I’m told that there’s a petition on the Downing Street website calling for a new Bank Holiday in November. Apparently it would be called the National Remembrance Holiday, with the laudable aim of honouring those who have given their lives protecting our nation in wars old and new. I have to say that when I first heard the suggestion, I thought the idea of the Bank Holiday was to have a day dedicated to remembering to check our bank statements really carefully, to cancel our credit cards and to change our PIN numbers. Oh yes and to remember not to put the most crucial personal data for half the population of the country in an internal envelope plonked into the office out tray. And perhaps to remember, too, that it’s not clever to have a system that allows a 23-year-old kid to access that kind of data.
But I digress. HM Revenue & Customs chairman Paul Gray has done the honourable thing and resigned barely nine months into the job, though I don’t think anyone has seriously said he is actually to blame for the fiasco. His severance settlement is undoubtedly a comfort to him, but he deserves praise for the manner in which he has accepted ultimate responsibility. (Of course, there’s a feeling that Gray is paying a price that Alistair Darling dare not pay because if he did, the ultimate sub-prime borrower in all this is Darling’s predecessor who reigned over HMRC for ten years.)
A couple of weeks ago I spotted a ‘breaking news’ flash on BBC News 24 that said, “Blair under pressure to resign”. Seems like the good old days, I thought. The Blair in question was, of course, Ian Blair, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, whose organisation was prosecuted and convicted under health and safety legislation for a crime far more appalling than the loss of a couple of CDs. While, again, Blair was not involved in the tragic operation that resulted in the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes and so to that extent isn’t to blame, it is an arrogance of breathtaking proportions that the man should s t ill be in office, singularly failing to take responsibility for the actions of officers far more senior than an idiotic HMRC clerk. Moreover, to head an organisation that has a culture that apparently allows the chief constable to go home without being told of the tragedy is, in itself, unforgiveable.
We’re all in the business of trying to be successful, and it’s right that that’s where almost all of our thinking is oriented. But there needs to be a debate about responsibility for failure when to stay, when to quit, and at what cost. In the commercial world, we could start by thinking about Citibank CEO Chuck Prince who rightly resigned after announcing losses of up to $11bn. He’s got a $95m payoff to mop his tears, though.
Unable to find the low carbon vehicles it wants, delivery giant DHL is planning to support innovative new start ups itself 13 Oct 2008
Company launches carbon offset scheme in Middle East and pledges to sign up more markets to carbon reduction programme 13 Oct 2008
As member states meet to discuss EU's proposals, fears are growing that key components of the legislation will be watered down 13 Oct 2008
Global logistics giant claims thousands of tiny efficiencies can deliver big carbon savings 13 Oct 2008
The entire US financial system may be on the ropes, but according to Richard Seireeni, the recently formed "Salmon Nation" financial network is doing just fine 09 Oct 2008
BusinessGreen.com casts its eye over the simplest means of harnessing some geothermal power 08 Oct 2008

