It is well-paid and the charity sits on a huge bubble of money. For the CEO to have legged it suggests not just controversy but that he found out something on the financial side which he did not want to be around when it went off.
I was once asked to apply for a job at the Guardian I didn't for moral reasons. However I suspect if I had got it I would have found out that they don't practice what they preach
"For the CEO to have legged it suggests not just controversy but that he found out something on the financial side which he did not want to be around when it went off. "
Hopefully, the fallout from 'Kid's Company' will bring down a lot more big charities. Not before time.
"However I suspect if I had got it I would have found out that they don't practice what they preach"
3 comments:
O/T don't know if you saw this.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3298586/Thousands-spent-headhunters-wants-new-boss-toxic-RSPCA-Charity-leadership-crisis-nearly-two-years-without-chief-executive.html
It is well-paid and the charity sits on a huge bubble of money. For the CEO to have legged it suggests not just controversy but that he found out something on the financial side which he did not want to be around when it went off.
What, exactly, to do they do with the money?
I was once asked to apply for a job at the Guardian I didn't for moral reasons. However I suspect if I had got it I would have found out that they don't practice what they preach
"For the CEO to have legged it suggests not just controversy but that he found out something on the financial side which he did not want to be around when it went off. "
Hopefully, the fallout from 'Kid's Company' will bring down a lot more big charities. Not before time.
"However I suspect if I had got it I would have found out that they don't practice what they preach"
We already know they don't..
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