Journalists
have noticed that the much-discussed public sector exit payment cap is not
yet in force. It has certainly been a long time coming, but perhaps the journalists
haven’t been paying attention over the past five years.
The Tories
promised this change in 2015 (when they introduced enabling primary legislation
in the Small Business, Enterprise and
Employment Act 2015.)
This led to consultation
on draft Regulations in 2016 – and to a flurry
of exits by those who were trying to avert the impending cap. I blogged
at the time about how, in local government at least, the cap could hit
those who were very
far from being “fat cats.”
The application
of the exit payment cap to long serving members of the Local Government Pension
Scheme would deny (for example) social workers made redundant above the age of
55 access to an unreduced pension (which has been promised to those workers, in
those circumstances for many years).
When Theresa
May’s “strong and stable” Government called a General Election in 2017 they
scuppered their own plan as far as the exit payment cap was concerned.
An attention-seeking
Tory backbencher then introduced a
Private Member’s Bill to purse the same agenda, but that also got nowhere.
When it found
time again, the Government consulted
afresh on new
legislative proposals between April and July of last year. The response to
consultation has been awaited now for almost eight months.
In response to this
week’s coverage in The Times the Government have apparently now confirmed
that they will be responding to the consultation soon. We can anticipate that
they won’t have listened to sensible arguments against what they want to do.
UNISON’s 2019 Local
Government Conference agreed
to renew opposition to this attack upon our members – and our local
government employers, the Local Government Association spelt out the damaging
implications of the Government proposals in their
response to consulation.
Writing as
someone whose recent redundancy would have been so much more harmful if the
exit payment cap (as proposed) had been in force, I hope that our trade unions
will continue to expose and oppose this pernicious attack upon public servants.
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