Tag: pension

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    OZEGBE: My name is Ozegbe. I am from Delta State. I retired on October 15, 2006 as a senior foreman (carpenter) on grade level 7 Step 8. I did my capturing in 2016. My problem is the non-payment of my federal share since 2006 till date. Thanks.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    ORSHIO: My complaint is the non-payment of my late father’s pension entitlement by the Nigeria Police Pension Board. I am a registered next of kin to the late Inspector Samuel Adem, who died on October 2010. He retired from Nigeria Police on June 30, 2004, but did not receive pension. I underwent several verification to enable me collect his entitlement, but no fulfillment till date.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    YUSUF: I am a CIPPO pensioner under PTAD. I forwarded my application  last November 7 to PTAD seeking review of my computation on gratuity and pension. But till date, there is no reply from PTAD.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    SADIQ: I am Sadiq, a retiree of NICON Insurance, where in October 1990. I attended PTAD verification last October. I am told that others are paid while I have not been paid. They said my name was not forwarded to them.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    SAMSON: My name is Samson. I am an Ondo State pensioner with federal share. I was verified by PTAD during the last exercise and captured into their scheme. My financial benefit was supposed to start from January 1, 2002. To my surprise, when I received bank alert for the payment, PTAD only paid me pension for March, April and May 2018. Please when am I going to receive the arrears of my pensions starting from January 1, 2002 ? Please I am dying.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    FLORENCE:  Please how far have you gone with my case about pension cut since last May and the non-payment of federal gratuity since my retirement in 2005. Please I need a solution. Florence.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    TUNDE: Dear Omobola, greetings. I am Tunde. I am a retired professor from University of Ibadan(UI). I retired in January 2008 and have satisfied all requirements to be paid my benefits. I have been cleared by UI and I have been at my PFA. I was told that they were awaiting PenCom’s approval. I have been without any income six months after 43 years of meritorious service. This is no joke. Please help me.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting your PFA and PenCom to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    OGUNTOLA:Dear Omobola, I am a staff member of Federal Ministry of Works and Housing Lagos. I have not been paid my pension salary for April and May, this year. Kindly help me out of this problem, save me from anger. Thank you.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting your PFA and PenCom to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

  • Retired policemen accuse PENCOM of mishandling of pension

    Retired policemen have accused the Pension Commission of Nigeria (PENCOM) of alleged  mishandling of their pension.

    The retired police officers who retired from service between May last year and this year have called on the federal  government  to intervene on the matter.

    The retired police officers said that while none of them including  those who had retired since last year were yet to be paid any money from their contributory pension scheme,  the PENCOM had decided to reduced by half the lump sum it ought to pay them.

    The retirees who disclosed that while still waiting to be paid, many of them had  died of starvation, fallen sick or incured a lot of debt said the about N1.5m which the PENCOM wanted to pay them as lump sum would  be too meagre to meet their needs.

    The retirees told reporters at the weekend in Ilorin,  Kwara  state,  wondered why the pension commission would decide to pay, as lump sum, 25- 30 per cent of their pension when it was, as they claimed, paying  53 per cent to their predecessors.

    ASP Samuel Anzo (rd) who spoke on behalf of the people said the PENCOM did not consult them or give them any consent form for them to fill as agreeing to the reduction before it carried out the arrangement.

    The spokesman described the new arrangement as bad as he alleged that PENCOM deliberately did it to achieve a selfish purpose at the expense of the retirees.

    He said.: “The order which has been sent to all the 21 pension administrators in Nigeria is too bad. It is wickedness because who knows who among the retirees could live long enough to maximally benign the piecemeal payment of the remaining pension. PENCOM want to use, for their investment, the money the pensioners suffered to save compulsorily during their service year and which they hoped to enjoy immediately  after they retire.”

    Anzo  who said they would not collect the money except it is at least 50 per cent of their pension  entitlement called on the federal  government Labour union and other relevant organisation to prevail on the PENCOM  to rescind its decision.

    “We use this medium to  draw the attention of President  Muhammad Buhari,  the Senate and the House of Representatives, Nigeria Labour Congress and all relevant Human Right offices and activist to urgently come to our aid on this issue as PENCOM has finally ordered to pay us peanuts money that could not pay our outstanding debts and pain we have suffered  for.

    “We,  the retirees under the contributory pension commission  of Nigeria and all the 21 Pension Fund Administration (PFA)  hereby want the Federal Government  and all other powerful authorities mentioned above to prevail on the PENCOM not to implement such unjust recent order as it will cause more serious injuries to our lives,” he said.

  • Lagos pays N9.3bn as pension in 1 yr.

    The Lagos State Government said on Friday that it paid N9.3 billion as pension to 2,466 retirees in the state, between May 2017 and March 2018.

    Dr Akintola Benson-Oke, the state Commissioner for Establishment, Training and Pensions, said this at the 2018 Ministerial Press Briefing, to mark the present administration’s three years in office.

    “The state government, through the Lagos State Pension Commission (LASPEC), paid the sum of N9.3 billion into the Retirement Savings Account (RSA) of 2,466 public retirees, within the last one year.

