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Welcome to the NHS Retirement Fellowship
Thank you for your interest in becoming the new chair of the NHS Retirement Fellowship. We are halfway through a five-year plan which is transforming the way we operate, how we engage with the NHS and other key stakeholders, and how we support our members currently and in the future. We have already come a long way from where we started and we are now beginning an ambitious plan of doubling our membership and raising awareness so we can continue with our mission of supporting retired and retiring NHS, health and social care staff. We are seeking a dynamic and professional chair with significant senior leadership experience in the NHS (or the broader health and social care sector) and/or extensive experience of governing a charity to work with us to deliver our vision.
Our Board is made up of a variety of professionals from across the NHS and beyond, a number of whom are members of the Fellowship. We work closely with our dynamic senior leadership team, branch officers and volunteers and have fostered an excellent working relationship for the benefit of our members.
The Fellowship has a small executive team of seven part time staff who all work remotely from home.
The potential for the NHS Retirement Fellowship is immense, and I very much look forward to welcoming you and working with you on this exciting journey.
Julia Hickey
Acting Chair
NHS Retirement Fellowship.
About the NHS Retirement Fellowship
“One of things that makes the NHS a special place to work is the sense of togetherness, belonging and family. So, when colleagues come to retirement, the Fellowship is a wonderful way of maintaining these things and allowing colleagues to continue their connection with the service. I think more can be done to help retired colleagues share experiences, perspectives and support and the Fellowship is ideally placed to do this.” Sir Jim Mackey, Chief Executive, NHS England
Our motto is fun, friendship and fellowship and it sits at the heart of everything we do.
The NHS Retirement Fellowship began in 1978 when retiring nurse Irene James recognised that for significant numbers of retiring NHS staff, their colleagues and friends had also become their family and that those pivotal connections could be lost. Our role has changed during that near 50 years as the NHS has changed and more latterly with the seismic transformation into a digital world. We now have almost 100 branches from the Highlands of Scotland to the north Devon coast and from Swansea in west Wales across to Norwich in East Anglia. About a third of our members are now national members, often choosing to engage on a more remote, digitally based basis. All our members have access to a portfolio of benefits which we offer, including our flagship travel insurance policy, and we are actively pursuing a partnership which would bring a huge range of benefits and discounts to our members. We also have a special fund to support members at a time of need.
Our branches run semi independently from our main charity with their own committees and bank accounts. Volunteers arrange a variety of activities for their members at local and regional level. National members, who choose not to join a specific branch, can join in with local activities and also have access to an increasing number of online based activities. We also hold an annual conference and AGM where the Board, staff and our members can all come together.
We are increasingly working with the NHS and other stakeholders in partnership to see how we can support employers and retain connections, experience and expertise at local level. We’re helping foundation trusts with governors, hospitals with volunteers and NHS charities with supporters. We’re looking to grow so that we are the voice of the retired NHS and wider health service community and see how our members can offer mentoring, support and guidance to the younger generations of NHS staff.
Our charity is looking to become a charitable incorporated organisation (CIO) over the next year.
Our values and mission are unchanged from when Irene James recognised the need to continue to support NHS staff when they retired to enable them to retain links, mutual support and understanding and friendships built over the years in their shared working lives. The NHSRF supports people in retirement to maintain friendships and make new ones, from the NHS, health and social care sectors from a diverse background irrespective of race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation and to support each other through friendship.
Role description and time commitment
Our Chair will lead the Board in developing and delivering our strategy, working closely with, and providing line management and support to, our chief executive. They will also support our chief operating officer in preparation for Board meetings and our head of communications in the planning of our conference and other duties. Our Chair will also be a key representative of the Fellowship in meeting and liaising with key stakeholders.
Our Board meets remotely three times a year and once a year in person. We also have two strategy days a year and our AGM and conference which takes place over a weekend in October. There is also a standing invitation to our Members Council meetings, which are three times a year remotely and once a year in person.
Timeframes
The closing date for applications is noon on Monday 1 June. Shortlisting will take place in the following week with interviews to take place in London on Thursday 2 July.
Term of office
We are looking to appoint for a three-year period initially. This will take us through 2028 when the NHS will mark its 80th anniversary and the NHS Retirement Fellowship will celebrate its 50th birthday.
Our chair role is unpaid, but we will reimburse you for reasonable travel expenses.
We provide friendship, fellowship and fun to retired NHS and other health and social care staff, volunteers and their friends and families

We’re looking for an exceptional leader to become our next Chair of Trustees — and help shape the future of Little Village.
What began as a grassroots response has grown into a London‑wide baby bank network, supporting thousands of families every year. But with more than one in three children in London living in poverty, our work — and our ambition — has never mattered more.
Over the next chapter, we plan to expand our reach across London and scale our advocacy, including our national leadership as a co-founder of the Baby Bank Alliance, to drive lasting systems change for families experiencing poverty.
As our current Chair’s term comes to an end in early 2027, we’re seeking someone with strong governance experience, strategic vision, and a deep commitment to social impact — someone ready to help lead an organisation with growing influence, reach and responsibility.
We’d love to hear from you if you:
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Have experience chairing boards, committees or senior leadership meetings.
