Following this week's consultations and ministerial statement the Q&A has been updated. Please see the link below:

The McCloud case Q&A for administering authorities page (opens in new window)

The above page will be updated as and when new information becomes available


On Thursday 16th July  a MHCLG McCloud consultation was published on proposed remedies for the LGPS to remove age discrimination.

In summary the consultation proposes that: -

 

The consultation runs until 8th October 2020


On Thursday 16th July a HM Treasury consultation on McCloud was published on proposals to bring the unfunded public service pension schemes in line with the result of the McCloud/Sergeant case by removing age discrimination within the protections given to older members, together with an update on the employer cost cap process.

These were accompanied by a Statement from the Chief Secretary to the Treasury.

To be clear the HMT consultation relates to members of the unfunded public service schemes including the Fire, Teachers and Police schemes. A separate consultation on proposals for remedying the age discrimination within the Local Government Scheme will follow shortly from MHCLG.

In summary the consultation proposes that: -

 

It is the intention of government to bring forward new primary legislation to provide the necessary powers to make changes to schemes in order to remove the discrimination identified by the Courts. The nature and timing of such legislation will be developed following responses to the consultation but it is the intention for changes to take effect from April 2022.

The consultation runs until 11th October 2020


Following last week's ministerial statement the Q&A has been updated. Please see the link below:

The McCloud case Q&A for administering authorities page (opens in new window)

The above page will be updated as and when new information becomes available


Yesterday a ministerial statement by Lord Agnew was made regarding progress toward remedy in public service pension schemes following the McCloud/Sergeant age discrimination case. The statement confirms that no qualifying scheme member will need to make a claim for the remedy to apply to them.

The statement refers to an element of choice for relevant members. We understand this applies to schemes (such as Teachers’, Police, Fire, etc) that gave older workers transitional protection through continued access to their final salary pension schemes. In the LGPS, the position is different, as all members participate in the same career average scheme, with an automatic underpin for protected LGPS members to ensure they are not disadvantaged. We do not anticipate this general approach changing under the new arrangements.


When the Government reformed public service pension schemes in 2014 and 2015 they introduced protections for older scheme members. The Court of Appeal ruled that younger members of the Judges and Firefighters Pension schemes were discriminated against because the protections did not apply to them. The Government has confirmed that there will be changes to all public sector schemes to remove this age discrimination.

The Government and the SAB are having high level discussions about what this means for the LGPS. The SAB is confident that the eventual outcome will provide younger members in scope with protection that is equal to the protection provided to older members.

The protection compares the benefits payable under the current rules with the benefits that would have been paid if the Scheme had not changed in 2014 and pays the higher. This protection will apply automatically – LGPS members who meet the qualifying criteria do not need to take any action.

It is important that members are made aware that many of them will not see an increase to their pension benefits. For others any increase is likely to be small because of low salary growth since the new schemes were introduced.

The SAB will continue to work with Government to ensure that the necessary changes to the LGPS are fully implemented and that all members automatically receive the protection they are due.

Changes to the Scheme will be backdated to April 2014 and will apply to qualifying members who left the LGPS after that date. Implementing and communicating the changes will be extremely challenging. The SAB have set up an implementation group to assist LGPS administering authorities and employers with this challenge.


The Scheme Advisory Board’s website provides background information on the McCloud judgment as well as a Q&A for administering authorities. This update is provided in addition to that material and sets out our understanding of the latest position.

Next steps for the LGPS

We understand that the LGPS will be treated separately from the rest of the public sector in respect of the McCloud remedy.

It is likely that the remedy will involve the extension of some form of underpin to members in scope who are not currently offered protection. Therefore, a full history of part time hour changes and service break information from 1 April 2014 will be needed in order to recreate final salary service. We recommended that administering authorities make Scheme employers aware of this.

It is also likely that, in order to ensure reverse discrimination does not occur, all leavers since 2014 will need to be checked against a new underpin.

We have had discussions with GAD (in their role as an adviser to the SAB) around the mechanics of how a remedy might work in the LGPS including the range of potential issues (both retrospective and ongoing) which could arise from the application of some form of underpin to a wider membership.

