Bath Chronicle

Weca officer’s £59,000 payoff revealed by audit

- Adam Postans adam.postans@reachplc.com

A top officer was given a £59,000 payoff to leave his role at the West of England Combined Authority.

The former employee is understood to be director of infrastruc­ture David Carter who parted company last year with the organisati­on (Weca), which comprises Bristol, South Gloucester­shire and Bath & North East Somerset councils and oversees the region’s transport, skills and strategic planning.

It was the only exit payment for any member of staff between April 1, 2021, and March 31 this year.

As reported in May, Weca’s external auditors Grant Thornton launched a probe into the golden handshake made in summer 2021, although the amount has only now been publicly disclosed in the annual accounts.

They were also examining other recent senior leadership team departures from the combined authority, which the finance watchdogs said could be “highly problemati­c” for Weca’s ability to deliver its objectives.

The auditors decided to dig deeper after identifyin­g a “risk of significan­t weakness” in the combined authority’s valuefor-money arrangemen­ts, which Grant Thornton is legally required to form an opinion on.

They began further inquiries amid concerns that “strained relationsh­ips” between Metro Mayor Dan Norris, who heads

Weca, and the three council leaders could be jeopardisi­ng the effective use of taxpayers’ money. Their final value-formoney report is yet to be published.

But Grant Thornton’s report to audit committee members in April said: “Clarity is required on the rationale for proposing the severance payment and how the payment and its terms were constructe­d.”

It came a few weeks after South Gloucester­shire Council cabinet member Cllr Ben Burton criticised an “exodus” of senior Weca officers, including the directors of finance, legal and infrastruc­ture, suggesting at a cabinet meeting that there could be a “toxic working environmen­t” at the combined authority.

Meanwhile, Weca’s recently published draft statement of accounts also show that chief executive Patricia Greer received a £162,757 salary in 2021/22 - up from £160,352 the year before - plus £34,147 in pension contributi­ons, giving a total remunerati­on of £196,904.

Salaries for other top officers included £153,657 for the director of infrastruc­ture, £127,653 for director of investment and corporate services, £120,389 for director of legal services and £98,797 for director of business skills.

The papers say the organisati­on spent just shy of £9 million on staff in 2021/22 - £892,000 more than budgeted for.

A spokespers­on for the authority said they were unable to comment further on individual staff payments.

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