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ministries
Provision for housing retired Ministers
Guidelines
A major
review is currently being undertaken which, it is hoped, will be in
2008.
In 1985 the Retired Ministers Housing
Committee consulted the General Secretary and the Provincial Moderators
about the guidelines governing the provision of retirement housing for
ministers and the widows/widowers of ministers. The guidelines so
revised were published as Appendix 4 to the Finance and Administration
Report to the General Assembly held in 1985.
Recently, the Committee has
consulted again with the General Secretary and the Provincial Moderators
about the application of the guidelines and the need to update them.
The revised guidelines are
set out below.
1. At the 1979 General
Assembly the United Reformed Church accepted a moral obligation to
provide housing for retired ministers and ministers’ widows who could
not otherwise be adequately housed. The relevant clauses of the
resolution read as follows:-
“The United Reformed Church
delegates to its Finance and Administration Department the
responsibility for providing housing for retired ministers and
ministers’ widows and this it exercises through the United Reformed
Church Retired Ministers Housing Society Limited, an independent Company
operating within the Finance Department.
The Church regards it as a
matter of integrity that retired ministers and ministers’ widows should
be adequately housed and supports the Housing Society in its appeal for
funds and its objects.
The Assembly approves the
appointment of a ‘Retired Ministers Housing Committee’ within the
Finance and Administration Department to have oversight of matters
concerned with the provision of retirement housing for ministers and
ministers’ widows and to manage the properties held on behalf of the
United Reformed Church.”
2. By this action Assembly
did not institute an entitlement to retirement housing as of right. A
minister who has the finance necessary to provide for retirement housing
may reasonably be expected to do so. The provision of housing by the
Housing Society is for those who would not otherwise be adequately
housed.
3. Parameters of the Scheme
The Scheme does not provide
housing for URC Non-Stipendiary Ministers but does include CRCW’s
4. Ministers
Normally an applicant must
be a minister of the URC and must meet the following conditions:-
(1) All applicants must be
in the stipendiary service of the Church at
EITHER (a) age 65
OR (b) less than age 65,
but having completed 40 years service since ordination and has been
allowed to retire on pension without early retirement deduction
OR (c) less than age 65,
but having been permitted to retire early on grounds of physical or
mental incapacity, duly certified by a Medical Practitioner to the
satisfaction of the Maintenance of the Ministry Committee AND whose
service meets or could have met the requirements set out below in (2)
(2) All applicants must
have given either
(i) 15 years continuous
full-time or equivalent full-time service immediately prior to age 65 or
as agreed under clause (1) above
OR (ii) a total of 25
years full-time or equivalent full time service
(3) Where a minister
satisfies the requirements in (1) and (2) above but moves into part-time
service immediately upon ceasing full-time service, the entitlement to
consideration for assistance will be carried forward until final
retirement.
(4) Equivalent full-time
service is pro rata part-time service (i.e. 10 years of 50% scoped
service is equivalent to 5 years full-time service)
(5) An application from any
minister whose service falls just outside these guidelines may be
considered nine months before retirement in the light of the merits of
the case and the resources available at the time.
5. Service for this purpose
will be full-time and stipendiary in an appointment for which the terms
of service include the provision of housing by the Church or other body,
and within one or more of the following categories:-
(1) Service with the United
Reformed Church (URC) AND/OR the Congregational Church of England and
Wales AND/OR the Presbyterian Church of England AND/OR the Re-formed
Association of Churches of Christ and their predecessors either in
pastoral charge, in an Assembly, Synod or District appointment or in a
special ministry.
(2) Service in a national
ecumenical council OR agency in the United Kingdom (UK) in which the URC
is directly involved and in which the terms of service are comparable to
those of ministers in the URC. Normally such service shall not exceed
ten years.
(3) Service with a county
OR regional ecumenical body in the UK in which the URC is directly
involved either as full-time service or as part-time service coupled
with service in a URC Pastorate. Normally such service shall not exceed
ten years.
(4) Service in a Local
Ecumenical Project (LEP) in which the URC is a full participant: such
LEP being duly registered as a local congregation or group of
congregations in the British Council of Churches or the successor
bodies’ registers and recorded as a Local Church in the URC.
(5) Service overseas since
July 1977 through the Council for World Mission OR through the
Ecumenical Committee of the URC, as full-time ministerial service.
(6) Service as a chaplain
in hospitals, schools, colleges or universities, industry or the armed
forces which is full-time ministerial service on terms which are
comparable with those of full-time URC ministers and in which the URC is
directly involved. Normally such service shall not exceed ten years.
(7) Service with
Mansfield, Northern, The Queen’s, Westminster and Scottish
Congregational Colleges on terms comparable with the conditions of
service of full-time URC ministers.
(8) Such other
service rendered by a URC minister as may from time to time be agreed by
the Retired Ministers Housing Committee to constitute qualifying
service.
It is in the interest of a
minister, who is considering taking up an appointment involving service
as outlined in sub-paragraphs (2) to (7) above OR in any other activity
and at retirement will require assistance with housing, to consult the
Secretary of the Retired Ministers Housing Committee.
6. Widows and Widowers
(1) The widow or widower of
a minister who dies in retirement as a tenant of a Society property will
be granted the transfer of the tenancy on the same terms as the deceased
minister providing that the marriage took place before the minister’s
65th birthday.
(2) The widow or widower of
a minister who dies in full-time service and whose service meets or
could have met the requirements of paragraph 1 above by his or her 65th
birthday will be assisted with housing (except where personal financial
resources are sufficient to provide for this).
(3) In all other cases the
needs of a minister’s widow or widower will be considered in the light
of the circumstances of each case.
7. Part-time Pastorates
(1) It is not the
responsibility of the Society to provide housing for ministers in
part-time stipendiary pastorates. Therefore, a minister who moves from a
full-time to a part-time stipendiary pastorate at the age of 65 or later
can have no expectation of assistance with retirement housing at this
stage, but will be considered for retirement housing when finally
retiring from pastoral charge, subject to the qualifying service
requirements in sections 4 and 5 above being met.
(2) Should a retired
minister who is already a tenant of the Society, or of a property
managed by the Society on behalf of the URC, be called to a part-time
stipendiary pastorate, or his/her period of charge be extended beyond
that initial call, the Society will consider continuation of the tenancy
subject to consideration by the pastorate making the call to pay the
rent surcharge appropriate to that property if possible.
Sep 2007
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