Explore about the Famous Civil Servant Suzi Leather, who was born in Uganda on April 5, 1956. Analyze Suzi Leather’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Suzi Leather dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Suzi Leather?
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Suzi Leather Biography
Dame Susan Catherine Leather, DBE, DL (born 5 April 1956) was chair of the Charity Commission from 1 August 2006 to 31 July 2012. She was succeeded by William Shawcross. Previously she chaired the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. She was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in January 2006.
She was educated at St Mary’s, Calne, Tavistock School, and Exeter University where she received a BA degree with honours in Politics in 1977, followed by a BPhil degree in social work. She then took an MA degree in European politics in 1978 from Leicester University.
In 1979–84, she was a senior research officer for Consumers in Europe. In 1984–86 she was a trainee probation officer. In 1988–97 she was a freelance consumer consultant. In 1997–2001, she was chair of Exeter and District NHS trust. From 2000–02, she was first deputy chair of the Food Standards Agency. From March 2002 – July 2006, she was chair of Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. She joined the board of the United Kingdom Accreditation Service in 2006 (a political recommendation from the Downing Street office of then Prime Minister Tony Blair) to improve their quality standards regulation.
From May 2005 – July 2006, she was chair of the School Food Trust. She gave up the HFEA and School Food Trust positions for the Charity Commission position. She felt her qualification for that position derived from her experience as a regulator rather than any expertise with charities; “My main contact [with charities] has been through volunteering – I have no experience personally of working for charities. I don’t think I had a very well developed sense of what the Charities Bill was going to do, so I can’t describe myself as a charities expert in any sense”, and therefore spent her early months in the post absorbing information about the sector.
The Independent Schools Council successfully challenged the controversial “public benefit” test, at a tribunal hearing which cost the Commission £185,000 in legal costs. Leather later expressed regret over the focus on bursaries, but said that most of the guidance had been upheld. The Commission was accused of exceeding its powers under the Charities Act 2006, and of drafting the “public benefit” test under Labour Party instructions. Nevertheless, upon her departure from the Charity Commission, Conservative MP Bernard Jenkin gave credit for her “courage and tremendous public service”. She is listed as #31 in Quentin Letts’ book, “50 People Who Buggered Up Britain”.
The Charities Act 2006 added to the traditional list of “charitable purposes” for which charities can be established (the prevention or relief of poverty, the advancement of education, the advancement of religion, and so forth) a requirement that their activities should be carried on “for the public benefit”; and it required the Charities Commission to determine how it would be established that the public benefit was being served. In pursuance of this requirement, in 2009 Leather instigated an investigation into private schools in order to determine whether non-profit education providers should continue to be accorded charitable status automatically. She stated she could not “see why charitable status was always merited”.
Specifically, it was decided that, while providing education is a charitable purpose, doing so only in exchange for an economic fee does not meet the requirement that the purpose is carried on for public rather than private benefit. A fee-paying school could nonetheless deserve charitable status, for example if it offered bursaries, or provided teaching or coaching children from surrounding schools, or otherwise contributed. In July 2009, five private schools in the North West of England had been investigated and it was concluded that two of the five gave insufficient benefit to the public and had therefore failed the proposed test. These school would lose their charitable status in a year’s time “unless they gave out more bursaries”, but these schools were allowed to keep their charitable status in 2010 after re-addressing their public benefit.
In 2010, a list released by the Cabinet Office in a drive for greater transparency in public life revealed the salaries of 156 “quango” bosses, including her own remuneration package of £104,999 a year for a 3-day week as head of the Charity Commission.
Leather was dubbed the “quango queen” in the popular press. In April 2013, she took the unpaid position of the independent Chair of the Plymouth Fairness Commission.
What's Suzi Leather Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Suzi Leather Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |