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Charity watchdog opens inquiry into City & Guilds’ sale of business arm

about 15 hours ago
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The Charity Commission has opened a statutory inquiry into City & Guilds’ sale of its qualification awards business to a private company last year.The announcement has been made after the Guardian revealed last month how City & Guilds bosses were handed million-pound bonuses after the charity privatised its business arm.The payments – which are understood to include a £1.7m award for the chief executive, Kirstie Donnelly, and £1.2m to the finance director, Abid Ismail – emerged after reports of how the privatised City & Guilds business has also embarked on a £22m cost-cutting drive and is shrinking its UK workforce after being sold by its charity owner to PeopleCert, an international certification company.

The presentation detailing the cost-cutting programme appears to have been removed from the PeopleCert website after the Guardian published the plans,Alongside the bonuses, Donnelly is also understood to have been granted a £100,000 increase to her salary, which now stands at about £430,000,Ismail’s salary is also believed to have been increased by 30%, rising by about £70,000 to £300,000,The commission said its inquiry will examine a range of issues including “concerns raised in public reporting relating to the sale and bonuses awarded to its executives”,It will also review “information provided by the charity to the commission regarding the sale of the awarding, assessment, and training businesses of the charity”, as well as “the trustees’ decision-making regarding the sale” plus “information that they were provided with and considered when making this decision”.

In its statement the commission said it “may extend the scope of the inquiry if additional regulatory issues emerge”, adding that it had previously been “made aware of the proposed sale by the charity, and had sought and received assurances about the trustees’ decision-making, but the sale did not require the commission’s regulatory consent”,Founded in 1878 by the City of London and a group of 16 livery companies, the original institute developed a national system of technical education, offering qualifications and apprenticeships in fields ranging from manufacturing and mechanical engineering to hairdressing and horticulture,It was awarded a royal charter by Queen Victoria in 1900, and the body says it helps about 1,1 million people a year,It has enjoyed a storied history, and the body’s famous alumni include the chefs Jamie Oliver, Marcus Wareing and Gordon Ramsay, as well as the former England football manager Gareth Southgate, the celebrity gardener Alan Titchmarsh and the fashion designer Karen Millen.

The institute’s business was owned under the umbrella of a charity, City & Guilds London Institute (CGLI), which announced in the autumn that it was selling its training and awards operation, City & Guilds (C&G), to PeopleCert.The charity, which provides grants to people in need of vocational training, said the sale gave it a cash windfall of between £180m and £200m, which was presented as ensuring the long-term future of the institution to pursue its charitable objectives, as well as providing increased opportunities and investment for the now-private training business.The trustees of the charity, CGLI, said: “We acknowledge the Charity Commission’s statutory inquiry and are cooperating fully with their investigation.We remain confident that all actions taken by the trustees have been proper, transparent, and in line with our charitable purpose.We are committed to maintaining public trust and will continue to act in the best interests of the charity and its beneficiaries.

”The private business arm, City & Guilds Ltd, has previously said: “Any awards to employees are a matter for City & Guilds Ltd and are guided by standard commercial practice to ensure critical expertise and experience is retained,”
politicsSee all
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Lib Dems call on Reform MPs to donate income from X to charity amid Grok row

The Liberal Democrats have urged Reform UK MPs who receive payment from X for their posts to donate the money to charities working to combat sexual exploitation, after the site was flooded with AI-generated sexualised images of women and children.The Lib Dem spokesperson for science, innovation and technology, Victoria Collins, said Nigel Farage and other MPs paid by the Elon Musk-owned site were receiving “tainted money”.A series of MPs have called for the government to stop posting on X after the site’s inbuilt AI tool Grok started generating huge numbers of images of women and children in bikinis or other minimal attire, often in sexually provocative poses, in response to user prompts.The site has now limited the image creation function to paying subscribers, a move that Downing Street condemned as turning “an AI feature that allows the creation of unlawful images into a premium service”.X users who are verified earn money based on the amount of engagement they generate

about 15 hours ago
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Home Office tells Gaza academic his bid to bring family to UK not urgent

A Palestinian academic has failed in his latest attempt to be reunited with his family in the UK after the Home Office concluded their case was not urgent and it was more appropriate for his two children to remain with their mother in a tent in Gaza.Bassem Abudagga was also told in a letter from Home Office officials that no reason had been found that was “sufficiently compelling” to defer a requirement that his wife attend a visa application centre (VAC) in Gaza so she could provide fingerprints to satisfy the conditions for evacuation.No such facility remains in Gaza as a result of Israeli bombardments, which have continued despite the fragile ceasefire – a fact that Abudagga says the Home Office is well aware of.Abudagga last saw his wife, Marim, son Karim, six, and daughter Talya, 10, four weeks before the October 7 attack in 2023 when he returned for a visit to Gaza.He had won a scholarship to study for a PhD at York St John University in 2022 and is regarded by his tutors as a model student

about 24 hours ago
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The world is in chaos. So thank God for the UK’s lone fixed point: Liz Truss

A world on the brink. Regime change in Venezuela. Greenland under threat from Donald Trump. Shadow fleet tanker seized by the US and the Brits in the North Atlantic. The Europeans battling to keep America onside in any Ukraine peace deal

1 day ago
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Labour’s swift pubs U-turn shows government learning – and repeating Treasury mistakes

Political U-turns come in various forms, and as news of the latest government reversal drifted out, this one connected to the plight of the pub trade, Labour MPs could take comfort in one thing: at least it happened quickly.While last summer’s change of stance on benefit reforms was forced on Downing Street by open rebellion, and those for pensioners’ winter fuel payments and inheritance tax for farmers followed months of dissent, the decision to revisit decisions on business rates took a matter of weeks.“It would have been better if we hadn’t done it at all, but at least it was reversed quickly,” said one MP about the promised new look at business rates valuations, which the hospitality trade say would have seen major increases for pubs and hotels.“Maybe they are learning. And to give the government credit, they have been in proper listening mode over this

1 day ago
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Software tackling deepfakes to be piloted for Scottish and Welsh elections

Election officials are working “at speed” with the Home Office on a pilot project to combat the use of deepfakes to target candidates standing in this year’s Scottish and Welsh elections.Officials at the Electoral Commission in Scotland said they and the Home Office expected software capable of detecting AI-generated deepfake videos and images to be operational before election campaigns begin in late March.Sarah Mackie, the commission’s chief in Scotland, said that if the software detected a hoax video or image, officials would contact the police, the candidate concerned and inform the public, although she acknowledged it could not always provide 100% certainty.They would then urge the social media platform to take the content down, she said. However, because such action is currently voluntary, the commission also wants legally enforceable “takedown” powers that would require media platforms to remove hoax material

1 day ago
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Badenoch claims forthcoming business rates U-turn for pubs ‘too little, too late’ – as it happened

We don’t yet know the extent of the government U-turn shortly to be announced related to business rates for pubs and other parts of the hospitality sector. (See 2.24pm.)But Kemi Badenoch is already saying it is “too little, too late”. In a post on social media, she says:Yesterday Keir Starmer told us Labour had ‘turned a corner

1 day ago
societySee all
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Thousands of offenders in England to get health support at probation meetings

1 day ago
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Under-pressure charities face conflicting demands | Letters

1 day ago
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A rare joy at police station in Huyton | Brief letters

1 day ago
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Jim Thomas obituary

1 day ago
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Guardian readers raise more than £850,000 as charity appeal enters final days

2 days ago
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Hospital patients collapsing while out of sight on corridors, NHS watchdog says

2 days ago