    “From August 2015 to date, the sum of N35.92 billion has been paid into the RSA of 8,731 retirees, deceased and withdrawn staff.

    “There has been continued significant reduction in outstanding backlog of terminal entitlements of retired public servants,” he said.

    Benson-Oke said that the Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode led-administration commenced and maintained the trend of paying terminal entitlements of retired employees monthly, since August 2015.

    “The ministry will continue to sensitise retirees on activities of pension fraudsters so that they will get their entitlements without hitch,” he said.

    The commissioner said that the ministry would distribute welfare packages to no fewer than 8, 000 pensioners aged 70 and above this year.

    On the payment of death benefit, he said that 80 beneficiaries of deceased employees in the state were paid N220.7 million within the period.

    The commissioner said that the state’s Public Service Staff Development Centre trained 3, 737 officers in the last one year.

    He said the training provided solutions to problems on human capacity through learning and development initiatives, using technology-driven resources.

    “The essence is not only for self-development, but for the skills and knowledge acquired to be deployed on the job for impactful service delivery to teeming populace of Lagos State,” he said.

    Benson-Oke commended the 17 labour unions in the state public service for supporting government in creating a safe, conflict-free and productive workplace.

    “It is historic to note that in the last three years, this administration has not witnessed any form of crisis, protests or agitations by labour unions,” he added.

    He said the unions’ National Joint Negotiating Council met and interacted with government four times yearly to take decisions on issues pertaining to workers’ welfare and promote industrial harmony.

    Benson-Oke promised that the ministry would continue to intensify efforts towards motivating and training the civil servants for better service delivery and protection of interest of residents of the state.

    NAN

     

  • PenCom recovers N1.34bn pension in third quarter of 2017

    PenCom recovers N1.34bn pension in third quarter of 2017

    The National Pension Commission ( PenCom ) has recovered pension contributions and interest totaling N1.34billion from defaulting employers during the third quarter of 2017.

    The Commission in its 2017 third quarter report posted on its website said it used 55 consultants as recovery agents to get back the outstanding pension contributions and penalties from the defaulting employers.

    PenCom said the affected employers were issued with appropriate notice to remit the outstanding pension contributions.

    “During the quarter, the sum of N1.34 billion was recovered, this brings the total recoveries made since inception of the Recovery Agents’ activities in 2012 to N13.58 billion,” it stated.

    On Pension contributions within the period, it indicates that the total monthly pension contribution by contributors from the public and private sectors into their Retirement Saving Accounts ( RSA ) was N4.38 trillion.

    This, it said showed an increase of N135.22 billion representing 3.18 per cent over the total contributions as at the end of the previous quarter.

    According to the report, the aggregate total contribution shows that the public sector contributed 51.34 per cent, while the private sector contributed the remaining 48.64 per cent.

    It, however, pointed out that during the quarter under review; the public sector contributed 40.87 per cent of the total contributions received while the private sector contributed 59.13 per cent.

    It further revealed that the aggregate total pension contribution of the private sector increased from N2.05 trillion as at second quarter of 2017 to N2.13 trillion as at third quarter of 2017, representing a growth of 3.89 per cent.

    Also, the aggregate total pension contribution by the public sector grew by 2.52 per cent from N2.20 trillion to N2.25 trillion over the same period.

    The statement noted that the commission continued the ongoing refund of contributions made by military and other security service agencies personnel exempted from the contributory pension scheme.

    It added that during the quarter under review, the department responsible for military pensions processed 254 applications for the refund.

    PenCom said N39.83 million was refunded to the contributors while the sum of N127.13 million, representing contributions made by the Federal Government on their behalf was returned to the contributory pension account.

    The statement also indicated that 27 state governments have enacted laws to implement the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) as at the third quarter of 2017, while eight states were currently in the process of implementing the CPS law.

    The report revealed that Yobe was, however, yet to commence the process of enacting a law on the CPS.

    NAN

  • Saraki to Houses of Assembly: emulate Kwara on pension to ex-officeholders

    Saraki to Houses of Assembly: emulate Kwara on pension to ex-officeholders

    SENATE President Bukola Saraki has urged Houses of Assembly in other states to emulate the Kwara State House of Assembly by passing bills to stop the bleeding of public treasuries in the guise of pension payments to former political office holders.

    The bill stopping the payment of pension to former governors and their deputies in Kwara State was passed by the House of Assembly last Tuesday, ending controversies that the Senate President was earning salaries from two sources.

    In a statement, Saraki hailed the Speaker of the Assembly, Ali Ahmad, for working to ensure the expeditious passage of the bill.

    Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed is expected to sign the Bill into law.

    When signed into law, former governors and former deputies would no longer earn salaries from the state government whenever they are holding political and public offices.

    The statement by Saraki reads: “I am pleased that following my conversation with Kwara Speaker, Ali Ahmad, two months ago, the bill to suspend the payment of pension to former governors and their deputies when they hold a political or public office was passed by the Kwara House of Assembly.”

    Saraki, who was governor between 2003 and 2011, has since been serving as a senator representing Kwara Central.

