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Southern Water nearly doubles CEO pay to £1.4m despite bonus ban

about 10 hours ago
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Southern Water has nearly doubled its chief executive’s annual pay package to £1.4m despite financial difficulties and a government ban on it awarding bonuses.Lawrence Gosden was awarded £691,000 under a “two-year long-term incentive plan” (LTIP), on top of fixed pay of £687,000 in its last financial year, according to the company’s annual report published this week.In the previous financial year he was awarded total pay of £764,000 including a bonus of £184,000.Water companies have been under intense scrutiny in recent years amid outrage over sewage leaks into Britain’s rivers and seas.

The Labour government sought to address some of that anger through a ban on bonuses for top executives at water companies that break the law,Southern Water was last month banned from paying bonuses with immediate effect after a sewage leak in August 2024 in the New Forest in Hampshire that fell into the most serious category,Southern said the extra LTIP pay was linked to a turnaround plan and was not a bonus, and that it complied with the law and with rules set by Ofwat, the water regulator,Feargal Sharkey, the former lead singer of the Undertones turned water campaigner, said he and others had warned the government that the bonus ban would not cut overall pay for “fat-cat executives”,“It is a blatant attempt to get around the bonus ban.

This happened before when they banned bonuses for bankers.The issue of fat-cat pay levels has reared its head and bitten the government on the arse once again,” he said.The increase to Gosden’s pay package is likely to be controversial as it emerged weeks after Southern Water was forced to ask shareholders, led by Macquarie, for £1.2bn to avoid a breach of its regulatory licence because of unsustainable debts.Macquarie is the former owner of Thames Water, whose debt pile has led it to the verge of collapse into temporary nationalisation.

Southern Water, which supplies Kent, Sussex, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight with water and sewage services, this week announced a hosepipe ban that was criticised for coming at a time when bills have risen significantly.Some experts say such bans are necessary to preserve water amid drought conditions in some parts of the country.Southern had already been allowed a 53% bill increase for its 4.7 million customers to an annual average of £642 – the largest rise of any company in England and Wales – but it is appealing to the Competition and Markets Authority to charge more.Gary Carter, a national officer at the GMB union, which represents thousands of water industry workers, said: “For Southern Water’s boss to trouser more than a million pounds after just announcing a hosepipe ban and losing millions of litres in leaks every single day is abhorrent.

“It encapsulates everything that’s wrong with our broken, privatised water system.”A Southern spokesperson said the company had a record year for leak repairs.They said: “Our CEO received no bonus this year, in line with the new Ofwat rule.He was paid part of a long-term incentive scheme linked to our turnaround that dates from early 2023.That’s funded not by customers, but by our shareholders.

We made record investments of £977m last year, which helped to deliver a successful turnaround plan including reducing leaks by more than 15%.”Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionGosden would have received another £396,000 if not for the ban on annual bonuses.The company’s chief financial officer, Stuart Ledger, had been in line for a bonus of £335,000 on top of pay worth £987,000.Southern’s remuneration committee decided to award Gosden £691,000 under the LTIP on 24 June, under a plan set up in 2023.The two-year plan is not caught by the rules on annual bonuses, although most companies do not generally consider a two-year period as “long term”.

It is understood that half the amount will be paid this year.A person with knowledge of the regulations said schemes that started before 1 April 2024 were not covered by the ban.Gosden’s pay increase was also driven by “benefits” worth £111,000, nearly quadruple the value of the benefits received the previous year.Those benefits included a relocation allowance, private healthcare and a car allowance.Southern’s spokesperson added that the relocation allowance and the long-term incentive plan “represent common industry practice”.

