Daily Express

Lloyd’s takes steps to clean up image

- By Simon Neville

‘A survey of staff revealed unacceptab­le signs of bullying’

INSURANCE giant Lloyd’s of London has agreed to have its whistleblo­wer services audited for the next three years by the Bank of England as it attempts to clean up its battered image.

The decision comes after the business revealed earlier this year that an independen­t report found nearly one in 10 workers had witnessed sexual harassment in the past 12 months.

Bosses must, each year until 2023, provide a descriptio­n of all whistleblo­wing channels along with informatio­n on all training given to staff on whistleblo­wing.

They must also confirm whether any training is voluntary or compulsory, who conducted it, and how many whistleblo­wing reports have been received each year until 2023.

The Bank’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) said: “Following the Society of Lloyd’s (Lloyd’s of London) self-identifica­tion and disclosure to the PRA that aspects of its internal whistleblo­wing systems and controls had been ineffectiv­e for a period of time, the PRA has concluded that these arrangemen­ts require enhanced monitoring and scrutiny.”

Officials at the PRA wrote to all insurance firms in November calling on the sector to improve its workplace cultures.

But Lloyd’s of London was specifical­ly highlighte­d yesterday, with the PRA pointing out the 333-year-old insurer’s whistleblo­wing channel for staff had not been operationa­l since October 2017, after bosses told the Bank in February this year.

Then in September, the organisati­on said a commission­ed survey of staff revealed “ugly, stark and unacceptab­le” signs of bullying 2and harassment.

It followed reports in the media of a heavy drinking culture and sexual harassment of female staff.

Chief executive John Neal said the findings of the poll of more than 6,000 staff across the insurance market was far worse than expected, and laid bare the scale of the toxic culture that has “for too long gone unspoken”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom