
employment.
(10) If a member is entitled under regulation 26(3)
to an ill-health grant (but not a pension) the multiplier for the grant is-
the member's total membership.
12 |
Re-employed pensioners
28. - (1) Where
a member is entitled to two retirement pensions because of being a member in
two employments which were not concurrent, he may elect for a single new pension.
(2) If he so elects, he becomes entitled to a single
retirement pension and retirement grant, each calculated by reference to the
augmented period (but see paragraph (7)).
(3) The augmented period is the member's total membership
in the later employment, increased by the period which would have been aggregated
if he had made an election under regulation 31(1) as respects
his earlier employment when he became an active member in his later employment.
(4) However, if the retirement pension from the earlier
employment was calculated using a longer period of membership than the period
which is the augmented period under paragraph (3), the longer period is the
augmented period for paragraph (2).
(5) No election may be made if the pension for the earlier
employment-
(6) The member must set off any retirement grant he
received because of his membership in the earlier employment ("the first grant")
against the retirement grant under this regulation and, if it was greater, repay
the difference between the grants to the new authority.
(7) For paragraph (6), the first grant includes the
amount by which it would have been increased under the Pensions (Increase) Act
1971 if it had become payable at the same time as the retirement grant under
this regulation.
(8) Any additional period which did not count in the
calculation of the first grant because of regulation 53(3) does not count in
calculating the retirement grant under this regulation either.
(9) Any surrender of the pension from the earlier employment
operates to the same extent on the single pension, but the surrendered pension
is payable by the new authority.
(10) Where the later retirement is one to which regulation
26 (ill-health) applies and the member does not become entitled to a single
pension-
Further provisions about elections under regulation 28
29. - (1) An election
under regulation 28 must be made by giving notice in writing to the new authority.
(2) The new authority is the appropriate administering
authority for the pension from the later employment.
(3) The election must be made before the expiry of the
period of three months beginning with the date on which the member becomes entitled
to the pension for the later employment and has effect from that date.
(4) If a member does not repay any amount due under
regulation 28(6) before the expiry of the period of three months beginning
with the date on which he elects, his election is void (and so he is not entitled
to the single pension).
Other early leavers: deferred retirement benefits and elections for early
payment
30. - (1) If a
member leaves a local government employment (or is treated for these Regulations
as if he had done so) before he is entitled to the immediate payment of retirement
benefits (apart from this regulation), once he is aged 50 or more he may elect
to receive payment of them immediately.
(2) However, an election made by a member aged less
than 60 is ineffective without the consent of his employing authority or former
employing authority (but see paragraph (6)).
(3) If the member so elects, he is entitled to a pension
and retirement grant payable immediately.
(4) If the sum-
is less than 85 years, his retirement pension and grant must be reduced by
the amounts shown as appropriate in guidance issued from time to time by the
Government Actuary (but see regulation 35(5) (guaranteed minimum pensions)).
(5) A member's employing authority may determine on
compassionate grounds that his retirement pension and grant should not be reduced
under paragraph (4).
(6) If a member who has left a local government employment
before he is entitled to the immediate payment of a retirement benefits (apart
from this regulation) becomes permanently incapable of discharging efficiently
the duties of that employment because of ill-health or infirmity of mind or
body-
(7) If the member does not elect for immediate payment
under this regulation, he is entitled to receive a pension and grant payable
from his NRD without reduction.
(8) An election under paragraph (1) must be made by
notice in writing to the member's employing authority or former employing authority.
Re-employed and rejoining deferred members
31. - (1) Where
a deferred member becomes an active member again before becoming entitled to
the immediate payment of retirement benefits in respect of his former membership,
he may elect to have his former membership aggregated with his membership on
or after the date he becomes an active member again.
(2) However, an election may be made by a Class B member
only as respects former Class B membership or Class C membership and an election
may be made by a Class C member only as respects former Class C membership.
