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First solvent schemes taken in to FAS

11th March 2008 Print
Around 4,000 people who lost savings when their pension schemes were wound up by solvent companies will be potentially eligible for financial help from a Government scheme.

Mike O'Brien, Minister for Pensions Reform, has announced the first six pension schemes backed by solvent employers to be admitted into the Financial Assistance Scheme (FAS). The FAS tops up the pensions of people belonging to schemes wound-up under-funded. But, previously, all schemes eligible for the FAS had been sponsored by companies which went bust.

The companies are building materials supplier Expamet, whose pension scheme has 1,233 members based mainly in the Hartlepool area; Fredk H Burgess, a Shrewsbury based agricultural machinery retailer with outlets nationally and scheme members in Staffordshire, Shropshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire (1,128 members); car battery maker Lucas Yuasa, which formerly had a factory in Sparkhill, Birmingham, with pension scheme members in that area (747 members); Dragon Cosmetics, in Maesteg Mid-Glamorgan (450 members); industrial textile manufacturer J & D Wilkie, in Kirriemuir, Angus (366 members); and Norman Butcher, an insurance company based in Bromley, Kent (140 members).

Mike O'Brien said: "It's very worrying for people when their final salary pension winds up under-funded and they don't know how much of their pension they will receive.

"In rarer cases this can happen where the company continues trading, so I'm pleased that these six schemes have now qualified for the FAS

- guaranteeing them a significant proportion of the pension they had worked hard for, broadly comparable to compensation paid by the Pensions Protection Fund (PPF).

"We have just published regulations to extend the FAS to allow people to receive 90 per cent of their pension from their normal scheme retirement age. And later this year we intend to bring forward legislation to admit more schemes with solvent employers into the FAS."

The next step is for the FAS operational unit to work with the trustees of the six schemes to obtain information as quickly as possible on members who may be potentially eligible for payment to enable the FAS unit to make assessments and start making payments.

The Government announced in December, last year, that up to 140,000 people who lost their pensions would be eligible for FAS help.

Regulations to increase FAS payments to 90 per cent, payable from normal scheme retirement age (subject to a lower age limit of 60) were published last week. A shorter, two-week written consultation period has been agreed with opposition parties and stakeholders in order to fast-track the regulations. The FAS unit should be in a position to start making payments at 90 per cent of accrued pension from the end of May.