Thousands of retired teachers and leaders potentially entitled to better pensions following the landmark McCloud ruling have died before even receiving statements outlining what they could receive.
New data obtained under the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act reveals the scale of the backlog in remedy cases facing the Teachersâ Pension Schemeâs (TPS) embattled administrators Capita, with tens of thousands of retirees awaiting statements.
Every month this drags on, more people die
Madeleine Dowling, technical team lead at financial advice firm Wesleyan, said the issues were âtaking a real financial and emotional tollâ on retired teachers.
âAfter years of service, retirement should be something that teachers look forward to. Instead, many are left facing uncertainty and worry.â
Most remedies not yet issued
The McCloud remedy scheme was designed to correct age discrimination caused by 2015 public sector pension reforms. The 2018 court judgment ruled that previous changes made to public sector pensions treated younger workers unfairly.
To fix this, the government promised to pay back more than ÂŁ17 billion to those affected.
This involved issuing âremediable service statementsâ (RSS) to retired teachers, asking whether they would like their pension entitlement to be calculated based on their current scheme, known as the âlegacyâ option, or the new âreformedâ scheme.
Data obtained under the FOI Act shows that as of March, 64,917 such statements had been sent to retired TPS members. But 77,654 statements remained unsent.
Of the outstanding statements, 5,973, or 7.7 per cent, are due to the families of TPS members who have died since 2015 â the year to which the remedy is back-dated.
Some will have died before the 2018 ruling and before the remedy was formally announced in 2021. But it is likely a large number have also died since then, while awaiting news of potential compensation.

Delays plague thousands of unwell retirees
It comes after Schools Week revealed in June that just two retired teachers had received the money or pension increase they were entitled to.
Delays are also plaguing thousands of unwell pensioners. Of the outstanding statements, 3,539 are due to pensioners who are in âill healthâ, FOI data shows.
Paul Heap, a retired teacher, said he was owed âaround ÂŁ14,000 from the original case, plus ÂŁ7,000 in losses because of delaysâ.
âSome teachers have died waiting. Others, like me, are watching our health decline. Every month this drags on, more people die. Weâve worked our whole lives as teachers, and this is how weâre treated â like we donât matter anymore.â
The delays have left a lasting mark on Graeme Humphrey, who retired in 2022 after 35 years in teaching.
He suffers from generalised anxiety disorder, and âthis whole process has made it worseâ, he told Schools Week.
âTPS seems to have contempt for the legal process and is seemingly disinterested in delivering legislated monies within any reasonable time scale.â
Retirees return to the classroom
For other former leaders and teachers, delays in receiving payouts have prompted a forced return to the classroom.
Former headteacher Gary Watson retired in 2022, but is owed ÂŁ31,000 that should have formed part of his lump sum. He says he has had to âgo back to work to supplement my incomeâ.
âI donât think any private sector pension provider could get away with this. Trustpilot reviews are incredibly damning, and many retired teachers [are] simply despairing at either the incompetence, under-staffing or perhaps a combination of both.â
On Trustpilot, the Teachersâ Pension Scheme has an average score of 1.1 out of five, based on 739 reviews. Ninety-five per cent of reviews give just one star.
Emma Mitchell, who taught history and geography for 30 years, has been waiting nearly a year to hear back from the TPS about her McCloud paperwork.
âIâm owed just over ÂŁ10,000 as a lump sum and about ÂŁ2,000 a year,â she said. âIâve had to dip into my savings to pay for roof repairs.
âAs a single parent, that money really matters â but itâs not extra. Itâs ours. You give everything to your students, to your school, to the community and you expect the system youâve paid into to be there when itâs your turn.â
Watson added: âThis is scandalous. To compound matters the communication from TPS is abysmal. When will these dues be settled?â
The TPS has been run for most of the past 30 years by outsourcing giant Capita.
The ÂŁ233 million, 10-year contract was due to transfer to Indian IT firm TCS in October, but Schools Week revealed earlier this year the handover had been pushed back to next summer.
âGovernment turning blind eyeâ
Delays to McCloud settlements arenât the only administrative issue affecting TPS members. For example, teachers have reported delays to cash-equivalent transfer values â needed to finalise divorces. Others reported being locked out of accounts, or their details being lost entirely.
Diane Tonkins, 60, sobbed over half-marked schoolbooks as she recalled being told by TPS she did not have a pension.
Decades of records, including her private pension and ÂŁ2,000 in contributions, were âlostâ. Worth about ÂŁ30,000, the missing funds forced her to keep working while caring for parents with dementia and Alzheimerâs.
âBecause of their mistake, I couldnât retire,â she says. During Covid, her parents died in care, confused and alone, she said.
Heap said the TPS under Capita was âunderstaffed, lacks communication and is failing, but the government has been turning a blind eye.
âThe backlog is thousands deep. Theyâre processing around 40 cases a month when thousands are depending on the money the government took from us.â
Dowling added Wesleyan is âincreasingly seeing delays not just in the issuing of remediable pension saving statements, but in processing pensions themselves.
âThis data, and our own experience, shows many are entering their retirement without an accurate understanding of how much they have in their pension â a precarious position for anyone to be in thatâs only compounded if they have dependents, ill-health or care needs that mean theyâre particularly reliant on this pension income.â
Calls for hardship fund
Heap said he asked officials to create a hardship fund for struggling retirees but was told there was âno need for oneâ.
âI went six months without glasses because I couldnât afford new ones,â he said.
âEvery month, I have to spend a quarter of my pension on paying interest that is only owed because my pension correction wasnât completed on time. I just about manage to cover council tax, energy bills and food.â
Kate Atkinson, national secretary for school leadersâ union NAHT, said it had been âcontacted by members with life-limiting conditions that are part of the backlog.
âClearly any further delay for these individuals is unacceptable and we have asked for a âfast-trackâ approach to be taken in relation to anyone in this group â we are hopeful that this can be achieved.â
A spokesperson for Capita acknowledged âthat some members have experienced delays in receiving their remediable service statements and subsequent payments, and we sincerely apologise for thisâ.
However, they said the delays were âlargely due to the complexity stemming from the McCloud remedy ⊠and dependencies outside of Capitaâs control.
âWe are continuing to work with the Department for Education to implement measures to improve the service, which includes automation and updated communications to members.â
âComplex legal issuesâ
The DfE said transitional protection remedy was âcomplexâ due to its size. The âretrospective natureâ had resulted in âa number of technical and legal issuesâ that âneeded to be resolved before guidance could be provided to the scheme administratorâ.
Officials are in touch with Capita to âaddressâ rising numbers of enquiries.

However, a spokesperson added: âWe understand that this has caused frustration and are continuing to work closely with Teachersâ Pensions to resolve this issue as soon as possible.â
It was also âreviewing arrangements for the issuing of the remaining remediable service statementsâ, but would give no further details.
The FOI data suggests most retirees who have received their statements and responded have opted to stick to the legacy pension scheme.
As of March, 8,488 respondents had chosen to stick with the legacy scheme, compared with 2,890 who opted for the reformed scheme.
The schools sector, which employs almost a million people in England, is not the only part of the public sector facing issues with the McCloud remedy.
Workers in the NHS, which employs about1.5 million people in England, have reported significant delays. The British Medical Association has warned the backlog has left many members with âno knowledge of their pension-saving