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South East Water boss in line for £400,000 bonus despite outages

about 5 hours ago
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The boss of the company that has left thousands of households in Kent and East Sussex without water for days is in line for a £400,000 long-term bonus regardless of his performance, if he resists calls for him to resign over the outages,David Hinton, the chief executive of South East Water, is to receive the payout if he stays on until July 2030,Hinton is facing calls to give up his right to the previously unreported “service award”,The payment, which was disclosed in the company’s annual report, is not performance-related, meaning that as long as he remains, Hinton will receive it whatever the company’s record on water supplies or pollution,South East Water has faced immense pressure after 30,000 households in Kent and East Sussex endured days of water supply failures in November and again in January.

The environment secretary, Emma Reynolds, on Wednesday called on the regulator Ofwat to review the company’s licence to operate.On Thursday, Ofwat confirmed it had launched an investigation into whether South East Water had “complied with its obligation to provide high standards of customer service and support for its customers”.The outage has forced many of the affected households in the Tunbridge Wells area to pick up bottled water from makeshift distribution centres and travel out of the area to wash and use flushing toilets.On Thursday, the company said taps “should be flowing as normal” for 2,000 people in Tonbridge and surrounding villages.The crisis has thrust Hinton – who has run the company since 2020 – into the spotlight, with several MPs calling for him to resign or refuse his bonus for this financial year.

Hinton received £457,000 in the year to June 2025, including a £115,000 bonus.However, a 30% base salary increase, to £400,000, plus two new payments mean he is on track to receive more than that this year – even if he were to receive no performance-related bonus.He is in line for £565,000 in fixed pay this financial year if the service award is divided equally over the five-year period.The first payment is a “service award”, worth another £400,000 if Hinton stays until July 2030 – a rate of £80,000 a year.If he is still in the job he will receive the first £80,000 in July 2028, the same the following July and another £240,000 in July 2030.

In addition, South East Water awarded Hinton £50,000 in extra pay, described as a “cash allowance”, to compensate him for extra hours related to an appeal to the Competition and Markets Authority to allow bills to be raise even higher.Other water companies that have appealed do not appear to have awarded extra pay for carrying out the appeal, which is often part of the standard process in the five-yearly reviews.Hinton would also be eligible for a performance-related long-term bonus of up to £600,000 over the five years.South East’s chief financial officer, Andrew Farmer, and other unnamed senior executives will be eligible for similar payments.Mike Martin, the Liberal Democrat MP for Tunbridge Wells, said: “Dave Hinton’s salary and bonuses are wild.

He should be ashamed.Try giving us water first, then let’s talk about the money.”Martin added that all bonuses should be performance-related.“Obviously, bonuses should be related to performance otherwise they would be called salary,” the MP said.Gary Carter, a national officer at the GMB union, said: “It really adds insult to injury to reward the very person ultimately responsible for failing customers – whilst simultaneously increasing their bills.

If David Hinton had a shred of decency, he would hand this money back.”Last week, before the latest outages, Hinton told MPs on the environment, food and rural affairs committee that he did not want a focus on his bonus and pay during an earlier water crisis in December.He said that was why he had not done media interviews about the water shortages.He has also not given interviews as the latest crisis has unfolded, but the company said he was “absolutely working as hard as everybody else behind the scenes”.However, Hinton acknowledged that his performance-related bonus could be docked this year as a result of the water shortages.

He said: “There are different elements to the bonus,For example, health and safety is one element, and a whole load of the elements are on water supply, and I do not expect to get a bonus on either of those elements,”Paddy Goffey, a researcher at the High Pay Centre campaign group said the extra payments appeared to be “a novel form of compensation package”,“Guaranteed service awards of this kind are not common, and executives are typically rewarded through base pay and performance-related incentives based on a range of metrics,” he said,The extra payments appeared to be “rewarding substandard performance and a poor quality of service for customers, while also removing accountability for this”, Goffey added.

A spokesperson for the company said: “South East Water remains committed to a remuneration framework that supports a performance culture, and recognises success but does not reward poor performance.“The bonus scheme is evaluated by the company’s independent non-executive director-led remuneration committee.The executive directors are not part of this committee and have no say in their remuneration.“The bonus scheme is made up of multiple elements, including health and safety factors, an environment programme, and staff engagement.We can confirm that no bonus payment was made for operational performance for the year 2024-25.

