Following the FCA’s recent publication which confirmed changes to the Alternative Dispute Resolution (Complaints) rules, it has now issued Policy Statement PS15/19 ‘Improving complaints handling, feedback on CP14/30 and final rules’ that can be found here which details further future rule changes.
The Policy Statement details the following new requirements:
- An extension to the ‘next business day rule’, where firms are permitted to handle complaints less formally, without sending a final response letter, to the close of three business days after the date of receipt;
- Firms must report all complaints, including those handled by the close of three business days;
- Raising consumer awareness of the ombudsman service, by sending a ‘summary resolution communication’ for complaints handled by the close of the third business day;
- Firms must not charge more than a ‘basic rate’ for all consumer post-contractual calls and all complaints calls; and
- An extended ‘complaints return’ which requires firms to send FCA data twice a year about the number of complaints they receive.
The majority of these changes do not come into force until 30 June 2016; however the limit on the use of premium rate numbers comes into effect on 26 October 2015.



Pension transfer advice – assessing transfer risk
Alistair MacDougall Compliance 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021, DBAAT, Drawdown, FCA, Pension, Pension Transfer, PI, transfer
It has been well publicised that the FCA has aimed increasingly close scrutiny in the direction of firms that have been providing advice in relation to defined benefit pension transfers. Apparently caught off guard by the then Chancellor’s introduction in the Pension Schemes Act 2015 of what are generally called ‘pension freedoms’, the regulator has […]