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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Richard Youle

Finance director left Welsh health board with a £73,000 payout

A director at Swansea Bay University Health Board has left the organisation with a £73,922 payout, it has emerged.

Lynne Hamilton was appointed as finance director in May 2017 and departed at the end of February this year.

Draft health board accounts for the 2019-20 financial year have revealed the package, which comprises an ex-gratia payment, unused annual leave and payments in lieu of notice.

There were no other departures from the health board where special payments were made in 2019-20.

An ex-gratia payment is a payment made by an employer where there is no contractual obligation to do so. There can be various reasons for it.

Asked why Ms Hamilton received the ex-gratia payment, the health board responded only to say that she left her post "by mutual consent".

It added that £38,457 of the £73,922 sum, which was agreed by the heath board's remuneration committee, related to two payments in lieu of notice.

Darren Griffiths has been appointed as interim director of finance for an initial six-month period.

Ms Hamilton gave regular updates on the health board's finances at meetings, briefing colleagues on whether savings plans were being achieved and what the end-of-year picture could look like.

The draft accounts for 2019-20 indicate a £16.2million deficit. The health board's operating costs were just under £931million.

The previous year the deficit was £9.8million, and the year before that it was £32.4million.

The health board, which has undertaken a huge amount of work to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, has made progress in various areas after being put in "targeted intervention" status by Welsh ministers in 2016.

This status is one below the most serious "special measures" category.

Two other Welsh health boards were placed in "targeted intervention" at the same time, with reasons for all three including a failure to deliver appropriate three-year business plans which address things like care quality, the workforce and finances.

Accountancy firm KPMG has been working with Swansea Bay University Health Board, on the instructions of the Welsh Government, on a financial governance review.

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