67 Pension & Pension Discretions Policy
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To seek Council’s
approval for the revised HR policy (Pensions & Pensions
Discretions Policy) (report of the Assistant Director –
Corporate enclosed).
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Consideration was given to the report of the
Assistant Director – Corporate which sought Council’s
approval for the revised HR policy (Pensions and Pensions
Discretions Policy)
The Portfolio Holder – Corporate and
Environmental Services introduced the report and the following main
points were highlighted:
- The policy was a statutory
requirement under the Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS)
regulation and set out how the Council would apply certain
discretionary powers relating to pensions;
- The policy had been developed by
PSPS and had been considered by the Readers’ Panel, including
officers and trade union representatives, as well as by the Policy
Development Panel; and
- Approval of the policy would
strengthen consistency across the partnership, safeguard
compliance, and provide a fair and transparent approach to
pension-related decisions.
Members queried the meaning of
‘mandatory’ within the ‘discretionary’
policy. The Head of HR and Organisational Development explained
that certain matters were classed as mandatory discretions under
the LGPS framework and must be included in the Council’s
policy.
DECISION:
That the HR policy (Pensions and Pensions
Discretions Policy) be approved.
36 Review of HR Policies
PDF 187 KB
To seek Policy Development Panel’s views
on the proposed HR policy (Pensions & Pensions Discretions
Policy) prior to report to Council (report of the Assistant
Director – Corporate enclosed).
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Consideration was given to the report of the
Assistant Director – Corporate which sought Policy
Development Panel’s proposed HR policy (Pensions &
Pensions Discretions Policy) prior to report to Council.
The Group Manager – Organisational
Development presented the report and highlighted that:
- The policy aimed to ensure legal
compliance, reflect best practice, and support consistent workforce
management both within South Holland District Council and across
the South & East Lincolnshire Councils Partnership.
- The Local Government Pension Scheme
(LGPS) required the Council to publish and maintain a clear
statement on how it applied certain employer discretions. The
policy set out the Council’s approach, balancing flexibility
for employees with financial prudence.
- A case-by-case approach for areas
such as flexible retirement and actuarial reductions, allowed the
Council to support staff appropriately while managing cost
exposure.
- Alignment across the Partnership to
simplify administration and ensure consistency.
- Endorsement of the policy by a
Readers Panel, which included officers, trade union representatives
(local and regional), and the Senior Leadership Team.
Members considered the report and made the
following comments:
- Members acknowledged the complexity
of the policy and its importance in ensuring clarity and fairness
for staff.
- Members asked about the broader
review of local government pension schemes and whether
administrative amalgamation was being considered.
- The Head of HR and Organisational
Development confirmed that while discussions had taken place, any
changes would require legislative reform. The current policy
aligned mandatory discretions across the three councils.
- A question was raised about the
percentage of pension funds invested in the UK and its impact on
funding schemes.
- The Head of HR and Organisational
Development explained that each council retained its own fund,
which was part of a wider pooled arrangement. The triennial review
was ongoing, and performance was currently satisfactory, with
outputs expected between September and February.
- Members asked whether the policy
directly affected staff and how it was being communicated.
- The Head of HR and Organisational
Development clarified that while the discretionary elements were
technical, the main policy would be published, and senior managers
would ensure staff understood its relevance.
- A question was posed about changes
from the previous version.
- The Head of HR and Organisational
Development noted that South Holland had not previously had a
formal pensions policy. The new document clarified what was
changing and what remained the same and had been developed with
input from experts and other councils.
- Members queried the “85-year
rule”.
- The Head of HR and Organisational
Development explained that this rule allowed for retirement without
actuarial reduction if the sum of an employee’s age and years
of service equalled 85. The policy allowed flexibility to switch
this provision on or off depending on individual
circumstances.
Councillor M Le
Sage left the meeting at 19.42pm.
AGREED:
That following consideration of the Policy, the comments and
feedback of the Panel be noted.