(3) Where a member elects under paragraph (1)-
(4) Where an election under paragraph (1) is made
by a member who has ceased to be an active member more than once, the election
may be made as respects his total membership at each of the times he so ceased
or only as respects such of those periods of membership as are specified in
the election.
(5) Where a member who may elect under paragraph (1)
does not do so or does not elect as respects all periods of his membership-
and references in these provisions to his appropriate administering authority
or appropriate fund shall be construed accordingly.
(6) For this regulation a period of membership is
an unaggregated period if-
(7) An election under paragraph (1) must be made by
notice in writing to the member's appropriate administering authority in the
employment in which he becomes an active member again whilst he is an active
member in that employment.
(8) If the appropriate fund for membership in the new
employment is different from that for any former employment as respects which
the member is making the election, the notice under paragraph (7) must also
be given to his appropriate administering authority in that former employment.
(9) References in this regulation to former membership
include all membership which the member was entitled to count as total membership
immediately before he ceased his former active membership (but excluding any
unaggregated period).
(10) Where a person ceases to be an active member in
one employment and immediately becomes an active member in another employment,
for paragraph (1) of this regulation he shall be treated as if he were a deferred
member as respects the first employment, despite never having ceased to be an
active member of the Scheme.
(11) In the case of a member who first becomes a member on or after 13th January
2000 any period of membership in the employment of a non-associated admission
body (as defined in regulation 4(16)(c)) shall not be aggregated with any other
periods of membership for the purpose of calculating his retirement grant. (SI2000/199)
Surrenders of pension
32. - (1) A
member may apply to the appropriate administering authority to surrender part
of the retirement pension which is or may become payable to him, so that, if
he is survived by his spouse or a dependant of his ("the beneficiary"), the
equivalent value of that part is paid instead to the beneficiary under this
regulation.
(2) The application must be made in the period of one
month ending with or one month beginning with the date on which the member retires.
(3) The authority must allow the application if they
are satisfied the member is in good health.
(4) The surrender must not result in a pension being
paid to the beneficiary of less than such amount as is specified in guidance
issued for this paragraph by the Government Actuary.
(5) The aggregate amount surrendered must not-
(6) On the death of the member, the beneficiary becomes
entitled to a pension at a rate equivalent to the value of the surrender in
the beneficiary's favour at the time when the surrender was made.
(7) The equivalent rate is such rate as is indicated
in guidance issued by the Government Actuary.
(8) If the surrender is allowed, it has effect from
the date the member retires from his employment.
(9) However, it does not take effect if the beneficiary
or member dies before that date, and it ceases to have effect if the beneficiary
dies before the member.
No double entitlement
33. - (1) Where
(apart from this regulation) any member would be entitled to a pension or retirement
grant under two or more regulations by reason of the same period of membership-
(2) An election by a member must be by notice in writing,
given to the employing authority before the expiry of the period of three months
beginning with the day on which he becomes entitled to elect.
(3) Paragraph (1) does not affect the member's rights
under the Pension Schemes Act 1993.
Requirements as to time of payment
34. - (1) Retirement
benefits under this Chapter may not be paid to a person before he has retired
from the employment in which he was a member.
(2) They must begin to be paid not later than the member's
75th birthday even if he has not retired (and see also regulation 35(3)).
Guaranteed minimum pensions etc.
35. - (1) Where
a member's local government employment is contracted-out employment and he has
a guaranteed minimum in relation to service before 6th April 1997, from the
date he attains state pensionable age he is entitled to a pension at a weekly
rate equal to not less than that guaranteed minimum.
(2) However, if the member attains state pensionable
age while in local government employment, he is not so entitled until he leaves
that employment, unless paragraph (3) applies.
(3) If the member-
he is entitled from the end of that period to so much of his retirement pension
as equals that guaranteed minimum (unless he consents to a postponement of the
entitlement).
(4) For the purposes of paragraph (1), a person has
a guaranteed minimum if he has such a minimum under section 14 of the Pension
Schemes Act 1993 in relation to benefits under these Regulations.