    The payment of salaries for life to some former governors after leaving office drew flaks from a cross-section of Nigerians.

    It is expected that other former governors now holding public offices, especially those in the National Assembly, would take steps to have their salaries put on the hold by their various states.

    Some serving senators once served as former governors and deputy governors of their states.

    The onetime governors are: Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso (Kano); Kabiru Gaya (Kano); Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom); Theodore Orji (Abia); Abdullahi Adamu (Nasarawa); Sam Egwu (Ebonyi); Shaaba Lafiagi (Kwara); Joshua Dariye (Plateau) and Jonah Jang (Plateau).

    Others are: Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko (Sokoto); Ahmed Sani Yarima (Zamfara); Danjuma Goje (Gombe); Bukar Abba Ibrahim (Yobe); Adamu Aliero (Kebbi) and George Akume (Benue).

    The former deputy governors are: senators Abiodun Olujimi (Ekiti), Enyinaya Abaribe (Abia) and Danladi Abubakar Sani, who once served as the acting governor of Taraba.

    Others who serve as ministers are: Labour & Productivity Minister Chris Ngige (Anambra); Minister of Mines & Steel Development Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti); Transport Minister Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers); Power, Works & Housing Babatunde Fashola (Lagos).

    The pension law in Akwa Ibom State provides monthly pensions for former governor governors and former deputies salaries that are equivalent to their successors.

    In many of the states, former governors are entitled to official accommodation in the state capitals, official cars, free overseas’ medical treatments for them and members of their families as well as security details and personal staff.

     

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    RUMIN: My complaint is non-payment of my late father’s gratuity from police pension. I am the son and next of kin to the late Inspector Akpagher, who died in June 2005. Since then I have not received a kobo as his pension benefits. I followed due process by attending all verification exercises where I provided all neccessary documents and information. But I am yet to receive my late father’s gratuity payment. I am, therefore, appealing to the authority concerned to consider my plight and assist me in getting my late father’s gratuity.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Rumin, please we require more documents from you to enable us determine the pension scheme of your late father. Kindly send us the letter of enlistment into the Nigeria Police Force. Kindly email the above document to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng

     

    IGBO: I retired in 1994. My Federal Pension as at October 2010 was N13, 866. It was cut down to N4,164.00 after a lump sum of N309,000 was paid in December 2012. My pension complaint appeared in The Nation newspaper of Wednesday 13/12/2017. I have made the documents you requested available to the commission more than 10 times. I have made two personal representations at the commission. I was not told what was wrong only to wait since 2010. I was present at the verification exercise in Owerri, Imo State in 2015, yet the delay continues and I continue to suffer. The documents are all there in your office.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Igbo, we have reviewed all the documents submitted following verification and your monthly pension has been re-computed. Payment will be made as soon as funds are released for that purpose. We apologise for the delay.

     

    OWARI: I am an aggrieved man. I retired from para-military Custom Marine department. I was employed in November 27, 1974 and retired in January 1, 2004. I am sending this short message service (sms) to remind the PTAD of the non-payment of my pension. My complain is that since January 1, 2004 till date my pension subsistence allowance from the sinking fund both arrears and regular monthly payment have not been paid to me. I have been verified and captured on April 14, 2014 at (CIPO), Gwagwalada, Abuja. An official issued me my capturing number. Since then nothing has been done till date. Besides, I was also verified and captured at PTAD) where I was also issued with pensioner’s verification acknowledgement form of personal data pensioner number. Please help me. I need my entitlements.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Owari, please be informed that your gratuity was paid to you by the defunct CIPPO in 2008 while arrears of monthly pension from retirement January 2007 to February 2017 was paid in March 2017 by PTAD and pay rolled immediately. For more information call 09-462-1700 or log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

     

    BABATUNDE:   I retired from NIPOST in July 23, 2005. My contribution in the Contributory Pension Scheme was up to N46,338.92 of which I have applied for, up till now, I am yet to be paid. My pay slip photocopies were forwarded to PTAD in Abuja.

    PTAD: Kindly be informed PTAD does not manage pensioners under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). Please forward the following documents to determine if infact you are a PTAD pensioner; Letter of first appointment, letter of last promotion and letter of retirement. Kindly email the above documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng You can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed. For more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

     

    OSAM: My fa              ther died since July 10, 2005. He served last at Police Mobile Force 26 Uyo, as a police inspector. His name is Okimba. I did all that was required of me for his gratuity to be paid in 2006, but it proved abortive. Later in march 2015, I took part in the second police pension verification exercise and did image capturing at the PTAD Maitama, Abuja, where all necessary documents were successfully submitted as required by the screening committee as the next of kin. But  till date, no payment has been made. Please help me out of this distress.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Osam, kindly note that your late father joined the Nigeria Police Force on 1st March, 1977 but died on 10th July, 2005. In  line with the Pension Reform Act of 2004 as amended, the late Inspector Okimba falls under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) managed by the National Pension Commission (PenCom). You are, therefore, advised to approach late Inspector Okimba’s Pension Fund Administrators and PenCom to claim the accrued pension benefits of the late Inspector Okimba.

