The Mail on Sunday

Dozens of NHS managers paid more than PM

- By Stephen Adams HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

DOZENS of local NHS managers pocket more than the Prime Minister – despite promises to crack down on executive pay.

The Mail on Sunday has discovered that at least 25 bureaucrat­s at county-level NHS clinical commission­ing groups received more t han £ 150,000 i n salary and bonuses last year.

According to an analysis of the latest annual reports from CCGs across England, a further 423 individual­s were paid more than £100,000, with hundreds more part-time board members earning in excess of Theresa May’s salary on a pro-rata basis.

Many of the managers received six-figure rewards while presiding over cuts such as restrictin­g access to hip surgery or IVF.

Among the highest paid was management consultant James Murray, who received at least £300,000 as chief financial officer of South West London CCG Alliance. Margaret Ashworth, the interim chief financial officer of Coastal West Sussex CCG, was pai d between £ 295, 000 and £ 300,000 for a ten- and- a- half month period.

Her colleague Ralph McCormack, executive lead for stabilisat­ion and transition, received between £275,000 and £280,000 for the full year. The biggest earner on a pro-rata basis was Carl Pettitt, former interim CFO of Camden CCG, who received between £195,000 and £205,000 for five months’ work split over two financial years – the equival ent of an annual salary of between £468,000 and £492,000.

However, Camden CCG used total rather than pro-rata earnings in its annual report, stating: ‘No individual CCG Very Senior Managers have been paid more than £150,000 in 2017-18.’

CCGs were introduced in 2013 following reforms led by former Health Secretary Andrew Lansley and are responsibl­e for the planning and commission­ing of health care services.

John O’Connell, chief executive of the Taxpayers’ Alliance, called the figures ‘alarming’.

A spokesman for SW London CCG Alliance said the cost of employing Mr Murray ‘included agency fees, VAT and employer National Insurance contributi­ons’. He is now on a permanent £140,000-a-year contract.

NHS Coastal West Sussex CCG said both Ms Ashworth and Mr McCormack had been in ‘ past interim positions’ which had since been filled permanentl­y.

A spokesman for NHS Camden said: ‘We engaged Ernst & Young in 2017- 18 to provide a chief finance officer during a time of transition. Payments include a consultanc­y fee and VAT.’

NHS England said: ‘A cap was introduced in 2016 for all new employees and, as set out in the NHS Long-Term Plan, a further 20 per cent reduction in administra­tive costs will be made this year, with savings reinvested in frontline care.’

 ??  ?? RICH REWARDS: Ralph McCormack £280,000
RICH REWARDS: Ralph McCormack £280,000
 ??  ?? INTERIM ROLE: Margaret Ashworth £300,000
INTERIM ROLE: Margaret Ashworth £300,000
 ??  ?? FINANCE CHIEF: James Murray £300,000
FINANCE CHIEF: James Murray £300,000

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