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Kiwisaver rules
Auckland’s Tim Fairhall changes Kiwisaver rules
By Joanne Holden
Tim and Joan Fairhall
An Auckland man with Down syndrome has won a change of rules that will allow anyone with a lifeshortening congenital condition to access their KiwiSaver funds before they turn 65. Tim Fairhall, who lives in a house in Te Atatū run by the Kōtuku Trust, is "positively dancing" after the Government announced in July that it would give early access to KiwiSaver to several hundred people with life-shortening conditions. He and his mother Joan Fairhall asked a Parliamentary select committee last year to change the rules to allow him and others with life-shortening conditions to access their KiwiSaver early - because they were unlikely to live until the normal retirement age of 65. Commerce Minister Kris Faafoi said the rules would be changed to create a new category for early withdrawal of KiwiSaver funds for anyone with a lifeshortening congenital condition. "I want to see Tim and others like him have the ability to use their KiwiSaver to support their wellbeing in their retirement – which is unlikely to be at age 65," he said. Joan Fairhall said her son was "positively dancing" at the news. "We are absolutely delighted for the sake of several hundred people, perhaps 1000 people, who will benefit from this," she said. "For Tim, it's fantastic because he can accomplish his dream of going and seeing his brother in Italy and his best friend in Canada." Tim, who turned 40 last month, has worked parttime at the Countdown supermarket on Te Atatū Peninsula for 15 years and has accumulated just over $10,000 in KiwiSaver. He wants to visit his brother Scott Fairhall an associate professor of cognitive science at Trento University in northern Italy, and his best friend, a former Kōtuku Trust support worker who married a Canadian and now lives in Canada. "It's been a long-held dream" she said. Faafoi said the new withdrawal category would have a set list of conditions named in regulations that would automatically qualify people for withdrawal. People would need to provide a medical certificate and other evidence to qualify for withdrawal. There would also be an alternative process for people who have a congenital condition not named in regulations to apply to their KiwiSaver provider to withdraw their savings. The change will be made following an amendment to the KiwiSaver Act 2006. COPYRIGHT: New Zealand Herald.