https://www.hartlepool.gov.uk/news/article/1250/audit_of_accounts_year_ended_31st_march_2018
A couple of figures that may surprise people...
CEO salary.....................£146,609
Pension Contributions..£22,276
Total...............................£168,885
Borough Solicitor salary.....................£93,663
Pension Contributions........................£88359
Compensation for Loss of office.......£63,451
Total.....................................................£245,473
Quote from: fred c on June 06, 2018, 01: PM
https://www.hartlepool.gov.uk/news/article/1250/audit_of_accounts_year_ended_31st_march_2018
A couple of figures that may surprise people...
CEO salary.....................£146,609
Pension Contributions..£22,276
Total...............................£168,885
Borough Solicitor salary.....................£93,663
Pension Contributions........................£88359
Compensation for Loss of office.......£63,451
Total.....................................................£245,473
That would suggest he was pushed - do the tentacles of the special one reach that far?
Well it can't be redundancy unless they're doing away with the post, which ain't gonna happen, although in their world anything is possible I suppose.
I've always assumed in my working life you either leave to go to a better job, get made redundant or dismissed from your post.
Compensation?
I always thought of him being too compliant to get rid of.
Quote from: Stig of the Seaton Dump on June 06, 2018, 06: PM
I always thought of him being too compliant to get rid of.
better he left with a gagging order as most of them do
Quote from: jawsbbc on June 06, 2018, 08: PM
Quote from: Stig of the Seaton Dump on June 06, 2018, 06: PM
I always thought of him being too compliant to get rid of.
better he left with a gagging order as most of them do
I believe the phrase here is ''hush money''. I'm sure he knows lots of dirty little secrets regarding the Scabal...and many big ones also, but he won't be singing like a canary any time soon! He'll be too busy enjoying himself spending that wedge of cash!
'Compensation for loss of office' is what exactly? It sounds like a simple throw away footnote n the balance sheet, but the more I see it the more I need to know what it means.
I've been a shop steward and been a manager, but never in all my time came across this phrase anymore.
Will we ever know.
A number of officers have left HBC over the last few of years and tbh, having to deal with some of the usual suspects is it any wonder, I suspect most of them take the view of 'thank **** i'm out of there'.....
Doesn't the pension figure of £88,359 seem excessive? I would have thought previous years pensions would have already been through the books and already declared.
Loss of office would usually mean redundancy. I bet the pension contributions are for the same reason but they seem very excessive. Perhaps to buy his silence?
With it being described as loss of office, does that mean we require no solicitor nowadays?
Quote from: crisstw on June 07, 2018, 01: PM
Loss of office would usually mean redundancy. I bet the pension contributions are for the same reason but they seem very excessive. Perhaps to buy his silence?
With it being described as loss of office, does that mean we require no solicitor nowadays?
Redundancy is loss of a position not an individual.
Loss of an individual is usually dismissal.
The £88000 would equate to almost 4 years of Employer's pension contributions. This may be payable in the case of redundancy when the employee reaches a certain age (close to earliest retirement date). The loss of employment late in a career would impact on the final salary pension and these payments will be to protect that pension entitlement. Employer's contributions continue even though the employee has gone.
It is hard to imagine the post of Borough Solicitor being redundant. I assume his work still needs to be done, so what is the reason behind his departure.
It obviously wasn't a redundancy a Borough Solicitors position is one of the must haves, for there to have been a compensation payment suggests it was a parting the ways, whether amicable or otherwise
There were whispers flying around for a while of a serious difference of opinion and the next salute the borough solicitors had moved on.
You never know, they might share a solicitor with another authority.
Quote from: Inspector Knacker on June 07, 2018, 10: PM
You never know, they might share a solicitor with another authority.
Ohh tut tut, why do you prolong this nonsense, do you refer to the Tees Valley Combined Authority Solicitor, all in good ( not so sure) time, breath deep exhale with clarity, err,hemm.
Every thing else seems to be getting shipped out, so why not. Tees Valley? No. But give it time.
http://solicitors.lawsociety.org.uk/person/117256/peter-john-devlin (http://solicitors.lawsociety.org.uk/person/117256/peter-john-devlin)
Landed on his feet following his golden parachute by the looks of it.
Just like the jobs for the boys situation with little Iain.
Words like 'lodge' and 'special handshake' come to mind.