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Welcome To Yorkshire set to come under closer scrutiny in wake of Sir Gary Verity’s departure as investigations launched into allegations over expenses and bullying

Man who brought Tour de France and World Championships to region left last month due to expenses scandal

Welcome To Yorkshire is set to come under closer scrutiny from the councils that part-fund the tourism and inward investment agency following the departure last month of chief executive Sir Gary Verity amid allegations he had misclaimed £40,000 in expenses - raising the prospect of a knock-on effect on the high-profile cycling events the region hosts.

Welcome To Yorkshire this week launched two separate investigations into Verity, one regarding his expenses, the other into allegations of bullying by him made by former members of staff.

When Verity departed the company, its chair Ron McMillan said he did not believe that the issue of his expenses required police investigation, but West Yorkshire Police have been made aware of the two inquiries.

The police have said, however, that it is “not clear if any criminal offences have been committed.”

Welcome To Yorkshire has launched a search for a successor to the larger-than-life Verity, with board member Keith Stewart saying: “I’m sure that person will be different and set a different tone.”

What his departure means in terms of the region’s ambitions to become the world’s leading destination for cycling is unknown for now.

Bidding for the 2014 Tour de France Grand Depart, at a time when British Cycling and the UK government were backing a rival bid from Edinburgh, was very much Verity’s idea, coming to him in the shower one day.

Besides hosting the Tour de France and launching Tour de Yorkshire, the region also bid successfully for this year’s UCI Road Cycling World Championships, which will mainly be based in Harrogate

The events have generated a huge return on investment for the region’s economy – the Tour de Yorkshire alone brought in an economic benefit of £50 million in 2014, which rose steadily to £98 million last year.

But with Welcome To Yorkshire part-funded by contributions from local authorities, how it spends its money will come under closer scrutiny than ever as a result of the expenses scandal.

The Yorkshire Post reported earlier this week that the councils that make up the Leeds City Region were seeking an urgent meeting with the company.

Councillor Tim Swift, the chairman of the Leeds City Region business rates pool board, said: “Any misuse of public funds is completely unacceptable. Welcome to Yorkshire is a limited company and decisions on executive pay and expenses are made by its board.

“The Leeds City Region business rates pool board is seeking an urgent meeting with the chair of the Welcome to Yorkshire board, to outline the defined and distinct conditions that will need to be in place for medium-term funding from the pool to be committed.

“We will also ask for reassurance on the rigour of the independent review announced by Welcome to Yorkshire’s board and for agreement on the timeline for it to be completed. Council leaders will use the opportunity of the results of this review to strengthen the accountability, transparency and diversity of the governance of public resources.”

He added: “The councils represented on the board will continue to support the Welcome to Yorkshire team to deliver the flagship events in the region and county.”

According to the Guardian, more than half of Welcome To Yorkshire’s annual turnover is publicly funded, to the tune of a combined £14.9 million over the past five years.

Meanwhile, Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme says he feels sad for Verity, with whom he worked closely prior to the Grand Depart of the 2014 edition of the race. The pair's working relationship continued with the launch the following year of the Tour de Yorkshire, held jointly by Tour de France owners ASO and Welcome To Yorkshire in partnership with British Cycling. 

The Guardian reports that Prudhomme, speaking at Welcome To Yorkshire’s Y19 trade show at the Royal Armouries in Leeds yesterday, said: “I cannot help but feel sad for the man who made me discover your beautiful county, for the man who brought together our ‘ooh la la’ with your ‘ee bah gum’, the man who made me love Yorkshire: mon ami, Gary Verity.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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6 comments

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muhasib | 4 years ago
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The Guardian appear to have asked questions about certain claims that were made:

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/mar/29/scandal-hit-yorkshire-to...

Interesting that this morning it appears he is still active as a director of the company organising the 2019 UCI World championships.

Avatar
ktache | 4 years ago
1 like

Can anyone please explain to me how you can mistakenly misclaim 40 thousand pounds?

Avatar
Smultie replied to ktache | 4 years ago
2 likes

ktache wrote:

Can anyone please explain to me how you can mistakenly misclaim 40 thousand pounds?

 

You don't mistakenly do that.

This is just fraud.

Avatar
Danger Dicko replied to ktache | 4 years ago
2 likes

ktache wrote:

Can anyone please explain to me how you can mistakenly misclaim 40 thousand pounds?

 

An extra £10 on a dinner bill here and there...

Avatar
Simon E replied to Danger Dicko | 4 years ago
1 like

Danger Dicko wrote:

ktache wrote:

Can anyone please explain to me how you can mistakenly misclaim 40 thousand pounds?

 

An extra £10 on a dinner bill here and there...

You missed off a zero.

£243,000 annual salary (plus chauffeur service and other perks) is obviously not enough for some people.

"Over the last 10-and-a-half years I have always tried to set the highest standards of personal performance and leadership. "

Well you didn't try fucking hard enough mate. Yet another one riding the gravy train then being 'sorry' when discovered.

Avatar
Mungecrundle replied to ktache | 4 years ago
1 like

ktache wrote:

Can anyone please explain to me how you can mistakenly misclaim 40 thousand pounds?

 

Not that I have any knowledge of the alleged fraud details, but it would be fairly easy to rack up £40k in first class travel, hotel and dinner bills. Especially if you had to employ a close family member in some sort of personal assistant role to accompany you on said "business" trips.

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