Sue Wright obituary

A picture


My sister, Sue Wright, who has died aged 57, devoted her life to raising awareness about fostering and adoption as well as practising as a child protection barrister and becoming a successful businesswoman,Our upbringing was unhappy and Sue went into foster care aged 16, but the placement did not work out; by the age of 17 she was living in a Salvation Army-run establishment with a 17-year-old flatmate, living on a £40 a week allowance,From 1982 to 1984 she found part-time work cooking and cleaning in a nursing home in Southport,It was owned by a Mrs Smythe, who welcomed her in, saying: “There’s always more room at the table,”This became Sue’s own mantra and the title of the speech she delivered to conferences and corporate audiences to raise awareness of the need for more foster carers and adoptive parents.

Born in Liverpool, Sue was the daughter of Ann (nee Clayton), who worked for the council, and John Sherman, employed in logistics.Sue went to Stanley high school, Southport, and having left with no qualifications, was determined to become a barrister so that she should stand up for others without a voice.She put herself through college and night school to gain some O-levels and took a BTec in business studies and finance while working for Mrs Smythe, then went on to study law at Preston Polytechnic (now the University of Central Lancashire) in the late 1980s.From there she moved to London in the early 90s, and completed her bar exams while working at Lehman Brothers in the City, where they thought she was doing beauty college exams.Sue moved back to Merseyside in the late 90s and fostered for Liverpool city council for 16 years, taking care of seven children in total, at first alongside working full-time as a barrister specialising in child protection, then later running the Harrogate Group, a property finance and advisory company that she set up in 2021.

Sue established a reputation as one of the north of England’s leading advocates.Her driving desire to help others extended to dogs; she was an active supporter of several rescue charities, including Manchester Dogs Home, helping to raise £2.2m to rebuild its premises after an arson attack in September 2014.Only four months before her death from cancer she was presented with a special commendation for her work with children and families at the 2025 Women of the Year awards.She campaigned for routine annual blood tests to become available on the NHS, as she believed this would have helped to diagnose her condition earlier and could have saved her life.

Sue is survived by her partner, Faisal Arif, her daughter, Sonia, from her marriage to the footballer Mark Wright, which ended in divorce, and her children, Ruth, Keira, Cory and Miley, her grand-daughter, Delilah, and me.
trendingSee all
A picture

European airports ‘face jet fuel shortages within three weeks’; Irish army called in over fuel protests - as it happened

Time to wrap up…European airports have warned the EU that jet fuel shortages could hit the summer holiday season if oil supplies do not start to flow through the strait of Hormuz within the next three weeks.Airports Council International (ACI) Europe reportedly wrote to EU transport commissioner Apostolos Tzitzikostas saying that the bloc is three weeks away from shortages. The letter was first reported by the Financial Times.The warning will raise concerns of a risk of flight or holiday cancellations if the US and Israel’s war on Iran continues. Oil prices have soared since the start of March after Iran effectively closed the strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route for exports from the Gulf, in retaliation

A picture

US inflation soars in March as war on Iran drives economy into uncertainty

US inflation soared in March amid the US-Israel war with Iran, with prices up 0.9% compared with last month and 3.3% over the year, according to new data released on Friday.The spike in the consumer price index (CPI), which measures the price of a basket of goods and services, is the largest in nearly two years and the first official measure of how the conflict has affected US consumer prices, particularly as Iran blocked the strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and gas would typically pass.The index for energy rose 10

A picture

US summons bank bosses over cyber risks from Anthropic’s latest AI model

The US Treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, summoned major American bank chiefs to a meeting in Washington this week amid concerns over the cyber risks posed by Anthropic’s latest AI model, according to reports.Jerome Powell, chair of the Rederal Reserve, was said to have been among those gathered at the Treasury headquarters for the meeting after the release of the Claude Mythos AI model that Anthropic says poses unprecedented cybersecurity risks.A recent leak of Claude’s code prompted the startup to publish a blogpost at the beginning of the month saying that AI models had surpassed “all but the most skilled humans at finding and exploiting software vulnerabilities”, adding: “The fallout – for economies, public safety, and national security – could be severe.”This week’s meeting was reportedly called while bank bosses were already in Washington for a lobby group gathering, with a guest list focused on heads of so-called systemically important banks – meaning regulators believe that a major disruption to their operations, or their potential collapse, would put financial stability at risk.Those in attendance included the Goldman Sachs chief executive, David Solomon, Bank of America’s Brian Moynihan, Citigroup’s Jane Fraser, Morgan Stanley’s Ted Pick and the Wells Fargo boss Charlie Scharf, according to Bloomberg, which first reported details of the meeting

A picture

‘Irresponsible failure’: Google, Meta, Snap and Microsoft slam EU over child sexual abuse law lapse

The European parliament has blocked the extension of a law that permits big tech firms to scan for child sexual exploitation on their platforms, creating a legal gap that child safety experts say will lead to crimes going undetected.The law, which was a carve-out of the European Union’s ePrivacy Directive, was put in place in 2021 as a temporary measure allowing companies to use automated detection technologies to scan messages for harms, including child sexual abuse material (CSAM), grooming and sextortion. However, it expired on 3 April, and the EU parliament decided not to vote to extend it, amid privacy concerns from some lawmakers.The regulatory gap has created uncertainty for big tech companies, because while scanning for harms on their platforms is now illegal, they still remain liable to remove any illegal content hosted on their platforms under a different law, the Digital Services Act. Google, Meta, Snap and Microsoft said they would continue to voluntarily scan their platforms for CSAM, in a joint statement posted on a Google blog

A picture

Justin Rose struggles to keep his cool in the heat but Masters dream lives on | Andy Bull

Hot days and hard greens at the Masters. It was up in the mid- 80s by lunchtime on Friday, and that was if you were underneath the trees with a Georgia peach ice-cream sandwich. Out there on the other side of the ropes it looked a whole lot hotter again. The world’s best golfers sweated away chasing after Rory McIlroy’s lead in conditions which, they all agreed, could yet get as tough as they come at Augusta National. By midway through the afternoon McIlroy loomed over the tournament like the Augusta sun, and you worried players who made the mistake of looking right at the big white leaderboards might burn their eyes on the numbers he was running up

A picture

Bath hit back to reach semi-final after stunning Northampton in 11-try epic

There are big games and then there are contests which define entire campaigns. And when the moment came it was Bath who just had enough turbo thrust to propel themselves into the Champions Cup semi-finals for the first time in 20 years. There is little to separate the two best teams in England and this was another endlessly compelling battle of wits and wills, ultimately settled by a 76th-minute try by Bath’s replacement forward Ted Hill.Plenty of work still has to be done to reach the final in Bilbao next month with Johann van Graan’s side now facing the winners of Sunday’s mouthwatering all-French tie between Bordeaux and Toulouse. This was a truly sensational hors d’oeuvre, though, with nine tries in the first half alone