Suzi Leather

Suzi Leather

Chair, Charity Commission from 1 August 2006

Dame Suzi Leather has been chair of the Charity Commission since 1 August 2006.
Just after her appointment, the government passed the 2006 Charities Act, which stated that charities must provide a “benefit to the general public” in order to claim charitable status. Much of her chairmanship has been consumed with determining how the Charity Commission will decide whether a charity provides public benefit.

How this public benefit test will affect independent schools has been the subject of much media scrutiny, and this has earned Leather plenty of personal and professional criticism from those who support the charitable status of public schools. As a former public schoolgirl herself, who educates one of her own children at private school, she had to withdraw from the debate after taking legal advice. Certain factions of the media also like to focus on the fact that she is a glamorous and attractive woman and a career “quangocrat”, as if those attributes automatically preclude her from doing a good job in her current role.

From 2002-2006, she was chair of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority and has also chaired the School Food Trust, the Food Standards Association and the Exeter and District Community NHS Trust.

She has a degree in politics from Exeter University and an MA in European politics from Leicester University. She is an active member of the Labour party.

She was made a Dame of the Order of the British Empire in January 2006.

Her term in office will come to an end in July 2012 and in October she will take up the position of chair of the trustees at LankellyChase Foundation.

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Charity Commission invites sector to financial control meeting

The Charity Commission has invited charities, trustees and advisers to attend a public meeting focused on good financial controls in the voluntary sector.

Dame Suzi Leather , Charity Commission chair delivers speech at breakfast briefing

Dame Suzi Leather has urged charities not to run marketing campaigns that focus on minimal overheads and says it is charities’ collective responsibility to educate donors on the necessity of running costs.

Rosie Chapman, former director of policy and effectiveness at the Charity Commission

The former policy chief of the Charity Commission has declared her opinion that requiring charities to fund the work of the Charity Commission is not a viable option.



'Charity facing closure' - the journalist's quandary

Niki May Young has witnessed a changing sector over the past two years, but today she is faced with a particularly difficult challenge.

The Charity Commission proposes that if a charity is not a member of one (or more likely several infrastructure bodies), then the charity is tainted. It further proposes to publicise that the Commission considers the charity to be tainted. Definitely not charity, but just rubbish and more utter rubbish!

» Charity Commission expects all charities to join an umbrella body

Dame Suzi Leather, chair of the Charity Commission

More than half of newly-registered charities are involved in service delivery, compared with 34 per cent of all charities on the register, the chair of the Charity Commission revealed at a Westminister meeting last night.

Partner more with the private sector, say charity experts

Charity experts have said the sector needs to explore more ventures with the private sector, in a series of debates at the NCVO Trustee Conference 2011.

Sam Younger, chief executive of the Charity Commission

Charity Commission chief executive Sam Younger says the regulator won't compel any charity to become a member of anything, but it will promote various umbrella bodies on its website.

Houses of Parliament. Image courtesy of nikoretro.

Yesterday’s Public Administration Select Committee meeting on the work of the Charity Commission provided some insights into the topics that the forthcoming ministerial review of the Charities Act might address.

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