All Law & regulation articles – Page 90
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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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Tapered annual allowance solution dismissed by experts
Pensions experts have criticised a rumoured government policy to raise the tapered annual allowance threshold income, calling it a sticking plaster that will not solve the underlying problem.
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HMRC delays GMP reconciliation final timeline again
On the go: HM Revenue & Customs has again declined to announce a new timeline for the guaranteed minimum pension reconciliation final data cuts, despite having promised that its next update would bring a string of delays to an end.
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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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Regulator outlines Q1 policy plans
On the go: The Pensions Regulator is to publish recommendations on trustee diversity and governance in February, as the watchdog set out its policy commitments for the early months of 2020.
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TPR presses Church of England for shorter deficit recovery
The Pensions Regulator has dismissed the idea of the Church of England employers reducing their deficit contributions, after a change in the valuation method used in one of its defined benefit schemes resulted in a shortfall decrease from £236m to £50m.
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Professionals say regulation creating unnecessary costs
On the go: A survey of pensions professionals has uncovered concerns about the added cost burden placed on schemes by increasingly strict regulation.
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RPI reform consultation to be published in March
On the go: A consultation on changes to the retail price index will be published alongside the UK Budget on March 11, the chancellor of the exchequer has announced.
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Chappell ordered to pay £9.5m into BHS schemes
On the go: Dominic Chappell has been ordered to pay £9.5m into two pension schemes related to the collapsed high street chain BHS.
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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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Mineworkers and British Coal secure £268m settlement
On the go: The Mineworkers’ Pension Scheme and the British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme have secured a $350m (£268m) settlement from a class action against a photovoltaic solar panel producer.
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Landmark vegan case could disrupt pensions industry
A landmark ruling finding that veganism is a philosophical belief will have a wider impact in the pensions industry, experts say, but warn trustees to avoid making knee-jerk changes to their schemes.
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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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Pensions Ombudsman reports Green Coal to TPR
On the go: The Pensions Ombudsman has reported the Green Coal Limited Occupational Pension Scheme to the Pensions Regulator with concerns over the “status of the scheme”, after upholding a complaint against it.
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Government brings identical bill back to parliament
On the go: The Department for Work and Pensions has reintroduced its pension schemes bill in the House of Lords, after the December general election delayed its debate in Parliament.
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Chancellor announces March Budget
On the go: The government has confirmed that Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid will deliver his first Budget on March 11, with the announcement expected to bring some changes for the pensions industry.
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Trustees sitting on hands over ESG investment
On the go: A new survey has raised serious doubts as to whether pension funds will take meaningful action in the short term on sustainable investment issues, despite new regulations coming into force in October.
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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.