logo
Combined authority's CEO steps down from role

Combined authority's CEO steps down from role

Yahoo31-05-2025

The chief executive of the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) is stepping down after four years in the role.
Laura Shoaf will remain in the role until 17 June and will continue as chair of Shadow Great British Railways, which was set up last year by the government under its plans to bring the UK's railways back into public ownership.
Ms Shoaf said she was "sad" to be leaving the organisation she has been with since its inception, but was confident she was leaving it in good hands.
The WMCA said Ed Cox, deputy chief executive, will step up as interim chief while a recruitment process gets under way for a permanent replacement.
"I have lived and worked in the West Midlands for over 20 years, and I am proud that I have been able to make a real difference for our residents," Ms Shoaf said.
"I will always champion our wonderful region and while I am sad to be leaving the combined authority, I know I am leaving it with people who care passionately about the West Midlands and will continue to see it go from strength to strength."
West Midlands Mayor Richard Parker said Ms Shoaf had done an "exemplary job for the region" during her time in the job.
In 2022, she was honoured with a CBE for services to economic regeneration in the West Midlands.
"I want to thank Laura for her decades of service to the West Midlands," the mayor said.
"I especially want to recognise the work she has done in my first year to help me embed and deliver my priorities.
"I want to wish her every success in the future, especially continuing in her role as Chair of Shadow Great British Railways."
This news has been gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service
Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
Regional authority boss takes rail reform job
West Midlands Combined Authority

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Change to service could help slash 'astronomical' transport bills for West Midlands councils
Change to service could help slash 'astronomical' transport bills for West Midlands councils

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Change to service could help slash 'astronomical' transport bills for West Midlands councils

Calls have been made for a lifeline service to be used to help West Midlands councils reduce "astronomical" transport bills they face every year. Members of the West Midlands Combined Authority's Transport Delivery Overview and Scrutiny Committee discussed proposals for transforming the region's Ring & Ride service. This includes moving to a new operating model and increasing fares for the first time since April 2017. READ MORE: Major change to the price of bus passes and fares coming in the West Midlands - this is when But committee member Councillor Robert Alden said one way of providing a more comprehensive Ring and Ride service would be for it to pick up some Home to School Transport trips. As well as boosting the service, he said it would also ease the financial burden faced by local authorities across the West Midlands. Demand for Ring and Ride services is growing steadily with figures showing 2,487 unique customers have taken a trip in the last six months. Bosses said the last week of March was the busiest since the start of 2020 when the service was hit by Covid-19. The authority still provides a subsidy of £6.467 million per year to run the service but this is a far cry from 2010/11 when its budget was around £12 million. A report to the committee said fare income brings in around £250,000 per year and this is reinvested into the service. Are car headlights too bright? Councillor Alden said: "All of our councils have huge Home to School Transport bills that place significant financial pressures and cost astronomical amounts. "There must be a way to operate this service that also picks up some of that Home To School Transport services across the region so there can be cross subsidisation. "Councils can make a saving on their budget and can also help underpin the finances of Ring and Ride and allow for a more comprehensive service across the region that helps everyone." Catherine Moore, Ring & Ride and Demand Responsive Transport Manager, said: "We have explored this. "We will continue to explore it but the problem is the times don't always work when the Ring and Ride wish to travel and the Home to School Transport children. "We have explored these conversations and we actually feel there might be some benefit from the Community Transport side we could perhaps further develop over the next few years."

Former Cabinet minister Penny Mordaunt becomes a dame
Former Cabinet minister Penny Mordaunt becomes a dame

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Former Cabinet minister Penny Mordaunt becomes a dame

A former Cabinet minister who played a prominent role during the King's coronation becomes a dame in Charles' Birthday Honours. Penny Mordaunt said it was 'lovely to be appreciated in this way' and she was 'feeling very grateful'. Her profile was boosted by her sword-carrying role as Lord President of the Council during the 2023 coronation ceremony. Dressed in a custom-made teal outfit with matching cape, and headband with gold feather embroidery, as Lord President of the Council she was responsible for bearing the Sword of State and presenting the Jewelled Sword of Offering to the King, the first time the duty had been carried out by a woman. Dame Penny told the PA news agency: 'It is lovely to be appreciated in this way, and I'm very conscious that everything I have ever got done has been with the help and efforts of others. 'So I'm feeling very grateful on many counts today.' The former defence secretary and Commons leader was widely seen as a potential Tory leader until she lost her seat at last year's general election. In Westminster she had twice challenged for the Conservative leadership, losing to Liz Truss and then pulling out of the race against Rishi Sunak, but her hopes of making it third time lucky were dashed when she lost her Portsmouth North seat. But she still harbours hopes of staging a political comeback by returning to the Commons. Sir Mark Tami, who has served as a Labour whip since 2010, has also been awarded a knighthood. The MP for Alyn and Deeside told the PA news agency that it is a 'great, great honour'. 'When I was told I was shocked,' he said. 'I think most people probably are. It's a great great honour and I'm very very pleased.' Meanwhile, Newcastle MP Chi Onwurah becomes a dame, and told PA she was 'totally overwhelmed and surprised' when she found out. 'I grew up on a council estate in Newcastle in a one-parent family,' Dame Chi said. 'I never thought about being made a dame, as you can imagine.' She said she would be 'really proud' to accept it 'on behalf of my constituents'. Other Westminster figures given honours include Sir Philip Barton, the former top civil servant at the Foreign Office, who becomes a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George. He was heavily criticised for failing to return from holiday while Afghanistan fell to the Taliban in 2021, as MPs on the Foreign Affairs Committee said they had lost confidence in him and suggested he should consider his position. But he remained in post as permanent under-secretary at the Foreign Office until standing down in January this year. Former Conservative health minister Maria Caulfield becomes a CBE and said she was 'really surprised'. She told the PA news agency that she has returned to work as a nurse since losing her Lewes seat at last year's general election, and 'when I read the letter I couldn't have been more surprised'. She added: 'It's nearly a year since the general election so I'd kind of forgotten really about politics and that side of things.' She said that she was 'really lucky' to have been able to focus on women's health during her time as a minister and was now doing 'gynae cancer research […] doing the hands-on work rather than the policy work'. Among the changes brought in while Ms Caulfield was in office was the introduction of the baby-loss certificate and the HRT prescription prepayment certificate. 'It's really nice to see that's being recognised and the team that helped us achieve all of that are to thank for a lot of that hard work,' she said

