The Sunday Post (Dundee)

YOU’RE FIRED

Ex-boss of disgraced charity found work advising another good gause – but he was dumped after shock revelation­s by Sunday Post

- By Gordon Blackstock and Andrew Picken gblAckstoc­k@sundAypost.com

THE FORMER boss of disgraced charity Scotia Aid has managed to get himself involved with another good cause, The Sunday Post can reveal.

Dan Houston, the founder and former chairman of Scotia Aid Sierra Leone, had been working in an “advisory capacity” at a charity which helps the families of people who die abroad.

But the organisati­on has now decided to cut ties with Mr Houston following a Sunday Post investigat­ion.

me revealed last week how two of his fellow bosses at Scotia Aid had been banned for life from being charity trustees.

The move followed our investigat­ion into the conduct of the Lanarkshir­ebased aid body, which gave just 13p in every pound it raised to the African children it was set up to help.

But Houston – who has a host of failed businesses to his name and once owed more than £200,000 to the taxman – escaped censure by the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR) because he quit as a Scotia Aid trustee before the watchdog took action.

The loophole meant he was free to continue working with other Scottish charities.

And we can now reveal that he had been helping out since last year at Glasgow-based DAYNA Death Abroad You’re Not Alone.

The 63-year-old had been working alongside Julie Love, who co-founded the organisati­on after her son Colin died in a swimming accident in lenezuela in 2009. Houston, who once paid himself £104,000 in “consultanc­y fees” to run Scotia Aid, had been advising DAYNA on ways to raise its profile and funds.

That’s despite an active investigat­ion by OSCR looking at claims his former organisati­on used a business rates loophole to net millions of pounds meant for local authoritie­s.

But following our reports Julie, 48, has now binned Houston.

“Last year a relative suggested meeting with Mr Houston to discuss ways he could help DAYNA,” she said.

“Since then we’ve had a few meetings and he’s been working in an advisory capacity.

“But following the stories in The Sunday Post we’ve decided to stop that relationsh­ip.”

It is not known if Mr Houston was paid for his involvemen­t in DAYNA.

Julie was recognised for her tireless charity work in the New Year’s honours list with a MBE.

She has spent most of the last year battling non-Hodgkin lymphoma and undergoing chemothera­py. She added: “The charity has perhaps suffered in the last year as I’ve not been well.”

Last week, we revealed how Kieran Kelly, 34, and Alan Johnston, 59, had been banned from running charities in Scotland after OSCR’s Scotia Aid probe.

The pair were trustees alongside Houston before he decided to quit.

There is no suggestion of any wrongdoing at DAYNA, which has been widely praised for its work in helping families who have lost a loved one overseas.

Mr Houston could not be reached for comment.

 ??  ?? Dan Houston avoided a ban by watchdogs, leaving him free to work with other charities.
Dan Houston avoided a ban by watchdogs, leaving him free to work with other charities.
 ??  ?? DAYNA founder Julie Love.
DAYNA founder Julie Love.

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