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hatrack

(60,260 posts)
Fri Jul 19, 2024, 11:19 AM Jul 19

Two Yorkshire Water Execs Got Nearly $800,000 For A Year Marked By Massive Sewage Dumping, Infrastructure Failure

Two bosses of Yorkshire Water have been handed a combined £616,000 in bonuses for a year in which thousands of its customers “struggled to go about their daily lives” for weeks due to a burst water pipe. The payouts, part of a bonus system that could be banned in future under proposals outlined by the Labour government in this week’s king’s speech, were detailed in the company’s annual report. The awards cover a period that also includes nine months of 2023, a year in which Yorkshire Water was named the second-worst water company in England for sewage spills.

The company’s chief executive, Nicola Shaw, was paid salary and benefits worth £657,000 for the year to the end of March 2024, topped up by a £371,000 bonus. Shaw, who was appointed in 2022, forfeited her bonus the previous financial year amid public outrage over sewage spills. Yorkshire Water’s chief financial officer, Paul Inman, was paid £436,000 in salary and benefits, as well as a £245,000 bonus. The extra awards are part of a short-term “executive incentive plan”, a cash award that can be collected after a year and is calculated based on measures that include profits, customer service and environmental performance.

In April, the water regulator Ofwat said Yorkshire Water had “failed” customers in Goole, East Yorkshire, after a burst water pipe affected 12,700 people for more than a fortnight between October and November 2023. “Residents described how they struggled to go about their daily lives, many were unable to bathe, do household chores, or turn their heating on during the start of the winter period,” Ofwat said at the time. A spokesperson for Yorkshire Water said it had paid out £37,000 in compensation and established a community fund, adding: “We know there were some learnings from how we handled this incident; we’ve taken these onboard and made some changes to improve the service our customers would receive if this incident were to happen again.”

Earlier this year, Yorkshire Water was singled out as the second-worst water company for sewage discharge from storm overflows. The company said this was “due to the industrial heritage of parts of our region, and the way the network was created at the time”, adding that it was investing £180m to reduce “discharges into watercourses from our storm overflows”.

EDIT

https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jul/19/yorkshire-water-bosses-huge-bonuses-company-failed-customers

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