Understand your member benefit statement
Your Member Benefit Statement is a vital tool for retirement planning. Learn more with this guide.
Members with regular and public safety service
Some plan members have service as a regular member and as a correctional employee or ambulance paramedic (and in a handful of cases, all three!). This has implications for your statement.
Your annual Member benefit statement shows your information in several sections.
Your personal information
This includes:
- Your name
- Your Person ID number
- Your date of birth
- The date you began contributing to your pension
- If you have a spouse, your spouse’s name and date of birth
You can review your personal information by signing in to My Account.
Your beneficiary
This shows the beneficiaries you have named for a pension benefit if you die before you retire. If you have a spouse, your spouse is automatically your beneficiary unless they sign a waiver.
You can update your beneficiary by signing in to My Account.
How to read the pension estimates in your statement
There are three things to know about the pension estimates in your statement:
- The service and salary information is based on everything you have earned or accrued in the last fiscal year, up to March 31
- The service projected into the future presumes you will continue to work in your current job, at your current pay, uninterrupted, until you retire
- The earliest unreduced pension age you see listed is when you are eligible for an unreduced pension on all your service. This means if you have both public safety service and regular service in your work history, the regular service has a later early retirement age and that is the age you will see in your statement.
This section also shows estimates of your lifetime monthly pension if you stopped working last March 31 for a plan employer, left your contributions in the plan and retired on one of the dates listed.
If you decide to retire early, your age and your total contributory service are used to determine when you will qualify for an unreduced pension. The best way to see how different retirement ages affect your pension is to use your personalized pension estimator in My Account.
If you need help, please contact the plan.
Do you have a former spouse?
If you have a former spouse with a right to a share of your pension, they are known as a limited member. This is important to know because the service earned and pension benefits shown on your statement will include your former spouse’s share; therefore, your actual pension benefits will be less than those shown. For more information, visit Divorce and separation or contact us for details about your pension.
Your pensionable earnings and service
This section shows:
- Your pensionable earnings—the portion of your salary used to determine your contributions to the plan
- Your pensionable service—your actual working time as a plan member over the plan’s fiscal year and since you began contributing to the plan (you earn one month of pensionable service for each full month of full-time work you complete)
- Your contributory service—the number of months you and your employer contributed to the plan (you earn one month of contributory service for each month you contribute)
Your contributions
This shows the amount you have contributed, plus interest earned on contributions:
- Over the plan’s fiscal year to March 31
- Since you began contributing to the plan
Your contributions do not reflect the value of your pension. The value of your lifetime monthly pension is based on:
- Your pensionable service
- The average of your five highest years of salary (not necessarily the last five years)
Go to My Account to view your historical service and salary information (under the Statements tab). This will show your reported service by the employer, as well as any finalized purchases and reciprocal transfers.
Here is an example:
Meet Miriam
- Miriam is currently working as a correctional officer. She has seven years of contributory service as a correctional officer, and five years of contributory service working as a regular member with the Province of BC.
- This means Miriam has two types of service with two different sets of pension rules applying. Miriam’s earliest unreduced pension age is 60 on her statement. This is the age she is eligible for an unreduced pension on all her service.
- It’s important to note that Miriam qualifies for an unreduced pension for her correctional service at age 55, but because her Member Benefit Statement states only a single date for the unreduced pension age, it uses the date she turns 60, as that is when she qualifies for an unreduced pension for her regular service.
- Miriam could retire at 55, and the portion of her pension calculated for correctional service will be unreduced. But the portion of her pension as a regular member will be reduced.