     

    DIOKA: My old mother,  Elizabeth, who retired as aprimary school teacher in 1984 (Imo State), is being paid a monthly pension of less than N3000. Can you believe it? What can N3000 purchase in Nigeria today? The pension is not even regular. It sometimes comes only when the Paris Club Fund is paid to states. Please, could you press it on the government of today to do a comprehensive review of the pension law, especially to make state governments  set up pension commissions in their states? Thank you. Chukwuma Dioka, Imo state.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Dioka, Please be informed that your mother is NOT a PTAD Pensioner, as primary school teachers are not under PTAD. She should kindly meet her state pension office to resolve her complaint. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

     

    ADEGOKE: I retired from customs in 2007. I want to know when pension issue of 20.37% being balance of 53.37% year 2010 pension increase arrears from July 2010 to date will be addressed and cleared. Arrears of 33% out of the 53.37% pension increase of July 2010 have been defrayed by PTAD in year 2016, leaving the balance of 20.37% arrears from July 2010 to date unpaid. what is responsible for the non-payment? could it be as a result of budgetary constraints? What has scaled down to pensioners disadvantage the year 2010 pension increase from 53.37% to 33%? Has arrangement reached advanced stage towards payment of the 20.37% arrears and when will it be paid? Please PTAD pay pensioners this arrears of 20.37% from July 2010 to date to put smile on our faces, or explain lucidly the true and proper position of this matter to us. Thanks.

    PTAD: In 2014, the Federal Government approved an increment in pensions of the 33% pension payment increase, effective July 2010, and PTAD has paid customs increment in full. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

     

  • Pension complaints and solutions (Part 3)

    A NONYMOUS: I am a retired 63-year-old military pensioner. I am sending this text in respect of Akinsoto comment in The Nation newspaper Friday June 2, 2017 page 46. Akinsoto also a NIPOST pensioner where he emphasised that our military and para military colleagues were paid there 33 per cent increment arrears at once not in dribs and drabs like that of NIPOST. I want Akinsoto to know that it is not true that military pensioner paid our 33 per cent at once. Out of the 53 per cent that we are being owed, 33 per cent arrears is paid to us in two quarterly payment as of 2015. The payment of that, according to government, is expected to finish will finish this year. For God sake, a person who is expecting to be paid N276,000 at once is being paid twice quarterly (in dribs and drabs). Can the money do a reasonable project? What kind of country are we in. I have never seen where arrears is being  paid quarterly. We kept sending text message to the military pension board asking questions but no response. We serve our country Nigeria with truthfulness and faithfulness but we do not have the strength to till a soil. We are getting frustrated but we believe that God will intervene in our case and all our entitlements will be paid at once.

    PTAD:The pensioner is a military pensioner and not a pensioner eligible under the Defined Benefit Scheme, DBS. With regards to the 33 per cent pension arrears, the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate recently paid an instalment owed to some of its pensioners. The categories affected are Police, Civil Service and Parastatal Pensioners. All pensioners under the Customs, Immigration and Prisons Pensions Department had already been paid the 33 per cent arrears in full since September 2016. The latest payment was made from the Service Wide Vote released two weeks ago by the Federal Ministry of Finance (FMF). PTAD assures that all outstanding arrears of the 33 per cent increment will be settled as soon as additional releases are made.

    EBONG: Dear Sir, your column in The Nation newspaper of Wednesday July 5  is earnestly assisting pensioners. My name is Ebong. I attended a verification exercise in Uyo Akwa Ibom State on February 7, 2017. My complaints is non harmonisation and short payment of my pensions. I submitted all the required documents for scanning. Please kindly help me so that my arrears can be paid to enable me cope in this recession period. My pension is paid up to date. Thank you.

    PTAD: Your monthly pension has been harmonised and we recently paid six months of 33 per cent arrears, the balance of 12 months will be paid subject to availability of funds.

    MAYALEEKE: My federal pension under the old scheme has been stopped since June 2010. I received my last pension under the old scheme from the Federal Government in May 2010. They paid me N8,748,90, per month without any increment of the past years. My name is Mayaleeke. My friend, Folajuwon has the same problem. All effort so far has failed. Kindly help.

    PTAD: Mr. Folajuwon and Mr. Mayaleeke should forward their verification print-out and bank-statements from Jan, 2010 to date to enable us ascertain their claim.

    ADACHI: I am Solomon Adachi. My dad died since 2007 while with the Nigerian Police Force. I was verified since 2014 but up till now, I have not been paid.

    PTAD: Mr. Adachi should please visit our Head Office for the Next-of-Kin interview.

    MRS OLUYEMISI: My name is Mrs Oluyemisi, from Osun State. I retired in July 2015 and I am yet to be paid my benefits. My question is that with two years salary arrears, is it going to be deducted from the lump sum to be given to us, by our PFA.

    PENCOM: Good day Ma’am. Please give us more details in a clearer form, to enable us to assist you with your complaint. What kind of arrears do you mean? Promotion, salary arrears or arrears accumulated due to unpaid salaries? Also provide us with details of your place of employment, PIN and PFA. Thank you.

