Daily Mail

New head of NHS finance watchdog paid £300,000

... and, oh yes, the £468k Bath university chief will sit on the board with him!

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

THE new boss of the NHS’s financial watchdog will earn almost £300,000 a year despite an unpreceden­ted cash crisis, it has been revealed.

Ian Dalton will take over as chief executive of NHS Improvemen­t next month on a salary nearly double that of the Prime Minister.

He will lead an organisati­on whose role is to rein in the spending of hospitals and health trusts, and cut back on waste.

In a further twist, the watchdog has confirmed it is paying £8,000 a year to the country’s highest- earning university chief to work two to three days a month.

Dame Glynis Breakwell – the £ 468,000- a- year head of Bath University – is employed as NHS Improvemen­t’s remunerati­on officer as a non-executive director. A spokesman said Dame Glynis was not involved in the approval of Mr Dalton’s salary.

The NHS is facing its worst financial crisis in a generation as it struggles to meet the needs of the ageing population on a very tightly constraine­d budget.

Last week, Chancellor Philip Hammond promised a £2.8billion cash injection over two years but this was a third of what experts had asked for. Tomorrow senior officials at NHS England will discuss imposing widespread rationing of painkiller­s and routine operations to try to save money.

Figures uncovered by the Health Service Journal show that Mr Dalton will earn £287,000 a year in his new post. This is nearly double the £150,000 salary paid to Theresa May and £92,000 more than the head of the NHS, Simon Stevens.

A spokesman said Mr Dalton would be paid the same salary as in his current post as chief executive of Imperial College Healthcare hospitals in West London. The 53-year- old will also benefit from the NHS’s generous pension scheme and his pension pot will be worth more than £1million by the time he retires.

Norman Lamb, Liberal Democrat MP and former health minister, said: ‘Anyone who cares about healthcare recognises that you do need to pay proper salaries to hire people of the right calibre.

‘But paying someone almost £300,000 a year is a huge amount, especially at a time when basic operations are being cancelled. Meanwhile, we are losing huge numbers of nurses, doctors and ambulance staff because the Government say they cannot afford to pay the going rate. Something has clearly gone badly wrong.’

Chloe Westley, campaign manager at the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘Whilst it’s important to attract the best talent, it can hardly be justifiabl­e to offer this new NHS boss double the salary of our Prime Minister.

‘These figures show the public sector elite is not shoulderin­g the burden of the public sector pay cap. Taxpayers expect their money to be spent fairly and focused on frontline services, not on six-figure salaries for those at the top.’

Mr Dalton, who is married with two children, said he would bring ‘valuable insight’ to the role.

He has been in his current job since June and has previously held senior roles at NHS England, the former North of England health board and the Health Department.

An NHS Improvemen­t spokesman said his salary was recommende­d by the watchdog’s board and approved by the Treasury.

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