(5) A person's retirement pension is not to be reduced
under regulation 30(4) to less than the aggregate of-
(6) In paragraphs (5) and (7) "the relevant date"
means-
(7) Where a person's local government employment is
or was contracted-out employment, a surrender under regulation 32 (together
with any previous surrenders) must not result in the annual rate of the retirement
pension being less than one eightieth of his final pay, multiplied by the length
in years of the whole period of his membership in contracted-out employment
beginning with the relevant date and ending with 31st March 1996.
(8) Where a person making a surrender under regulation
32 has a guaranteed minimum, the surrender (together with any previous surrenders)
must not result in the weekly rate of the retirement pension being less than
the guaranteed minimum.
(9) Where a person making a surrender under regulation
32-
references in paragraphs (7) and (8) to the retirement pension are references
to the retirement pension which would become payable if he ceased to hold his
employment on the day the surrender takes effect.
(10) This regulation overrides any provision in these
Regulations to the extent to which it conflicts with it, except-
Revaluation of guaranteed minimum
36. - (1) Where
the guaranteed minimum of a person who has ceased to be an active member is
appropriately secured, his earnings factors for the purposes of section 14(2)
of the Pension Schemes Act 1993 must be determined-
(2) For such a person the weekly equivalent mentioned
in section 14(2) of the Pensions Schemes Act 1993 is to be increased-
(3) In this regulation-
(3 × his final pay)
|
× his total membership. |
(7) The multiplier for a deferred member's death grant
is the same as for his retirement grant.
(8) The multiplier for a pensioner member's death grant
is 5, but the amount so calculated is reduced by the amounts of any retirement
pension paid to him.
(8A) The multiplier for the death grant of a member who remains in service
after his 65th birthday as referred to in regulation 24A(1)
is whichever of-
3 × the member's total membership
80 |
(9) If the administering authority have not made payments
under paragraph (1) equalling in aggregate the member's death grant before the
expiry of the period of two years beginning with his death, they must pay an
amount equal to the shortfall to the member's executors.
(10) For these Regulations, any payments made under
paragraph (1) must be treated as payments made by way of death grant.
Reduction of death grants: re-employed pensioners
38. - (1) If-
the death grant payable because of his membership in the further employment
must be reduced (or extinguished) to the extent necessary to prevent his total
pension benefits exceeding (or further exceeding) his relevant final pay.
(2) A person's total pension benefits are the total
of-
(3) A person's relevant final pay is the greater of-
(4) The pay for an employment must be adjusted for
inflation by calculating the amount to which it would have increased if it were
an official pension becoming payable from the end of that employment.
|
(4) Where the deceased was an active member, the short-term pension is the deceased's final pay. (SI2000/199)
(5) Where the deceased was a pensioner member, the
short-term pension is equal to his retirement pension immediately before the
death (but see regulation 41 ).
(6) In this regulation "pensioner member" includes a
person whose retirement pension has been commuted under regulation 49 (exceptional
ill-health).
(7) If there is more than one surviving spouse, they
become jointly entitled under paragraph (1).
Surviving spouse's long-term pension
40. - (1) If a
member dies leaving a surviving spouse, the spouse is entitled to a spouse's
long-term pension.
(2) If the deceased was an active or pensioner member,
the long-term pension is payable from the end of the period for which the short-term
pension is payable.
(3) The long-term pension payable on a deferred member's
death is payable from the death.
(4) If the deceased was an active member with a total
membership of at least two years, the long-term pension is equal to half the
ill-health pension to which the deceased would have been entitled under regulation
26 if he had become entitled to a pension under that regulation on the date
he died.
(5) If the deceased was an active member with a total
membership of less than two years or a deferred member, the multiplier for the
long-term pension is-
the deceased's total membership
|
(but see regulation 41 ). (6) If the deceased was a pensioner
member, the long-term pension is equal to half his retirement pension immediately
before the death (but see regulation 41 ).
(7) If there is more than one surviving spouse, they
become jointly entitled under paragraph (1).
