Two Top City & Guilds Executives Placed on Leave Amid Bonus Scandal
A scandal over millions of pounds in bonuses has prompted two senior executives at City & Guilds, a leading vocational training body, to be placed on leave. The charity watchdog, the Charity Commission, is launching an investigation into the sale of City & Guilds' training and qualifications business to PeopleCert, following reports that executives received massive bonuses.
The chief executive, Kirstie Donnelly, and the chief financial officer, Abid Ismail, will be absent from work for a short period while an internal investigation led by PeopleCert's legal representatives is conducted. The inquiry aims to uncover events before and after the sale of City & Guilds' business to PeopleCert.
Last year, City & Guilds sold its training and qualifications business to PeopleCert, with reports suggesting that executives received significant bonuses as part of the deal. The payments were reportedly worth £1.7m for Donnelly and £1.2m for Ismail. However, PeopleCert claims that the charity's board approved the payment structure before it was privatised.
The sale gave City & Guilds a cash windfall of between £180m and £200m, which will be used to secure its long-term future and pursue charitable objectives. The Charity Commission is investigating events at the charity itself, not PeopleCert.
The trustees of City & Guilds say they are cooperating fully with the Charity Commission's inquiry and remain confident that all actions taken by the board have been proper and transparent. However, the scandal raises concerns about executive pay and accountability within the charity sector.
A scandal over millions of pounds in bonuses has prompted two senior executives at City & Guilds, a leading vocational training body, to be placed on leave. The charity watchdog, the Charity Commission, is launching an investigation into the sale of City & Guilds' training and qualifications business to PeopleCert, following reports that executives received massive bonuses.
The chief executive, Kirstie Donnelly, and the chief financial officer, Abid Ismail, will be absent from work for a short period while an internal investigation led by PeopleCert's legal representatives is conducted. The inquiry aims to uncover events before and after the sale of City & Guilds' business to PeopleCert.
Last year, City & Guilds sold its training and qualifications business to PeopleCert, with reports suggesting that executives received significant bonuses as part of the deal. The payments were reportedly worth £1.7m for Donnelly and £1.2m for Ismail. However, PeopleCert claims that the charity's board approved the payment structure before it was privatised.
The sale gave City & Guilds a cash windfall of between £180m and £200m, which will be used to secure its long-term future and pursue charitable objectives. The Charity Commission is investigating events at the charity itself, not PeopleCert.
The trustees of City & Guilds say they are cooperating fully with the Charity Commission's inquiry and remain confident that all actions taken by the board have been proper and transparent. However, the scandal raises concerns about executive pay and accountability within the charity sector.