Denise Daley calls for pension payout reforms and backlog relief in Sectoral Debate
Denise Daley used the 2026 Sectoral Debate to argue that Jamaica's pension arrangements are failing seniors who spent decades in public and private employment.
Addressing the House, the opposition spokeswoman said a public servant may give up to 45 years of service while taxes and statutory contributions are deducted and processed each month. When retirement arrives, however, disbursements often stop, slow, or crawl forward for months and even years. Pensioners are left wondering how they will buy medication or put food on the table, she said.
Daley told legislators that outcome is unacceptable and that retirement after a lifetime of faithful service should not become a period of financial uncertainty. The opposition is recommending that pension funds begin a verification process at least one year before retirement, with every document reviewed, every discrepancy resolved, and every approval completed before an employee leaves the public service or a private institution.
"Pension payment should commence immediately upon retirement, not months and years after," she said.
She added that while the system is modernized, reform must include a plan to eliminate the existing backlog so pensioners already trapped in delays are not forgotten as new retirees benefit from improved processes.
Daley also raised the impact of inflation on fixed pension incomes, noting that rising living costs steadily reduce what payments can buy. A pension that once provided security can gradually become insufficient for even basic needs, she argued.
"Since these people live to become pension age, why do we want to kill them now quickly? Because they cannot afford basic food," she said. "We must therefore examine whether additional safeguards are necessary to ensure that pensioners are not pushed below the poverty line simply because the cost of living continue to exceed their income."
She further warned that efficiency must not come at the expense of accessibility amid a widening digital divide. Many senior citizens do not own a phone, much less a smartphone, and many have never received formal digital literacy training, she said. As institutions push online services, pensioners often find themselves standing outside cashless banking facilities, confused and frustrated while trying to access money that belongs to them.
Syndicated from Jamaica PNP (Video) · originally published .
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