Government to rethink rejection of Waspi compensation

Government to rethink rejection of Waspi compensation

7 hours ago Share Save Kevin Peachey Cost of living correspondent Share Save

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A decision to reject compensation for women hit by changes to the state pension age will be reconsidered by the government. Campaigners say 3.6 million women born in the 1950s were not properly informed of the rise in state pension age to bring them into line with men. Last year, the government apologised for a 28-month delay in sending letters, but rejected any kind of financial payouts. A document was not shown to Liz Kendall, who was Work and Pensions Secretary at the time of the decision, but had since come to light and needed to be considered, the government has now said. There is no guarantee any payout will be made, but campaigners said the move was a major step forward.

Current Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden told the Commons that retaking the decision would not automatically lead to compensation. "Retaking this decision should not be taken as an indication that government will necessarily decide that it should award financial redress," he said. The undisclosed evidence involved was a survey from 2007, and McFadden said that checks would be made to ensure other documents and surveys had not been missed. No timescale has been given for the work to be done. "I understand that people are impatient for this matter to be resolved," he said. "It is important that we give it full and appropriate consideration." Angela Madden, who chairs Women Against State Pension Inequality (Waspi), said: "The government now knows it got it wrong and we are pleased they are now trying to do it properly. "We hope they also try to do it quickly." She added that the "only correct thing to do" was to compensate those affected immediately.

Compensation recommended

Early last year, a parliamentary ombudsman recommended compensation of between ?1,000 and ?2,950 for each of those affected. While the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO) could recommend compensation, it could not enforce it and the government rejected it. Ministers said there was no evidence of "direct financial loss" resulting from the government's decision, and that Labour did not believe that paying a flat rate to all women at a cost of up to ?10.5bn would be "fair or proportionate" to taxpayers. The Waspi campaign had called for payments of at least ?10,000 each. It is pursuing a judicial review of the government's decision not to pay compensation. Campaigners raised money for the legal challenge and a court capped the contribution to the government's legal fees if they were unsuccessful. The case was scheduled to go to the High Court in December. The government has now informed the court of its latest decision.