    ANONYMOUS: I have double pin no. What can I do?

    PENCOM: Good day Sir. Please write a formal complaint of this to the commission, addressing it to the National Pension Commission, Plot 174 Adetokunbo Ademola Crescent, Wuse II, Abuja. Please make sure to attach evidence of registration with both Pension Fund Administrators. Thank you.

    ANONYMOUS: Good day, please we need help. We retired, from the Federal Civil Service. Some of us retired between 2013 and 2017 respectively. We have not received any pension or gratuity. Some of us have died of frustration, while some are sick. We don’t have proper food to eat and we cannot send our children to school and meet other basic needs of life. Thanks. I want to remain Anonymity.

    PENCOM: Sir, please provide us with your PIN, place of employment, dates of employment and of retirement; for us to ascertain the status of your benefits. Thank you.

     

  • Pension complaints and solutions (Part 2)

    OSAM: Dear Omobola, my father died since  July 10, 2005. He served last at Police Mobile Force 26 Uyo, Akwa Ibom State  as a police inspector . His name is Okimba. I did all that was required of me for his gratuity to be paid in 2006, but there was positive response.  Later in March 2015, I underwent the second police pension verification exercise and did image capturing at PTAD Maitama Abuja where all necessary documents were successfully submitted as required by screening committee as the next of kin. But up till date no payment. Please help me out of this distress.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Osam, kindly note that your late father joined the Nigeria Police Force on March 1, 1977 but died on July 10, 2005. In line with the Pension Reform Act of 2004 as amended, late Inspector Okimba falls under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) managed by the National Pension Commission (PenCom). You are therefore advised to approach late Inspector Okimba’s Pension Fund Administrators and PenCom to claim the accrued pension benefits of late Inspector Okimba.

    OWARI: I am an aggrieved man. I retired from paramilitary Custom Marine Department. I was employed on November 27, 1974 and retired on January 1, 2004. I am sending this sms to remind PTAD of the non-payment of my pension. My complaint is that, since January 1, 2004 till date my pension subsistence allowance from the sinking fund both arrears and regular monthly payment has not been paid. I have been verified and captured on April 14, 2014 at (CIPO) Gwagwalada Abuja by an official who issued me my capturing number. And since then nothing has been done till date. Besides, I was also verified and captured at pension transitional arrangement directorate where I was  issued with pensioner’s verification acknowledgement form of personal data pensioner number. Please help me. I need my entitlements.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Owari, please be informed your gratuity was paid to you by the defunct CIPPO in 2008 while arrears of monthly pension from retirement January 2007 to February 2017 was paid in March 2017 by PTAD and pay rolled immediately. For more information call 09-462-1700 or log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

    RUMIN: My complaint is non-payment of my late father’s gratuity, from police pension. I am the son and next of kin to late Inspector Akpagher who died in June 2005. Since then, I have not received a kobo as his pension benefits. I followed due process by attending all verification exercise where I provided all documents and information necessary but I am yet to receive my late father’s gratuity payment. I am therefore appealing to the authority concerned to consider my plight and assist me to receive my late father’s gratuity.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Rumin, please we require more documents from you to enable us determine the pension scheme of your late father. Kindly send us the letter of enlistment into the Nigeria Police Force. Kindly email the above document to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng

    IGBO: I retired in 1994. My federal pension as at October 2010 was N13, 866. It was cut down to N4,164.00 after a lump sum payment of N309,000 in December 2012. My pension complaint appeared in the nation newspaper. Wednesday 13/12/2017. I have made the documents you requested available to the commission more than 10 times. I have made two personal representations at the commission. I was not told what was wrong only to wait since 2010. I was present at the verification exercise here in Owerri, Imo State in 2015, yet I continue to cry, the delay continues and I continue to suffer. The documents are all there in your office.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Igbo, we have reviewed all the documents submitted following verification, and your monthly pension has been re-computed. Payment will be made as soon as funds are released for that purpose. We apologise for the delay.

    Mrs Awire: I and one of my children are Next-of-Kin (NOK) to my husband who passed on on September 16, 2003. He was retired in April, 1999. He worked at the Nigeria Immigration Service. When he was in service, his salary along with his colleagues was not paid through the bank. I went to the Immigration Office to collect his pay statement and Letter of Administration from the High Court. I complained to The Nation in May, 2016. The matter was forwarded to the Directorate and I was asked to come to Abuja with my child who is also the beneficiaries. I travelled from Ilorin where we are based to Abuja in July 2016 to Abuja and my documents were verified by your officials. I was certified okay and told to expect payment in three months which is October 2016. As at today, one year and seven months the Directorate promised to pay me, I am yet to hear from the PTAD. Please, The Nation, kindly look into my case to put an end to the suffering I and my children are going through. Thanks

    PTAD: Dear Mrs Awire, please be informed the Death benefit was paid into the NOKs joint Fidelity Bank Account in October 2016. Kindly confirm payment from your bank. If payment has not been received, please email the NOK’s signed and stamped original bank statement on the bank letter head, covering from October 2016 till date to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng . You can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed. For more information, call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

  • Nigeria’s pension revolution

    Nigeria’s pension revolution

    The story of pensioners’ agony in the country seems endless; changing almost every time. From queuing under the sun and going through all sorts of dehumanising treatment, it is a tale of woes. But, lately, there seems to be a new dawn; they are now being treated with respect and dignity like those in developed countries. In this report, Omobola Tolu-Kusimo looks at what has changed in the pension industry and the impact on pensioners.

