Government moves to boost pensions for protective services in acting positions
The Government is proposing changes to pension rules that would allow police, prison and fire officers who spent extended periods acting in higher positions to retire with benefits based on their acting salaries rather than their substantive appointments.
The measure is contained in the Finance Bill, 2026, which was laid in Parliament by Finance Minister Davendranath Tancoo.
Under the proposed amendments, officers who acted in a higher office for at least one continuous year, but less than three continuous years, immediately before retirement would become eligible to have their pension, gratuity and other retirement allowances calculated as though they had been substantively appointed to that higher post.
The change would apply to officers in the Police Service, Prison Service and Fire Service.
The proposal seeks to address a long-standing issue within the public service where officers often spend years performing the duties of higher offices in an acting capacity without receiving the full retirement benefits associated with those positions.
One of the most prominent examples was former Police Commissioner Stephen Williams, who first assumed the role in an acting capacity on August 7, 2012. Williams remained Acting Commissioner of Police through a series of extensions before eventually being confirmed in the position.
The Finance Bill would amend the Fifth Schedule of the Prison Service Act and the Fire Service Act, as well as Regulation 183A of the Police Service Regulations, to give qualifying officers access to retirement benefits based on the salaries attached to the higher offices they occupied while acting.
To qualify, officers must have served continuously in the higher position for no less than 12 months and less than three years immediately before compulsory retirement or before proceeding on annual leave ahead of retirement.