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Angela Rayner ‘disappointed’ by Diane Abbott’s latest comments on racism

Angela Rayner has said she is disappointed that Diane Abbott has defended comments about racism that led to her year-long suspension from Labour, as the party says it is looking “incredibly seriously” at Abbott’s latest remarks.The deputy prime minister, who last year paved the way for the veteran Labour politician to be allowed to stand for the party again at the election, told the Guardian the comments represented a “real challenge” for the party.While she said it was not up to her to decide whether Abbott would be suspended, her words suggest that the MP’s future within the party is once again under question. Rayner added that it was “not good” that Abbott had sought to back away from her earlier apology.Abbott, who represents Hackney North and Stoke Newington, was disciplined for writing a letter to the Observer in April 2023 arguing that people of colour experienced racism “all their lives”, different to the “prejudice” experienced by Jewish people, Irish people and Travellers

about 9 hours ago
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Labour spent 30% more than Tories in 2024 general election, figures show

Labour significantly outspent the Conservatives at the last general election including more than £12m advertising on platforms including Facebook and Snapchat, figures show.The last general election had the highest spending on record with more than £94m spent by political parties – about a quarter of which went on traditional direct mail to voters.Overall, Labour spent £30m compared with £23m by the Conservatives, according to data published by the Electoral Commission.The spending figures showed the two main parties significantly outspent smaller ones, with the Liberal Democrats and Reform UK spending about £5.5m each

about 9 hours ago
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Wes Streeting considers writing off part of doctors’ student debts to avert strike

Doctors could have some of their student loan debts written off as part of a package of measures being examined by Wes Streeting that may help avert next week’s strike.The Department of Health and Social Care is analysing how a new system of “forgiveness” could be brought in for younger doctors who are paying back student debts of up to £100,000.The health secretary and the co-chairs of the British Medical Association (BMA) resident doctors committee are holding talks on Thursday afternoon aimed at averting the latter’s planned five-day strike starting on 25 July.The health department is considering several different ways such a scheme might work, according to well-placed sources. They include not charging interest on debt accrued by trainee doctors while they were at medical school – in effect, freezing the debt – and cutting the overall debt by a certain sum for every year the doctor works in the NHS in England

about 10 hours ago
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Lowering the voting age: a boost for UK democracy or a shot in the dark?

Half a century since the national voting age was last lowered, Keir Starmer has decided the time is right to include more than a million 16- and 17-year-olds in democracy for the first time.Like bringing in same-sex marriage, smoking bans or maternity leave, extending the franchise is a defining policy that will become part of this government’s permanent legacy for the country.The thinking behind the move, promised in Labour’s manifesto, is that encouraging younger people to vote at an age when they are still largely in education will persuade them to make it a lifelong habit.There is also an issue of fairness. Many young people work and contribute taxes, or serve in the military in non-combat roles

about 12 hours ago
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Labour MP suspended for opposing disability cuts will keep speaking for ‘invisible in society’

An MP suspended from Labour for spearheading a rebellion against disability benefit cuts has stood by her actions and says she will “continue to advocate for my constituents”.Rachael Maskell, the MP for York Central, told the BBC that Keir Starmer had been wrong to suspend her and three colleagues and that the party needed to be a “broad church that listens to each other”.Speaking to the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, she said by speaking up against government cuts to disability benefits she was advocating for people who were “invisible in our society”.“I don’t see myself as a ringleader, I joined with other colleagues who had similar concerns about this legislation. We ultimately do believe that cutting money from some of the poorest in our society is not what a Labour government should be doing,” she said

about 16 hours ago
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MPs to tighten laws allowing foreign donations to influence UK elections

Ministers are planning to close loopholes that could allow foreign money to influence UK elections, with a crackdown on illegitimate donations through shell companies and new tests on political donors.As part of a push to tighten up electoral law, the government will on Thursday announce a series of measures to ensure donations come from allowable UK sources.These will include making sure foreign sources of money cannot be transferred into UK shell companies that carry out no business in the UK.The changes will also involve asking parties to do enhanced checks on donors and will require donor organisations known as “unincorporated associations” to make sure all contributions over £500 come from legitimate UK sources.At the same time, there will also be stronger fines of up to £500,000 for those that break the rules, with any false or misleading declarations constituting a criminal offence

1 day ago
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Stephen Colbert on Pentagon deal with Musk’s Grok AI: ‘Such a bad idea’

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Post your questions for Craig David

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The left must learn to take (and make) a joke | Letters

2 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Paramount’s $16m settlement with Trump: ‘Big fat bribe’

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London arts centre to amplify global majority voices and ‘urgent questions’

3 days ago
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‘I broke down in the studio from all the raw emotion’: Richard Hawley on making The Ocean

3 days ago