Glasgow-raised Nationwide and Greggs bosses among businesswomen honoured
Glasgow-raised Nationwide and Greggs bosses among businesswomen honoured

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Glasgow-raised Nationwide and Greggs bosses among businesswomen honoured

Nationwide's chief executive has said she is 'hugely proud' of her Glasgow background as she becomes a dame, joining the Scottish boss of Greggs and a raft of businesswomen to be recognised in the King's Birthday Honours. Debbie Crosbie, the only woman to lead a 'big six' bank in the UK, has been given a damehood for her services to financial services. Greggs chief executive Roisin Currie and Sky's boss Dana Strong have also been honoured in this year's list. Dame Debbie told the PA news agency: 'I try to encourage people to think beyond 'I'm a female', but when it comes to this (honour) I am actually hugely proud. 'I grew up in Glasgow, I wasn't different to any of my peer group, so to be given the opportunity to lead… I've had a massively rewarding career. 'As a woman, I hope that sends a message of opportunity and hope, not just to young people.' Dame Debbie said she was particularly honoured to be recognised as not just the only woman to lead a major high street bank in the UK, but also as a Scot. 'Lots of people talk about me being a female but I think most of my peer group have come from a much higher social demographic and they tended to be educated in either Oxford or Cambridge,' she told PA. 'I think having that diverse social mobility as well as gender is really important – we do a lot of work at Nationwide to try and encourage people from backgrounds who wouldn't traditionally think of themselves as able to go into these types of jobs.' Dame Debbie has had a more than 30-year career in banking, climbing the ranks of Clydesdale Bank before becoming chief executive of TSB bank in 2019. Since taking the top job at Nationwide in 2022, she led the building society's £2.9 billion acquisition of Virgin Money, which has seen it become the UK's second largest mortgages and savings provider. But Dame Debbie also said some of the work she was most proud of involved Nationwide's free dementia clinics, with some 30,000 appointments in 200 of its branches over the past year. She said the clinics 'really touch people' and she had received numerous messages of thanks from families who had used the service. Meanwhile, Roisin Currie, a fellow Glaswegian and alumni of Strathclyde University, has been made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for her services to hospitality. Ms Currie became the chief executive of Greggs in 2022 having joined the Newcastle-based bakery chain, popular for its sausage rolls, 12 years prior. Greggs has been growing rapidly across the UK and has set its sights on exceeding 3,000 shops, with Ms Currie overseeing the chain topping £2 billion in annual revenue for the first time last year. She spent nearly 20 years at Asda before joining Greggs as its people director in 2010. This year's King's Birthday Honours also recognises the group chief executive of Sky, Dana Strong, who has been made a CBE for her services to business and media. Ms Strong succeeded Jeremy Darroch, who led the broadcaster for more than a decade, when she took the top job in 2021 from her previous role as the president of one of Sky's owner Comcast's US businesses. The American businesswoman developed her telecoms career at Austar, which was a satellite subscription TV provider in regional Australia, before going on to hold executive positions at Virgin Media and Liberty Global. She has since overseen the launch of Sky Glass, the streaming TV that requires no satellite dish or box, and Sky Stream. Ms Strong said in a statement to PA that she was 'deeply humbled' by the honour, adding: 'It is a great privilege to serve in the UK's creative sector, and I am immensely proud of Sky's role in inspiring, enriching, and connecting lives across the country.' Other businesswoman to be honoured include the former chief executive of Microsoft UK, Clare Barclay, who has been made a dame for her services to business, technology and leadership. Dame Clare has been at Microsoft for more than 26 years, having joined as a sales and marketing manager, and now also chairs the Government's Industrial Strategy Advisory Council. Lyssa McGowan, the chief executive of Pets At Home, has been made Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for her services to retail. Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store