    In an air conditioned hall filled to capacity were men and women dressed elegantly in various traditional attires. The venue was 3 Bees Event, beside HS-Petroleum (Sweet Sensation), Ketu, Lagos. The hall’s ambience was like a typical party, but it was not. It was a verification exercise organised by the Federal Government through the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) for public sector pensioners.

    One after the other, the senior citizens  were served popular Nigerian delicacy Jollof-rice with grilled chicken and water by PTAD officials while they got verified. Seated quietly, the pensioners moved calmly following several steps in order to be added to the database. The PTAD staffers assisted them to fill required forms, check their documents for corrections and authenticity, while finger prints, pictures and contact information were collated. PTAD will later transfer the information on the forms to its electronic database. The documents were scanned, linked to pensioner biometrics and archived. Things have never been this rosy for the senior citizens. It was, indeed, a worthwhile experience for them.

    Before

    In the past the nation’s pension administration was a mess. The mess emanated from the public sector scheme, which is the Defined Benefit Scheme (DBS) or Pay As You Go (PAYG). Under the old system, pension was guaranteed by the government, but it became unsustainable due to lack of adequate and timely budgetary provisions and increases in salaries and pensions.

    It was crisis-ridden and bedeviled with zero-funding, unco-ordinated and fragmented Defined Benefit (DB). The management, at the time, was characterised by poor records of eligible beneficiaries, deficit in pension liabilities to the tune of N.6 trillion,  fraud and non-uniformity in pension arrangements in  the public and private sectors were rife.

    The private sector schemes, which were largely akin to the Provident Fund Schemes, was characterised by low coverage and compliance ratio due to lack of effective regulation and supervision.  This resulted in complete paradigm shift from DBS as operated by both the public and private sectors to the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS).

    As a result of the disorderly pension system, especially in the public sector, many pensioners never get paid their pensions and gratuities decades after retirement.  Those  who were paid and were on monthly pension were removed from the payroll under the previous Heads of Service while many were never included in the database.

    Despite serving the country for decades, the senior citizens were maltreated by government officials, who were to verify them for pension payment. They made them queue under the scorching sun and got them drenched during the rainy season. Some of them collapsed and died after queuing for long hours.

    Giving a historical perspective on pension  problem in the country, Executive Director, Centre For Pension Rights Advocacy, Ivor Takor, said the plight of Nigerian pensioners could be viewed from two eras: pre-pension reform and post- pension reform.

    Takor, who is also a former board member of the National Pension Commission (PenCom), in a paper made available to journalists, said the first public sector pension scheme in Nigeria was the Pension Ordinance of 1951, with retroactive effect from January 1, 1946.

    He said: “The law provided public servants with both pension and gratuity. Pensions Decrees 102 and 103 of 1979 were enacted for civil servants and the military respectively, with retroactive effect from April 1974. These decrees, which were later referred to as the Pension Act 1990 and the Armed Forces Pension Act, 1990 respectively, remained the operative laws on public service (Federal, states and local governments) and military pension in Nigeria until they were repealed by the Pension Reform Act 2004, which was later replaced by the Pension Reform Act 2014.

    “The National Provident Fund (NPF), which was established in 1961, was the first formal pension scheme in the private sector. It was largely a saving scheme providing a one-off lump sum benefits. The Nigerian Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), established in 1993, took over from the NPF and commenced business in July 1994.”

    He lamented that Nigerian pensioners have had a raw deal and continued to suffer in the hands of employers, who were expected to protect them against old age poverty and destitution. “Employers, in the first place, based on contractual agreements, have a legal and moral obligation to protect workers against old age destitution and poverty,” he argued.

    Reform era

    The Federal Government embarked on pension reform and enacted the Pension Reform Act (PRA) 2004, which established the CPS and PenCom. Its implementation thereafter has made pension administration, management and regulation to be considerably streamlined.

    The Act further established the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorates (PTAD) for greater efficiency and accountability in the pension administration under the DBS.

    Today, the story of pensioners in the country has changed. To enable payment to all genuine pensioners, the PTAD commenced verification exercise in the six geo-political zones of the country.  So far, they have met pensioners in almost all the  states of the federation to verify them.

    The PTAD in its quest to treat pensioners with dignity for serving their fatherland during their active years visited hospitals and homes to verify those who are sick and weak.

    Restoring hope

    PTAD Executive Secretary, Mrs Sharon Ikeazor, said the Directorate has over 250, 000 pensioners in its database, adding that it has embarked on a lot of transformation programme to ensure that the story of pensioners in the country changed.

    She said the agency has been improving its services to pensioners and would continue to serve them well, adding that the workers also have a new orientation that makes it possible for them to treat the pensioners with respect.

