EA Chairman resigns

JP1

Member
Livestock Farmer
s300_defra-sign.jpg


The Chairman of the Environment Agency Sir Philip Dilley has today resigned from his position.

Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss said:

Today I have accepted Sir Philip Dilley’s resignation and I would like to thank him for his work as Chairman of the Environment Agency.

He has ably led the Environment Agency through some challenging times and leaves it a much better organisation, as shown in its excellent response to the recent flooding which saw staff working around the clock to protect and help thousands of people across the country.

It is important that the Environment Agency continues to have a strong leadership team and its Chief Executive Sir James Bevan will continue his excellent work heading up the operational and day-to-day running of the organisation. The current Deputy Chairman, Emma Howard Boyd, has agreed to become Acting Chairman with immediate effect and will lead the board in holding the agency to account. We will begin the task of recruiting a permanent replacement in due course.

In a statement issued today, Sir Philip said:

I have today told the Secretary of State of my decision to step down as Chairman of the Environment Agency, and she has accepted my resignation.

I am well qualified to carry out this role, and had much to contribute. I fully support the Secretary of State’s reform agenda to deliver efficiency as well as a better, more joined-up service to our stakeholders and the public, and so I am disappointed that I will not now see through delivery of these reforms.

My reason for resigning is that the expectations of the role have expanded to require the Chairman to be available at short notice throughout the year, irrespective of routine arrangements for deputy and executive cover. In my view this is inappropriate in a part-time non-executive position, and this is something I am unable to deliver.

Furthermore the media scrutiny focused on me is diverting attention from the real issue of helping those whose homes and businesses have flooded, as well as the important matter of delivering a long-term flood defence strategy. This same media attention has also affected and intruded on my immediate family, which I find unacceptable.

I want to be clear that I have not made any untrue or misleading statements, apart from approving the statement about my location over Christmas that in hindsight could have been clearer.

The Environment Agency is an extremely competent and well-run organisation, and the many employees I have met are passionate about what they do because they really care for the environment and the communities we work to enhance and protect.

I retain the full support of the board, which I know has a strong breadth of knowledge and experience, and with Sir James Bevan as the newly appointed Chief Executive the future of the Environment Agency is in strong hands.
 

Honest john

Member
Location
Fenland
Hee Hee,
They did some digging on a river here last year,
Took the silt from the sides & dumped it back in the middle :ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::banghead::banghead:

They are now back in there removing it & stacking it in the fields.

Top class organisation ;);)
 

Kidds

Member
Horticulture
Two things:
Firstly, if he had come back off holiday immediately would it have stopped raining?
Secondly, it would take a lot for than £100k to tempt me into something that exposes my family to the parasitic leeches of the media that his family have no doubt endured. 10x wouldn't be enough.

The victims of the recent floods have my every sympathy but unless you tell me different I don't see how he was to blame.
 

Badshot

Member
Location
Kent
Two things:
Firstly, if he had come back off holiday immediately would it have stopped raining?
Secondly, it would take a lot for than £100k to tempt me into something that exposes my family to the parasitic leeches of the media that his family have no doubt endured. 10x wouldn't be enough.

The victims of the recent floods have my every sympathy but unless you tell me different I don't see how he was to blame.
He's not to blame for the floods, but he has done nothing to stop the nonsensical European claptrap that is contributing to them through lack of waterway maintenance.
Local idb went to a meeting about deweeding the dykes here on Romney marsh, run by the ea. Unfortunately it was run by the bunny huggers not the engineers/workers. Waste of time.
 

fudge

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire.
He's not to blame for the floods, but he has done nothing to stop the nonsensical European claptrap that is contributing to them through lack of waterway maintenance.
Local idb went to a meeting about deweeding the dykes here on Romney marsh, run by the ea. Unfortunately it was run by the bunny huggers not the engineers/workers. Waste of time.
Bunny huggers are pushing at an open door mind. There is no stomach in government to maintain drainage systems and river catchments properly. Thier view is that is just not worth the expense.
 
Such a hard life he led, £100k/yr and couldn't be available at short notice. It does make you wonder what this country is coming too, no wonder it's in the mess it is. Disgrace but then he will be replaced with another numpty from the "old boy's club"
And that's for what he describes himself as a part time position!
 
Two things:
Firstly, if he had come back off holiday immediately would it have stopped raining?
Secondly, it would take a lot for than £100k to tempt me into something that exposes my family to the parasitic leeches of the media that his family have no doubt endured. 10x wouldn't be enough.

The victims of the recent floods have my every sympathy but unless you tell me different I don't see how he was to blame.

If you were the head of a large organisation like the EA and being paid handsomely for it. When a crisis occurred that demanded the very thing your being paid for i.e your leadership skills where would you consider the best place to be?

1. The beach
2. At work

The man chose to take a high profile role and in the end for whatever reason wasn't up to it.
 

Bruce Almighty

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Warwickshire
He's pathetic. I would say he's shirking responsibility.

If any of us had a disaster or emergency affecting our businesses we'd be back off holiday like a shot - we don't earn anywhere near as much as he does.

Hardly surprising though is it, Chris Smith had to be dragged to Somerset 2 years ago
 

Badshot

Member
Location
Kent
Bunny huggers are pushing at an open door mind. There is no stomach in government to maintain drainage systems and river catchments properly. Thier view is that is just not worth the expense.
I agree. All they need do is tell gov that by not cleaning the rivers they are being so much greener for the wildlife, and by doing so they can save a fortune as a nice little side benefit. Be irresponsible to continue wasting tax payers money damaging the environment wouldn't it?
 

JP1

Member
Livestock Farmer
To be fair, he was asked where he was and he honestly replied that he was at home in that he has two homes as his wife is from the Caribbean and he has two homes

At least he has resigned / been resigned. The political environment is shaped by others and they are remarkably silent
 

Kidds

Member
Horticulture
He's not to blame for the floods, but he has done nothing to stop the nonsensical European claptrap that is contributing to them through lack of waterway maintenance.
Next one won't either. As far as I have heard it was the volume of water that was the problem, nothing else. Not like the Somerset Levels of last year.

Let's face it, the papers demanded his resignation and got it. I wouldn't mind if the papers had a plan B that they thought was a better route but all they want is a scandal for them to shout about, they don't want a solution.
 

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