On Second Thought, DoPT Does Not Want To Scrap Pensions Act
Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions Jitendra Singh
New Delhi: The Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) has decided
against scrapping a 145-year-old law, which exempts pension from being
“attached or sequestered”, though a bill seeking its abrogation from
statute book has already been passed by the Lok Sabha.
Earlier, the DoPT had asked the Law Ministry to include the Pensions
Act, 1871 in the repealing bill so it could be removed from the statute
book. One of the key provisions of the law is that it exempts pension
from attachment by any court. But later, it wrote to the Law Ministry to
remove the Act from the repealing bill.
After its passage in the Lok Sabha, the Repealing and Amending (Third) Bill, 2015 is pending in the Rajya Sabha.
The Law Ministry is the nodal agency for repealing laws which have lost relevance today.
A senior government functionary said that perhaps the realisation that
there is no other law in the country which protects pensions led to
decision against scrapping the Act.
After the DoPTs request, the Law Ministry approached the Union Cabinet
to clear an official amendment to remove the Pensions Act from the
repealing bill.
On March 23, the Union Cabinet cleared the official amendments, paving
way for the passage of the bill in the upper house. After being cleared
by the Rajya Sabha, the bill will travel back to the Lok Sabha to clear
the official amendments.
Section 11 of the Act states that “No Pension granted or continued by
government on political considerations, or on account of past services
or present infirmities or as a compassionate allowance, and no money due
or to become due on account of any such pension or allowance, shall be
liable to seizure, attachment or sequestration by process of any court
at the instance of a creditor, for any demand against the pensioner, or
in satisfaction of a decree or order of any such court.”
Another official amendment cleared by the Union Cabinet relates to the
Appropriation Acts (Repeal) Bill, 2015. The bill, cleared by the Lok
Sabha and pending in the Rajya Sabha, seeks to repeal The Punjab
Appropriation Act among other laws. But the Punjab Appropriation Act has
already been repealed by the Punjab Legislative Assembly and
“inadvertently” became part of the Appropriation (Acts) Repeal Bill,
2015.
The two bills seek to scrap a total of 1,053 Acts which have become redundant and are clogging the statute books.
PTI
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