Shesastute
New Member
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- 5
I am now paying the correct contributions along with my notional service, and now need to set up some sort of repayment. I don't have a lot of faith that, even if I arrange to pay this back, and get reassurances from my pension provider and the NSSO, that I won't be dealing with further issues when I retire.But you're not "paying it back", you're paying it for the first time, in exchange for a future (pension) benefit!
Is your payroll now set up for the correct pension deduction, or is the problem ongoing?
You're correct that 'paying it back' was the wrong term to use, and that according to the circulars around pensions that it is my liability to ensure my pension contributions payments are correct. However, I believe that there is, or should be, a liability with the organisations mentioned that didn't fix the problem at each opportunity the issue came to light, for example when I opened a case about it with the NSSO. I am now being asked to pay for 23 years of non-payment of contributions over the course of 8 years. Life goes on as normal for the organisations and the experts working in them, who created this mess.
I really appreciate you taking the time to outline the options and breakdown of the missing contributions. I'll be arranging to pay some of the missing contributions now (as much as I can afford anyway).This will sound harsh but you had the opportunity at any point over the last 25 years to cop the error yourself and mitigate your own liability. All you had to really do was ask the question why your pension contributions had been cut in half despite getting promoted and getting a pay bump. On top of that you haven't actually lost anything. You have in fact received an interest free loan from the taxpayer for 25 years of pension contributions, the gross of which is probably worth at least 25% over & above what you will now need to pay considering the impact of inflation. On top of that, unless you were a top rate taxpayer all the time, you're probably also benefitting from more tax relief that you would have gotten at the time the the contributions.
You are in fact well ahead of the game.
To be fair though, I don't feel ahead of the game. There are many factors and circumstances around the time I moved to DoF, which I haven't outlined here, that lead me not to spot this error. I do intend to bring a case to the FSPO in due course.
To be fair to the union rep, perhaps it was too early on as I had only discovered the extent of the missing contributions. I have now contacted the head honcho for the Civil Service division, and I'll see if I get any traction there.OP must first exhaust all internal avenues of complaint before the FSPO will even look at the case. Although might we have an issue of self-investigation here, different desks in Finance as an organisation?
Amazed and disappointed at the union reps response. Try to stop paying union dues and see what happens.