Ex-gratia pension payments upped

The Cayman Islands government has increased payments made to Caymanian retirees who did not receive any pension upon leaving government posts.

The issue involves ex-gratia pension payments, made to reward the public service of Caymanians who worked in government for more than four years but did not become eligible for a pension or other equivalent allowances.

The pension regulations grant payments of $200 per month for those with between four and 10 years of government service, and $300 per month for more than 10 years of service.

Those payments were increased on 15 December from $200 to $300 per month and $300 to $450 per month, respectively.

The larger payments will cost government an additional $300,000 per year to provide.

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“The status quo simply wasn’t any longer justifiable,” said Deputy Governor Donovan Ebanks.

“No Caymanian is going to be able to provide for themselves in retirement based on $200 per month or $300 per month.”

The problem that led to the need for granting ex-gratia pensions was dealt with more than a decade ago by enacting the requirement that all government workers receive a pension for their service, Mr. Ebanks said.

“Everyone who has been employed by the Cayman Islands government since the dawn of this new century accrues a pension entitlement and, thus, cannot accrue an ex-gratia pension entitlement, too,” he said. “But we have to do what is right by those Caymanians who toiled before we had that universal pension benefit.”

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