1978 No. 232
The Shipbuilding Industry (Pension Schemes) Regulations 1978
Made
Laid before Parliament
Coming into Operation
The Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred on him by section 49(4) and (11) of the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977, hereby makes the following Regulations:—
Citation, commencement and interpretation1
1
These Regulations may be cited as the Shipbuilding Industry (Pension Schemes) Regulations 1978 and shall come into operation on 20th March 1978.
2
In these Regulations—
“the Act” means the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977;
“actuary” has the meaning assigned to it by regulation 2 below;
“the Corporation” means British Shipbuilders;
“the Corporation's part”, “divided pension scheme” and “the holding company's part” have the meanings respectively assigned to them by regulation 2 below;
3
The Interpretation Act 1889 shall apply for the interpretation of these Regulations as it applies for the interpretation of an Act of Parliament.
Divided pension schemes2
1
The following provisions of this regulation shall apply to a pension scheme (hereinafter called “a divided pension scheme”) to which both the conditions specified in paragraph (2) below apply.
2
The conditions referred to in paragraph (1) above are—
a
that the scheme is a scheme established or administered by a holding company for providing pensions to or in respect of persons who are or have been employees of the holding company or of wholly owned subsidiaries of the holding company, some but not all of which subsidiaries became wholly owned subsidiaries of the Corporation on 1 July 1977; and
b
that the assets of the scheme are vested in trustees appointed in accordance with its provisions.
3
A divided pension scheme shall be deemed in all respects to be, and shall be administered as, two separate pension schemes, being as to one part a scheme for providing pensions to or in respect of persons who are or have been employees of the wholly owned subsidiaries of the holding company which became wholly owned subsidiaries of the Corporation on 1 July 1977 (hereinafter called “the Corporation's part”), and as to the other part a scheme for providing pensions to or in respect of persons who are or have been employees of the holding company or of the other wholly owned subsidiaries of the holding company (hereinafter called “the holding company's part”).
4
As soon as practicable the assets and liabilities as at 1 July 1977 of every divided pension scheme shall be apportioned between the Corporation's part and the holding company's part, and every such apportionment shall, in default of agreement between the parties, be determined by an actuary appointed by the Secretary of State.
5
For the purposes of this regulation the expression “actuary” means a person who holds the diploma of Fellowship of the Institute of Actuaries or of the Faculty of Actuaries in Scotland.
6
The part of such assets as aforesaid apportioned to the Corporation's part shall be transferred to the trustees of that part appointed as mentioned in paragraph (7) below, and the part of such liabilities as aforesaid apportioned to that part shall have effect as against the trustees of it.
7
Trustees of the Corporation's part shall be appointed in accordance with the provisions of the scheme as soon as practicable; the existing trustees shall, until such appointment, continue to act in respect of both the Corporation's part and the holding company's part.
8
Where any policy of assurance forms part of the assets of the scheme and the benefits and liabilities thereunder have been apportioned as aforesaid the assurer shall amend the policy so that it will relate solely to the benefits and liabilities apportioned to the holding company's part and shall issue in favour of the trustees of the Corporation's part another policy to provide for the benefits and liabilities apportioned to that part.
9
In relation to the Corporation's part the provisions of a divided pension scheme shall have effect as if references to the Corporation were substituted for references to the holding company.
Modification of pension schemes3
1
The following provisions of this regulation shall apply to any pension scheme for providing pensions to or in respect of employees or past employees of a company which has become a wholly owned subsidiary of the Corporation.
2
For the purposes of any pension scheme to which this regulation applies—
a
the service of any person as a full-time member of the Corporation, being a person who was subject to such a scheme when he became such a member, may be treated as if it were service as an employee of the Corporation; and
b
the service of any person as an employee of the Corporation or of a wholly owned subsidiary of the Corporation may be treated as if it were service as an employee of a wholly owned subsidiary of the Corporation which he previously served as an employee.
3
Where a pension scheme to which this regulation applies provides that any description of benefit may, or may in particular circumstances, be conferred on a person only at the request or with the consent of the wholly owned subsidiary concerned, or the Corporation as the case may be, no such request shall be entertained or consent given in the case of a benefit for or in respect of a member of the Corporation without the prior approval of the Minister for the Civil Service and the Secretary of State.