We expect decisions relating to members in scope, the extent of final salary service protection, the requirement for retrospection and the inclusion of ancillary benefits (transfers, survivors etc) to be determined centrally.

We don’t expect to see any remedy implemented before the end of financial year 2020/21. Therefore, issues around FRS102 and audit will once again need to be addressed.

Tax implications

We expect pension tax issues be decided centrally. We anticipate that a notional underpin may need to be taken into account in annual allowance calculations for active members going forward and that revisions to previous years’ calculations for all members may be necessary.

Cost cap

We understand that cost cap calculations will be re-run once the McCloud remedy has been agreed i.e. McCloud costs will be fed into the cost cap calculations.

Administration issues

We do not underestimate the challenges and concerns around administration and scheme complexity. However, decisions on the scope, extent and nature of the remedy will be largely driven by the views of government lawyers. They will seek to ensure that any agreed remedy removes, as far as possible, the risk of challenge.

Other public service pension schemes

We understand that there will be one high level policy consultation for the other public service pension schemes (apart from the Judges’ pension scheme).

Following the McCloud judgment the judges and firefighter cases were referred back to Employment Tribunals for remedy. The police case (Aaron and others), which was previously stayed pending the outcome of the McCloud judgment, was also referred for remedy.

Case management hearings have now taken place in respect of the judges and police cases; the case management hearing for the firefighter case is due to take place on 18 December 2019.

Both tribunals issued interim declarations providing that claimants who were active members on 31 March 2012 are entitled to be treated as having met the conditions for full transitional protection i.e. as if they had remained in their final salary scheme after 1 April 2015. Government have confirmed that non litigants in both the judges and police schemes will be treated in the same way, as will members of all other public service pension schemes. There are however many issues and questions to be dealt with before any final decision on a remedy can be arrived at.


The Chief Secretary to the Treasury announced in a written statement that ‘the government believes that the difference in treatment will need to be remedied across all those schemes. This includes schemes for the NHS, civil service, local government, teachers, police, armed forces, judiciary and fire and rescue workers. Continuing to resist the full implications of the judgment in Court would only add to the uncertainty experienced by members.

Statement by the Chief Secretary to the Treasury on McCloud remedies (parliament web site)


The SAB has published an advice note covering the implications of McCloud/Cost Cap in relation to the 2019 fund valuations:

Advice from the SAB on McCloud May 2019 (pdf 3 pages 188kb)


Minister response letter regarding the pause of the SAB cost management process:

Letter from Minister regarding pause of SAB cost management process (pdf 42kb)


On 14th February the SAB published a Q&A on the McCloud case and it's potential impact on cost cap for administering authorities. Please see the link below:

The McCloud case Q&A for administering authorities page (opens in new window)

The above page will be updated as and when new information becomes available


On 7th February the SAB received confirmation that the cost cap pause and the uncertainty caused by the McCloud case announced in last week’s Written Ministerial Statement (see 30th January 2019 WMS on cost cap below) applies equally to the LGPS as to the unfunded public service pension schemes. Given that confirmation the SAB considers it has no option but to pause its own cost management process pending the outcome of McCloud.

As a result there are currently no changes to benefits planned in respect of the cost cap. This situation will be reviewed once McCloud is resolved which is not expected for some months.

Letter confirming application of WMS to LGPS (pdf 121kb)

Letter from SAB pausing the cost management process (PDF 78kb)

Full copy of Board communication pausing cost cap including the 2019-20 employee contribution table (PDF 154kb)


On 30th January the Government announced a pause in the cost cap process due to uncertainty caused by a court ruling on elements of the 2014/15 scheme reforms. The Written Ministerial Statement setting out the reason for the pause is listed below, together with a summary of and the the full Court of Appeal ruling in the case of The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice and another v McCloud and Mostyn and others [2018] and Sargeant v London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority and others [2018]. Also listed is a letter from MHCLG confirming that the WMS applies equally to the LGPS as to the unfunded public service schemes.

Written Ministerial Statement (pdf 79kb)

McCloud Summary (pdf 137kb)

McCloud full judgement (pdf 699kb)