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The Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan Board (French: Régime de retraite des enseignantes et des enseignants de l'Ontario) [5] is an independent organization responsible for administering defined-benefit pensions for school teachers of the Canadian province of Ontario.
OPTrust, officially the OPSEU Pension Trust, [2] is a legal trust formed by the contractual agreement between the two plan sponsors, Ontario Public Service Employees Union and the Government of Ontario. [3] It manages one of Canada's largest pension funds and administers the OPSEU Pension Plan. [4]
The Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System [3] (OMERS) is a Canadian public pension fund, headquartered in Toronto, Ontario.OMERS is a defined benefit, jointly sponsored, multi-employer public pension plan created in 1962 by Ontario provincial statute to administer retirement benefits and manage pension investment funds of local government employees in the Canadian province of Ontario.
1.9% Wave 3: Small employers (50 or fewer employees) without comparable workplace pension plans – – 0.8%: 1.6%: 1.9% Wave 4: Employers with a workplace pension plan that requires modifications to meet the comparability test, as well as employees who are not members of their workplace's comparable plan – – – 1.9%: 1.9%
TORONTO (Reuters) -The Ontario Teachers Pension Plan (OTPP) said on Thursday it had invested a total of $95 million to the troubled cryptocurrency exchange FTX and any financial loss from the ...
The Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan lost $19 billion in 2008. [4] Between 2008 and 2009, net assets fell to $87.4 billion from $108.5 billion. [4] In May 2016, CBC reported that the Ontario government since 2000 had given "$80.5 million to teachers' unions and the Ontario Teachers' Federation," after Ontario's auditor general performed an ...
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A province may choose to opt out of the Canada Pension Plan, as Quebec did in 1965, but must offer a comparable plan to its residents. [5]: §3(1) Any province may establish an additional or supplementary plan anytime, as under section 94A of the Canadian Constitution, pensions are a provincial responsibility.