Jill Barrow

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Jill Barrow
Born
Jill Helen Barrow

(1951-04-26) 26 April 1951 (age 73)

Jill Helen Barrow (born 26 April 1951) is a British company director and former public administrator.

Early life[edit]

Jill Helen Barrow was born on 26 April 1951, the daughter of Philip Eric Horwood and Mavis Mary, née Handscombe. She received a Certificate of Education from the University of Durham in 1972, and then completed a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree at the Open University in 1980, before returning to Durham and completed a Master of Education (MEd) course in 1983.[1]

Career[edit]

Barrow was a teacher in secondary schools and further education colleges between 1972 and 1986, when she began working in education management and inspection. Between 1990 and 1993, she was Director of Education at Essex County Council and then took up the same role at Surrey County Council until 1995, when she was appointed Chief Executive of Lincolnshire County Council;[1] she was the first woman to become the chief executive of a county council in England.[2]

Barrow left Lincolnshire CC in 1998,[1] a year after the Conservative group on the Council secured a majority and took over from the LabourLiberal Democrat coalition that had governed since 1993. According to the Leader of the Labour Group on the Council Rob Parker, the Conservative leadership, headed by Jim Speechley, began a "scorched earth" policy of removing coalition appointees from the council's executive.[3] Barrow was given a severance payment amounting to £160,000.[4] Auditors later found this payment to be unlawful,[3] also commenting on the "absence of justification for payments of such magnitude".[4] Speechley was forced to resign as leader in 2002 and was jailed in 2004 over a separate incident,[5][6] while his successor as leader, Ian Croft, was later found to have "breached the code of conduct for people in public office" over his relations with Barrow's successor as Chief Executive, David Bowles, who had been a whistleblower in the Speechley scandal.[7]

After Barrow left Lincolnshire CC, she was appointed Chief Executive of the South-West of England Regional Development Agency, serving between 1999 and 2001. She was a Board Member for England on the National-Lottery-funded New Opportunities Fund from 1999 to 2004. Barrow was then a director at the consultancy firm GatenbySanderson until 2006, when she took up a directorship at the leadership consultancy company Big Blue Experience; as of 2016, she remains in that role.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Barrow, Jill Helen", Who's Who 2017 (A & C Black; online edition, Oxford University Press, November 2016). Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  2. ^ "People", Times Education Supplement, 18 August 1995. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  3. ^ a b Peter Hetherington, "Lincolnshire Tories in disarray", The Guardian, 6 October 2004. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  4. ^ a b KPMG, "Misuse of severance powers", Lincolnshire County Council: Report in the Public Interest (KPMG, 2 May 2002), p. 11. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  5. ^ "Council leader resigns", BBC News, 13 September 2002. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  6. ^ "Former council leader is jailed", BBC News, 2 April 2004. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  7. ^ "Ex-leader banned from authority", BBC News, 31 March 2006. Retrieved 12 November 2017.