    “Pensioners no longer have to come to Abuja when they have complaints, but can rather make use of the Lagos office. This is because we have strengthened the office to have the capacity to attend promptly to them. We are going to meet pensioners in all the states of the federation to verify them. We have been going to the hospitals to verify those who are sick and visit the homes of those who are weak and cannot go out of their houses. The pensioners don’t believe it and sometimes, they burst into tears and say you mean government can come to us and I said why can’t government come to you. There was a 99-year-old woman, who came out but we collected her address that we will be coming to her house for future verifications and told her not to stress herself.

    “I told my staff that they must have a conscience and treat pensioners with respect. Because one day they will also become a retiree. I asked them if they will  like to be treated with disdain. They have aged parents too. My orientation with them is working and they are treating retirees well. We have not even taken them abroad for training, but their attitude to work has been very good. Part of the things that I do to monitor and motivate them is that I go with them to places where they are carrying out the verification exercise and I tell them that if I can do it, why can’t they do it too. When they went to Maiduguri, I was there with them. I drove to Damaturu and the pensioners were crying because they were shocked to see me come to them.

    “I would also sometimes enter the call center and pick up phones myself. I sit in my office and watch my CCTV. I do these things to ensure that they are in their best behaviour. When I came into office, I discovered that some of the workers appointment were not confirmed. I embarked on staff audit and worked with the Head of Service to confirm their appointments, especially some of the directors and this further motivated them to work. They now take their job very seriously and they are passionate about it,”she said.

    Speaking further on the objectives of the Directorate, she said PTAD was established in August 2013 to oversee the administration of pensions under the DBS for pensioners not transiting to the CPS in compliance with the provisions for the PRA 2004, which recommended the establishment of an independent pension department for the public service of the federation. It operates four pension departments: The Civil Pension Department (CSPD), Police Pension Department (PPD), Customs, Immigration and Prisons Pension Department (CIPPD) and Treasury Funded Parastatals Pension Department (PAPD).

    Before PTAD was established, pension administration in Nigeria had fallen into disrepute amidst allegations of misappropriation of funds, maladministration, corruption. There were numerous pensioners complaints that bothered on issues such as non-payment of monthly pensions after retirement, short payment of pensions and gratuity, removal of names on pension payment voucher, non-payment of harmonised pension arrears, irregular payment of Federal pensions and non-receipt of pension after retirement, among other problems. In a bid to correct these anomalies as well as streamline the payment of pensions and gratuities of pensioners under its mandate, the PTAD commenced a nationwide verification of pensioners under the DBS to “maintaining a comprehensive database of pensioners in its jurisdiction” as it is mandated in the PRA 2004.

    She said it is on record that PTAD did not inherit credible pensioners’ database, despite the many verification exercises conducted by the defunct pension offices. There was, therefore, an urgent need to verify all pensioners under the DBS to enable PTAD resolve their complaints. The verification of pensioners is therefore, aimed at the establishment of an accurate, credible and digitised database of pensioners under the DBS and eliminate duplication of payments and ghost pensioners.

    “It also include regularising abnormalties such as over payments and under payments, obtaining relevant work records to ensure accurate computation of pension payment and updating the records of the next of kins (NoKs) for payment of benefit and entitlements. The essence of digitising the employment records and biometrics of pensioners is to create a permanent database of their records and ensure that pensioners are not asked to come out again for such detailed exercise,”she added.

    Pensioners react

    Mrs Roselyn Adeniyi, who retired in 2006, said she retired as a chief matron. She lamented that she has not received any pension or gratuity since she retired and had done series of verifications. “The last one I did was in 2011, but nothing came out of it. But I am convinced that I will get my pension soon going by the arrangement by PTAD. I love the way this verification is going on smoothly, but I pray that the money will be given to me before I die. My appeal is to President Muhammadu Buhari to approve money so that I will be paid,” she said.

    Another retiree, Mr George Odororo, said he retired in April 1999 from Lagos State Civil Service. “It has been a wonderful and commendable arrangement compared to previous verifications,” he said.

    For Mrs Mariam Abdullahi, the story is different. According to her,  she retired in 1992 and she has been getting her  pension regularly. “I am here to do the regular verification. The organisation this time is very good, better than what we have gone through in the past. We were expecting that it will be as tedious as our former experience. But I am happy and enjoying the exercise. They are taking care of us. I came to the centre at about 9:00am and I went through the process in two hours.”

    But Mr Samuel Adetuga, who retired in 2001 said has not received any pension payment. “I have received gratuity, but no pension. I have done several verifications. My message to the President is that as he is putting effort to see that we are paid, he should follow it up so that those government officials and other connivers that are stealing our money will not have the opportunity to do it again,” he said.

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    Mrs Awire: One of my children and I are the next-of-kin (NOK) to my husband, who passed on in September 16, 2003. He retired in April 1999, after working at the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS). When he was in service, his salary with his colleagues were not paid through the bank. I went to the Immigration office to collect his pay slip and Letter of Administration from the High Court.

