Households (surviving spouses/partners)
- If you marry or start a conjugal common‑law relationship with a federal pensioner after they turn 60 or after they retire, you would be eligible for survivor benefits after their death. This applies to public service, Canadian Forces, RCMP, judges, and MPs (Bill: multiple repeals noted above).
- For MPs, you qualify as a survivor if you were married to the MP at death or lived together in a conjugal relationship for at least 1 year immediately before death (MPRAA s.2(1) amended).
- If there is no eligible survivor, children’s benefits may be higher than standard rates, up to the new caps set in each act (e.g., up to 2/5 per child and 8/5 total of the basic allowance when no survivor is entitled) (CFSA s.25(1)(b), (2); PSSA s.12(4); RCMPA s.13(1)).
Current retirees in affected federal plans
- If you previously chose to reduce your own pension to provide a benefit for a spouse you married after retirement or after age 60, that reduction would be cancelled on the day the law comes into force (Transitional provisions).
- Your spouse or partner would be eligible for survivor benefits without your pension having a reduction in place (repeal of election provisions and transitional deeming rules).
Active federal employees, Canadian Forces, RCMP, judges, and MPs
- Future survivor benefits for spouses/partners will not depend on your age at marriage or whether you married after retirement (Bill: repeal of “marriage‑after‑60” limits across plans).
- Court‑ordered support can be diverted from certain judicial annuities and related benefits, as clarified in the Judges Act (Judges Act s.52(1) amended).
Private‑sector workers in federally regulated industries (banks, telecom, interprovincial transport) with pensions under the PBSA
- Your plan must pay a joint‑and‑survivor pension if you have a spouse/common‑law partner when your pension starts or if you acquire one at any time after it starts, subject to existing waiver rules in PBSA s.25(7) (PBSA s.22(2) amended).
- If you have a defined contribution plan with variable benefits, your surviving spouse/partner is entitled to the remaining account as variable payments, subject to regulations and tax rules (PBSA s.16.3(1)).
PRPP (pooled registered pension plan) members
- On death, your surviving spouse/partner is entitled to variable payments from your account, subject to regulations and tax rules (PRPP Act s.49 amended).