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sportSee all
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Raducanu stunned by wildcard Preston in Hobart after tough Australian Open draw

Emma Raducanu ended her preparations for the Australian Open with a miserable 6-2, 6-4 defeat by Taylah Preston, a 20-year-old Australian wildcard, in the quarter-finals of the Hobart international.As the top seed in Hobart, a small WTA 250 tournament, Raducanu had entered with a real opportunity to compete for an elusive second career WTA title since her win at the US Open more than four years ago. Instead, the challenging rainy conditions were seemingly all it took to unsettle the Briton, who put in a dismal performance on Thursday evening. Her defeat against Preston, the WTA No 204, is her fourth-worst defeat by ranking since 2021.On a day of frustrating rain delays, the players were only on court for about 10 minutes before they had to return to the locker room with Raducanu trailing 1-2

about 8 hours ago
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Sports piracy explodes in UK with 3.6bn illegal streams and rise of black-market bookmakers

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about 10 hours ago
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Roger Federer hails Alcaraz and Sinner’s ‘great’ rivalry amid Australian Open return

Roger Federer hailed the dominance of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner as the six-time champion returned to the Australian Open for the first time since his retirement in 2022.Federer, who last travelled to Australia in 2020, will headline the inaugural opening ceremony with a doubles exhibition match alongside Andre Agassi, Patrick Rafter and ­Lleyton Hewitt.“The rivalry with Alcaraz and Sinner is a great one,” said Federer. “They play incredible tennis. I think that French Open final was unreal

about 10 hours ago
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New York Giants reportedly closing in on John Harbaugh as next head coach

The New York Giants are closing in on a deal to hire John Harbaugh as their next head coach, with negotiations ongoing but momentum building toward an agreement, according to an ESPN report Wednesday night.While contract details are still being finalized and no paperwork has been signed, sources told ESPN that both sides expect the process to reach the finish line barring an unexpected snag. One source characterized the talks as active and substantive, with issues still to be worked through.Harbaugh, 63, became available last week after an 18-season run with the Baltimore Ravens, where he compiled a 180–113 record, won a Super Bowl following the 2012 season and established one of the league’s most consistent teams.The Giants, who have gone 7–27 over the past two seasons, identified Harbaugh as a priority target early in their search to replace Brian Daboll, who was fired in November

about 12 hours ago
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Home hope Alex de Minaur handed no favours with tough Australian Open draw

Local hopes of ending a half century-long drought in the Australian Open have been tested after No 6 seed Alex de Minaur was handed a nightmare draw for the first grand slam of the year beginning on Sunday.In the first round at Melbourne Park the Australian faces former world No 6 Matteo Berrettini, who helped Italy win a third successive Davis Cup in the final in November.Another former top 10 player, 29th seed Frances Tiafoe, is a potential third-round opponent, while the 10th seed Alexander Bublik looms in round four entering the tournament in career-best form.If De Minaur can reach the quarter-finals – a stage he has never passed in grand slams – he is likely to play Carlos Alcaraz, the top seed who has beaten the Australian in all five matches the pair have played. Another Australian, 79th-ranked Adam Walton, will face Alcaraz in the first round

about 12 hours ago
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‘Smiling assassin’ Jordan Smith basks in spotlight after hitting $1m tennis jackpot

Pending tax advice, tennis coach Jordan Smith is Australia’s newest millionaire, thrust into the global spotlight after beating top professionals in the One Point Slam on Wednesday night.Smith’s improbable run to the $1m prize made him a magnet on Thursday morning at Melbourne Park, amid more than a dozen local and international interviews, selfies, promotions and autographs.At 10.30am, having slept for less than three hours and with no food in his stomach, Smith was just trying to do his best with all the attention. “No one’s really experienced this before, right?” he said

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Labour MPs could rebel over Hillsborough law after talks with families break down

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Keir Starmer denies change to digital ID plan is yet another U-turn

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UK politics: West Midlands crime commissioner resists calls for immediate sacking of chief constable – as it happened

about 23 hours ago
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Onwards and sideways for Keir after another U-turn leaves him going nowhere | John Crace

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