    I complained to The Nation in May 2016. The matter was forwarded to the Directorate and I was asked to come to Abuja with my child, who is also a beneficiary. I travelled from Ilorin, where we are based, to Abuja in July 2016 and my documents were verified by your officials. I was certified okay and told to expect payment in three months, which was October 2016. As at today, one year and four  months, which the Directorate promised to pay me, I am yet to hear from PTAD. Please, The Nation, kindly look into my case to put an end to the suffering my children and I  are going through. Thanks

    PTAD: Dear Mrs Awire, please be informed that the Death benefit was paid into the NOKs joint Fidelity Bank Account in October 2016. Kindly confirm payment from your bank. If payment has not been received, please email the NOK’s signed and stamped original bank statement on the bank letter head, covering from October 2016 till date to complaints @ptad.gov.ng, or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng . You can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed. For more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

    DIOKA: Dear Omobola, my old mother, Elizabeth, who retired as a primary school teacher in 1984 (Imo State), is paid a monthly pension of less than N3000. Can you believe it? What can N3000 purchase in today’s Nigeria? The pension is not even regular. It sometimes comes only when the Paris Club Fund is paid to states. Please can you press on the government to do a comprehensive review of the pension law, especially to make state governments set up pension commissions in their states? Thank you. Chukwuma Dioka, Imo State.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Dioka, Please be informed that your mother is NOT a PTAD Pensioner as primary school teachers are not under PTAD. She should kindly meet her state pension office to resolve her complaint. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

    ADEGOKE: Dear Omobola, my name is Adegoke. I retired from Customs in 2007. I want to know when pension issue of 20.37 per cent being balance of 53.37 per cent of 2010 pension increase arrears from July 2010 to date will be addressed and cleared. Arrears of 33 per cent out of the 53.37 per cent pension increase of July 2010 has been defrayed by the PTAD in 2016, leaving the balance of 20.37 per cent arrears from July 2010 to date unpaid. What is responsible for the non-payment? Could it be as a result of budgetary constraints? What has scaled down to pensioners disadvantage by the 2010 pension increase from 53.37 per cent to 33 per cent? Has arrangement reached advance stage towards the payment of the 20.37 per cent arrears and when will it be paid? Please PTAD pay pensioners this arrears of 20.37 per cent from July 2010 to date to put smile on our faces, or explain lucidly the true and proper position of this matter to us. Thanks.

    PTAD: In 2014, the Federal Government approved an increment in pensions by 33 per cent pension payment increase, effective July 2010, and PTAD has paid Customs increment in full. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

    SYLVANUS: Good day Omobola, let me refresh your memory on the two cases in which you promised to intervene. I served Lagos State from 1974 to 1983, when I transferred to Anambra, my home state. I held the post of Assistant Director. When I finally retired from University service in 2001, Lagos State was asked to provide my pension benefits based on apportionment. But there was no response up till April 2013, when I was paid about N1 million as gratuity and pension arrears. Now I am being owed 48 months pension by TEPO, Ikeja.

    Under Pension Act 1979, Federal Government took responsibility for pension of retirees in Ondo State, where I entered teaching in missionary schools from 1960 to 1976. On retirement, based on apportionment, a copy of my computed pension benefits was sent to PTAD, but no response up till now. At both states verification centres, no attention was given to me. Please Omobola, help an old man. God bless you. Sylvanus.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Udeh, more information is needed to resolve your complaint. Can you confirm if you have completed a PTAD verification exercise? If yes, kindly provide us with your full name & Bank account details. If not, also provide us with your full name. In addition to the following documents; letter of first appointment, letter of last promotion; letter of retirement; signed and stamped original bank statement on the bank letter head , covering Jan 2001 till date are required. Kindly email the above documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng. You can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed. For more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

    BABATUNDE: My name is Babatunde, I retired from NIPOST in July 23, 2005. My contribution in the Contributory Scheme was up to N46,338.92 of which I have applied for, up till now, I am yet to be paid. My pay slips photocopies were forwarded to PTAD in Abuja.

    PTAD: Kindly be informed that the PTAD does not manage pensioners under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). Please forward the following documents to determine if in fact, you are a PTAD pensioner; letter of first appointment, letter of last promotion and letter of retirement. Kindly email the above documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng you can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed for more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

    OSAM: Dear  Omobola, my father died on July 10, 2005. He served last at Police Mobile Force 26, Uyo, as an  inspector. His name is Okimba. I did all that was required of me for his gratuity to be paid in 2006, but te efforts proved abortive. Later in March 2015, I underwent the second police pension verification exercise and did image capturing at PTAD Maitama Abuja, where all necessary documents were successfully submitted as required by screening committee, as the next of kin. But up till date no payment. Please help me out of this distress.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Osam, kindly note that your late father joined the Nigeria Police Force on 1st March, 1977, but died on 10th July, 2005. In line with the Pension Reform Act of 2004 as amended, the late Inspector Okimba falls under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) managed by the National Pension Commission (PenCom). You are, therefore, advised to approach the late Inspector Okimba’s Pension Fund Administrators and PenCom to claim the accrued pension benefits of late Inspector Okimba.