Prison Officer Recruitment 2025-01-28
2025-01-28
TAGS
Response quality
Questions & Answers
Q1
Partial Answer
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Context
The Prison Officers Association in Scotland has been campaigning for a lower pension age due to the physically demanding nature of the job. The current retirement age is 68, which they argue is too late compared to other frontline services.
I thank the Minister for his warm words and encouraging remarks. He will know that in Scotland the “68 is too late” campaign by the Prison Officers Association enjoys cross-party and Scottish Government support, but the UK Government have refused to take action on this important issue. The current retirement terms ignore the reality of the frontline role that prison officers perform in prisons on a daily basis across the UK. It is a dangerous role, and no less so than that of firefighters or the police, who enjoy very different terms. Although justice is devolved to the Scottish Parliament, the pensions of Scottish prison officers are controlled by the UK Government. So will the Minister or the Secretary of State commit the Government to reviewing the current prison officer retirement age of 68, and will he meet me to hear this case in more detail?
As I have said, the Lord Chancellor has requested advice on this matter. We promote our strong employee total reward package as part of our recruitment. The terms and conditions of the civil service pension scheme are some of the best in the public sector, with a low employee contribution rate and a significant employer contribution rate of 28.97%. However, that does not mean it is not a right and proper question to ask, and if the hon. Member wishes to have a meeting with me, I am quite happy to meet him.
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Assessment & feedback
The specific request for a review of the retirement age was not directly addressed with a commitment or timeline.
Asking For Advice
Highlighting Existing Pension Benefits
Response accuracy