Reduction of some surviving spouses' pensions
41. - (1) Where
a male pensioner member or deferred member marries and dies, the pension to
which his widow is entitled under regulation 39
or 40 is calculated as if his retirement pension were only
so much of his actual pension as is attributable to the period of his membership
in contracted-out employment after 5th April 1978.
(2) Except in the case of a short-term pension payable
to the widower of an active member, the pension to which a widower is entitled
under regulation 39 or 40
is calculated as if the member's retirement pension were only so much of her
actual pension as is attributable to her membership after 5th April 1988.
(3) However, relevant additional membership also counts
as membership after that date where the widower was married to the member at
some time while she was in local government employment after 31st March 1972.
(SI2000/199)
(4) Relevant additional membership is membership-
Surviving spouse's guaranteed minimum pension
42. - (1) If
paragraph (2) applies, the pension to which a person is entitled under regulation
39 or 40 must be not less than the surviving spouse's
guaranteed minimum.
(2) This paragraph applies if-
(3) Paragraph (1) overrides any contrary provision
in these Regulations except-
Meaning of "eligible child"
43. - (1) The eligible
child of a deceased member is-
(2) A person counts as a child only if-
(3) If an appropriate administering authority wish,
they may treat education or training as continuous despite a break.
Children's short-term pensions
44. - (1) If an
active or pensioner member dies leaving one or more eligible children, they
are entitled to a children's short-term pension.
(2) If a short-term pension is payable to a surviving
spouse under regulation 39 , the children's short-term pension is payable only
for three months after the death.
(3) Otherwise, it is payable for six months after the
death.
(4) Where the deceased was an active member, the
pension is the greater of-
|
(4) Where the deceased was an active member, the pension is the deceased's final pay. (SI2000/199)
(5) Where the deceased was a pensioner member, the pension is equal to his
retirement pension immediately before the death.
(6) Where, if a children's long-term pension and a surviving
spouse's long-term pension were payable instead of short-term pensions, that
would result in a greater aggregate pension, long-term pensions shall be payable
instead of short-term pensions if the child is in the care of the surviving
spouse (SI2000/199).
(7) Where-
the long-term pension shall be payable instead of the short-term pension.
(8) In this regulation "pensioner member" includes a
person whose retirement pension has been commuted under regulation 49 (commutation:
exceptional ill-health).
Children's long-term pensions
45. - (1) If a
member dies leaving one or more eligible children, they are entitled to a children's
long-term pension.
(2) If the deceased was an active or pensioner member,
it is payable from the end of the period for which the short-term pension is
payable.
(3) The pension payable on a deferred member's death
is payable from the death.
(4) An eligible child ceases to be entitled to a long-term
pension when he ceases to be a child within regulation 43(2).
(5) If the deceased was an active member, the pension
is the appropriate fraction of the pension to which he would have been entitled
if on the date of death he had become entitled under regulation
26(1) (ill-health).
(6) If the deceased was a deferred member, the pension
is the appropriate fraction of the amount of the pension to which he would have
been entitled if on the date of death he had become entitled under regulation
24 (normal retirement).
(7) If the deceased was a pensioner member, the pension
is the appropriate fraction of his retirement pension.
(8) If, apart from this paragraph the calculation of
the long-term pension would be based on a member's retirement pension calculated
on the basis of membership of less than-
(whichever is the shorter), then that period should be used instead in calculating
it.
(9) The appropriate fractions are-
(b) where there is more than one eligible child-
(10) If a child in full-time training for a trade,
profession or vocation is receiving pay at an annual rate exceeding the training
rate-
(11) In paragraph (10) "the training rate" means the
current annual rate of an official pension which began to be paid on 1st April
1994 at an annual rate of £1,450.
Discretion as to payment of children's pensions
46. - (1) If a
children's pension is payable for more than one eligible child, the appropriate
administering authority may apportion it amongst the children as they think
fit.
(2) The appropriate administering authority may pay
the whole or part of a children's pension to a person other than an eligible
child, to be applied for the benefit of one or more eligible children as the
authority direct.
