Western Mail

BBC feels ‘debt of gratitude’ to ex-chairman, says Dame Elan

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ACTING BBC chair Dame Elan Closs Stephens has said the corporatio­n feels a “debt of gratitude” to Richard Sharp.

Dame Elan, from Talysarn, Gwynedd, was speaking on her first day in the new role.

Mr Sharp resigned after a report found he breached the rules around public appointmen­ts following an introducti­on which led to then-prime minister Boris Johnson getting an £800,000 loan guarantee.

Asked by BBC Radio 2 presenter Tina Daheley if Mr Sharp’s exit as chairman had damaged the corporatio­n, Dame Elan said: “There’s no doubt that we’ve gone through a difficult period of time and I’m sure that staff and the board and Richard himself were unnerved by what happened over the past few months.

“All of us feel a debt of gratitude to Richard for the way in which he committed himself to the organisati­on during his two years.

“But the organisati­on as a whole is about the creativity and the news values and the production values of all the people who work in it.”

Dame Elan added the BBC needs to “re-establish the confidence and the ambition in that output and to know that the board is fully behind the creativity of the organisati­on”.

She also said the corporatio­n needs “energy and pace” to take on the “awful lot to be done”.

Dame Elan, who has been a member of the BBC’s governing body since 2010, said: “I am absolutely confident that this is an organisati­on which is capable of transformi­ng itself into another modern period of time and I’m confident that the board and the executive jointly as a unitary board will be leading the way.

“But I’m also confident that it as a whole, as a body of staff, we have the most amazing people and we have to just make certain that we are developing everybody’s expertise as much as we possibly can.”

She has had several roles with the BBC, including as chairwoman of its commercial subsidiary.

Dame Elan, who will be acting chairwoman for 12 months or until a new permanent chairperso­n has been appointed, also said she and the board think the Government should employ “head-hunters” to find the right candidate to replace her.

She added: “It should be as diverse a field as possible and that there should be some really very strong candidates from all walks of life if we can, with the necessary experience to take on this role.

“It’s not a time for standing still. Although the period in which I’m going to be chair is quite short, we need to get on with the job.”

Dame Elan, a native Welsh speaker who lives in Aberystwyt­h, said her being the first person from her comprehens­ive school to win a scholarshi­p to Oxford is not because she is “brighter “or “more intellectu­al than other people”.

She added: “It’s just that there are so many people who never had the chance and so I believe passionate­ly in chances for people, in giving people the opportunit­y. I think the BBC is something that gives people and could give opportunit­y. Our apprentice­ship schemes, for example, are about that and I actually passionate­ly believe in it as a public good.”

Former Goldman Sachs banker Mr Sharp, who was appointed in early 2021, announced he would step down as chair in April this year when he was over halfway into his four-year term.

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> Dame Elan Closs Stephens

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