All Section 75 articles – Page 2
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      NewsCalls for next government to revive multi-employer schemes billOn the go: The boss of a small Scottish plumbing company hit with a £1.2m pensions bill is calling for the next government to revive a 2018 proposal, which would end the current issues affecting sponsors of the Plumbing and Mechanical Services Industry Pension Scheme. 
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         News NewsPlumbers call for trustee chair to resign over pensions debacleAn action group is calling for the resignation of Alan Pickering CBE as chairman of the Plumbing and Mechanical Services Industry Pension Scheme. 
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      NewsScottish plumber’s plight highlights ongoing Section 75 issueThe boss of a small Scottish plumbing company is the latest to receive a bill of more than £1m to cover a shortfall in a multi-employer defined benefit scheme. 
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         News NewsField blasts lack of support for plumbers faced with huge DB debtsThe Work and Pensions Committee has warned the government that “much more needs to be done” to support small plumbing businesses being faced with potentially crippling debts to the industry’s multi-employer defined benefit scheme. 
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      NewsField condemns TPR failure to act on Johnston Press pensionOn the go: The chair of the Work and Pensions Select Committee has condemned The Pensions Regulator’s finding that restructured publisher Johnston Press did not use a ‘pre-pack’ insolvency to avoid its pension obligations. 
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      NewsSNP bill seeks PPF support for orphan liabilitiesA private members’ bill submitted by Scottish National Party MP Alan Brown last week could see the Pension Protection Fund taking on so-called orphan liabilities from multi-employer pension schemes. 
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      NewsMore than half of charity DB schemes are now closed to accrualCharities are catching up with private sector employers as the number of defined benefit schemes closed to accrual jumped to 58 per cent at February 2018 from 43 per cent a year earlier, according to consultancy Hymans Robertson. 
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         Opinion OpinionDDAs will require scrutiny to ensure security of benefits is not affectedA deferred debt arrangement could be helpful for those sponsors currently unable to afford the cost of continued benefit accrual, but it will require significant scrutiny from trustees and their advisers, explains Alex Hutton-Mills from Lincoln Pensions. 
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      NewsAttractiveness of deferred debt arrangement remains to be seenEmployers in multi-employer pension schemes will now be able to delay the requirement to pay an employer debt when they cease accrual in the scheme, but opinions are divided on how attractive this will be. 
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         News NewsUniversity of Oxford learns hard lesson with Care closureThe University of Oxford has introduced a defined contribution scheme for new joiners and is making a number of other changes to reduce costs as universities are waking up to their pension deficits. One expert called the education sector ‘a disaster’ in pension terms. 
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      NewsGovernment's s75 proposals are a 'missed opportunity'Experts have welcomed the government’s recent consultation proposing a new deferred debt arrangement for employers in multi-employer pension schemes, but concerns over complexity of employer debt regulation remain. 
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      NewsDiscrimination, indexation and tax relief's survival: Top law and regulation stories from 2016Year in review: As if Brexit didn’t pose enough challenges, regulators, lawyers and two successive pensions ministers have had a lot on their plate in 2016. 
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         Features FeaturesCAF exits multi-employer scheme to set up own fundThe Charities Aid Foundation has withdrawn from a multi-employer defined benefit pension plan and established a new DB scheme, removing its exposure to other employers’ pension liabilities. 
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      FeaturesSalvation Army derisks as charities struggle with pension deficitsThe Salvation Army has recently reduced risk in its UK defined benefit multi-employer scheme, having made efforts to tackle its pension deficit, but pension obligations are proving increasingly problematic for many charities. 
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         Features FeaturesPlumbing scheme plans to seek guidance from Scottish courts as government drags feet on s75Plumbing Pensions’ prolonged consultation with a departing employer over its exit fee has brought to light fundamental problems with section 75 debt legislation as it currently stands for non-associated multi-employer schemes. 
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      NewsIndustry seeks remedy for multi-employer s75 headacheExperts have questioned the viability of solutions proposed in response to a government consultation to ease Section 75 debt obligations, the cost of which can potentially trap employersin multi-employer schemes. 
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      NewsVolunteering charity makes £2.9m deficit payment after property saleLondon-based charity Community Service Volunteers has reported using the sale of property assets to reduce the risk posed by its pension deficit, as defined benefit schemes reach their lowest aggregate funding level in 18 months. 
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         News NewsRegulator nets £184m from Lehmans as cases trebleThe Pensions Regulator’s unprecedented £184m settlement for the members of the Lehman Brothers pension scheme is its biggest trophy in a growing anti-avoidance campaign, with the number of investigations trebling since last year. 
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      NewsNewly defined money purchase plans wake up to actuarial and comms obligationsTrustees and employers offering money purchase benefits may face increased member communication and valuation requirements as a result of the government’s new statutory definition. 
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      OpinionEditorial: The two-headed monsterDefined benefit scheme managers and trustees could be forgiven for feeling perplexed at the government’s attitude to the benefits they oversee. 
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