Dependants of re-employed pensioners
47. - (1) If-
the benefits payable under the Scheme on his death (except short-term pensions)
and any surrendered benefits must be calculated in the case of each beneficiary
using whichever of assumptions A and B gives that beneficiary the more favourable
benefits.
(2) Assumption A is that the deceased did so retire
and assumption B is that he did so retire and so elect.
(3) An unreduced retirement pension is a pension which
is not reduced under regulation 30(4) (early leavers).
(4) If after a member became entitled to a relevant
pension, he entered further local government employment in which he died, the
benefits payable under the Scheme on his death (except short-term pensions)
must be calculated on assumption A.
(5) A relevant pension is a superannuation allowance
under Part I of the Act of 1937 or a pension under the former Regulations, a
local Act scheme, or a retirement pension under the 1974 Regulations, the 1987
Regulations or these Regulations, which was reduced or suspended on account
of the further employment.
(6) Where-
the short-term pension under regulation 39 is the sum of-
(7) Where a member dies in a new employment, the long-term
pension under regulation 40 is the greater of amount A or amount B.
(8) Amount A is half the sum of-
(9) Amount B is half the retirement pension to which
the member would have been entitled if on the date of death he had become entitled
under regulation 26(1) and had elected under regulation
28 for a single pension.
(10) Amount A and amount B are both to be calculated
on the basis that the retirement pensions have not been-
Commutation: small pensions
48. - (1)
If the annual rate of the retirement pension which a member who has attained
state pensionable age is entitled to be paid is not more than £260 or such higher
amount as may be prescribed from time to time by regulations made under section
21(1) of the Pension Schemes Act 1993, the appropriate administering authority
may pay him a lump sum representing the capital value of the pension. (SI2000/199)
(1) If the aggregate of the annual rate of the retirement
pension and the actuarial equivalent as an annual pension of any retirement
grant payable under these Regulations which a member is entitled to be paid
is not more than £260 or such higher sum as may be prescribed from time to time
by regulations made under section 21(1) of the Pensions Schemes Act 1993, the
appropriate administering authority may pay him a lump sum representing the
capital value of the pension. (SI2000/199)
(2) The appropriate administering authority may also pay a lump sum representing
the capital value of a long-term pension which is payable to any surviving spouse
or to or in respect of an eligible child or children, if the annual rate does
not exceed £260, or such higher amount as may be so prescribed.
(3) If a member is entitled to more than one retirement
pension under the Scheme or more than one long-term pension is payable under
the Scheme following a deceased member's death, a lump sum is payable only if
the aggregate amount payable to that member or following that death is less
than £260 or such higher amount as may be so prescribed.
(4) Any increase payable under the Pensions (Increase)
Act 1971 in respect of a pension must be included in its annual rate.
(5) The capital value of a pension must be calculated
as shown in guidance issued by the Government Actuary.
(6) Where a payment is made in respect of a retirement
pension, a payment representing the capital value of any long-term pension,
which would be payable to the member's spouse if that spouse survived the member,
must also be made.
(7) The payment of a lump sum in respect of a pension
discharges the appropriate administering authority from their liability for
it and, where the payment is made to a member, for any short-term or long-term
pensions which may become payable on his death.
(8) The appropriate administering authority must deduct
from any payment under this regulation any tax to which they may become chargeable
under section 599 of the Taxes Act.
Commutation: exceptional ill-health
49. - (1) If,
when a retirement pension first becomes payable to a member, the appropriate
administering authority are satisfied that his life expectancy is less than
one year, they may pay him a lump sum equal to five times the amount by which
the annual rate of the retirement pension exceeds his guaranteed minimum.
(2) Such a payment discharges the authority's liability
for that pension (except the guaranteed minimum) and for any lump sum death
grant calculated by reference to that pension under the Scheme.
(3) The authority must deduct from any such payment
any tax to which they may become chargeable under section 599 of the Taxes Act.
the member's total membership.
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the member's total membership.
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