These are the top salaries at the Save the Children fund.
CEO Justin Forsyth £139,950
COO Anabel Hoult £139,950
COO / CFO & Strategic Initiatives Rachel Parr £131,970
Global Programmes Director Fergus Drake £113,300
Fundraising Director Tanya Steele £112,200
Marketing & Comms Director Sue Allchurch £111,920
Policy & Advocacy Director Brendan Cox £106,029
CFO Peter Banks £102,000
HR Director Paul Cutler £100,980
The UK average salary is £26,500.
Save the Children Fund gets £176 million – over half its
income - in grants from various governments, including over £80 million from
the British government. That compares to £106 million in donations from the
public. In 2012 over £70 million was spent by Save the Children UK on its own
staff costs. This was reduced on paper to £44 million in 2014 by the expedient
of transferring some Headquarters staff from Save the Children UK to Save the
Children International.
Save the Children’s HQ staff work in a plush office for
which they pay a staggering £6.5 million pounds a year lease. Do they really
need their HQ in ultra-expensive Central London?
How much all of this is known to the 13,000 good-hearted
volunteers who work many hours for nothing to support these people. It’s not
just Save the Children, of course. Many of the corporate charities are just as
bad. There are more than 195,289 registered charities in the UK that raise and
spend close to £80 billion a year. Together, they employ more than a million
staff – more than our car, aerospace and chemical sectors .
In England and Wales there are 1,939 active charities focused on children; 581 charities trying to find a cure for cancer; 354 charities for birds; 255 charities for animals, 81 charities for people with alcohol problems and 69 charities fighting leukaemia. All have their own executives, administrators, fundraisers, communications experts and offices, but few will admit they are doing exactly the same thing as other charities. In Ethiopia, for example, two decades ago there were 70 international charities operating there, today the figure is close to 5,000.
In England and Wales there are 1,939 active charities focused on children; 581 charities trying to find a cure for cancer; 354 charities for birds; 255 charities for animals, 81 charities for people with alcohol problems and 69 charities fighting leukaemia. All have their own executives, administrators, fundraisers, communications experts and offices, but few will admit they are doing exactly the same thing as other charities. In Ethiopia, for example, two decades ago there were 70 international charities operating there, today the figure is close to 5,000.
And while registered charities claim that almost 90p in
every pound donated is spent on ‘charitable activities’, many spend at least
half their income on management, strategy development, campaigning and
fundraising – not what most of us would consider ‘good causes’. A 2013
parliamentary inquiry into the charity sector found there were so many
charities that the Charity Commission for England and Wales was struggling to
ensure that most registered charities were genuine, rather than tax avoidance
schemes or political campaigning groups. The inquiry said the Commission, which
receives more than 900 calls, letters and emails every day, didn’t have the
staff to check whether our donations were actually going to real charitable
purposes at all.
From here
From here
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