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Have strong understanding of governance (best practice)
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Have experience of charity fundraising and income generation
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Can commit the time and expertise to play a key role on our Board.
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Share our passion for tackling child poverty and supporting families.
This is an opportunity to play a defining role in a movement for change.
We are especially keen to diversify our Board and particularly welcome applications from men and people under-represented in charity governance, including those from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic backgrounds, LGBTQ+ people, people with disabilities, and people with lived experience of poverty.
Next steps
If joining the Little Village family sounds appealing, we’d love to hear from you. You can find more details in our recruitment pack, including how to arrange an informal chat before applying
Find out more and apply here: Recruitment - Little Village
Closing date: 12pm, Wednesday 3rd June
To bring about change for children and families through the power of sharing, reusing and connecting

The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Actively Interviewing
This organisation is scheduling interviews as applications come in. They're ready to hire as soon as they find the right person. Don't miss your opportunity, apply now!
Be Part of Meaningful Change
Rape Crisis South London (RCSL) is entering an exciting new chapter. With a new CEO, refreshed Senior Leadership Team, and an ambitious vision for the future, we are laying the foundations for a bold new organisational strategy.
Applicants must have the right to work in the UK.
About the Role:
In addition to the statutory duties of a Trustee, the Treasurer Trustee provides strategic financial oversight to support the organisation’s sustainability and effective governance.
The role is responsible for advising the Board on its financial duties, the implications of strategic decisions, and ensuring that appropriate financial policies and procedures are in place. It includes oversight of financial reporting, such as management accounts, budgets, and forecasts, and working in close collaboration with the CEO and Director of Finance and Resources.
The Treasurer Trustee also acts as a key liaison with external auditors, presents the annual report and accounts at the AGM on behalf of the Board, and chairs the Risk and Finance Sub-Committee.
Our vision:
A world free from sexual violence, where survivors are believed, respected and supported.
Our mission:
To provide high‑quality, specialist support and to challenge the structures that enable sexual violence.
What You Will Do
The specific responsibilities of the Treasurer Trustee are:
- Keeping the Board informed of its financial duties and responsibilities.
- Providing the Board with advice on the financial implications of their decisions and strategic plans.
- Ensuring RCSL has the appropriate financial policies and procedures.
- Having oversight of the preparation of regular financial reporting including the management accounts, forecasts and budgets.
- Liaising with and supporting the CEO and the Director of Finance and Resources.
- Liaising with the auditors and presenting the annual report and accounts to the AGM on behalf of the Board.
- Chairing a Risk and Finance sub-committee
About You
Person Specification - Essential
Experience of being a Trustee
- An understanding and acceptance of the legal duties, responsibilities, and liabilities of trusteeship.
- Significant experience of charity human resources including at a strategic level.
- An ability to work effectively as a member of a team.
- An ability to challenge current thinking, the method of governance and management of the organisation in a constructive manner.
- Ability to evaluate and interpret management information and other data/evidence.
Note:
This role is open to female applicants only as being female is deemed to be a genuine occupational requirement under Schedule 9, Paragraph 1 of the Equality Act 201. All Trustees are required to complete an enhanced DBS.
You will demonstrate:
- Proven experience in a relevant role or environment, with the ability to apply your skills confidently and effectively
- Strong communication skills, with the ability to engage professionally with a range of stakeholders
- Excellent organisational and time‑management skills, with the ability to prioritise workloads and meet deadlines
- A high level of accuracy and attention to detail
- The ability to work independently while also contributing positively as part of a team
- A proactive, problem‑solving approach and a willingness to take ownership of tasks
- Competence in using relevant systems, tools, or software required for the role
- A professional, confidential, and ethical approach to your work
Desirable
What You Bring
- Commitment to feminist, survivor‑led practice
- Anti‑racist and anti‑discriminatory values
- Ability to work independently and collaboratively
- Commitment to learning, reflection and self‑care
Safeguarding and Safer Recruitment
Rape Crisis South London is committed to safeguarding survivors, children, young people and adults at risk. All staff have a shared responsibility for promoting safety and wellbeing.
This includes:
- Promoting the safety and wellbeing of service users
- Identifying and reporting safeguarding concerns
- Following organisational safeguarding policies and procedures
- Supporting a culture where everyone feels safe, respected and supported
Our safer recruitment processes include:
- Values‑based interviews
- Verification of identity, qualifications and employment history
- Reference checks
- DBS checks (enhanced or basic, depending on the role)
Safeguarding training and ongoing supervision
Interview Process:
Candidates will be required to attend a 3 stage interview:
Stage one: phone call
Stage 2 MS Teams Call with CEO and Board of Trustees
Stage 3: Interview with CEO and Trustee / or Director
The interview will explore experience and approach to:
- Safeguarding
- Equality, diversity and inclusion
- Feminist and trauma‑informed practice
- Role‑specific responsibilities
- Role‑specific assessment details
Post holder will be required to undertake either Enhanced DBS
Equality, Feminism and Inclusion
RCSL is an equal opportunities employer. Our work is rooted in feminist principles that recognise sexual violence as both a cause and consequence of gender inequality. We centre survivor voices and prioritise empowerment, inclusivity and intersectionality.
We particularly welcome applications from women who are under‑represented in roles within the Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG), charity, social impact sector.
Intersectionality and Reasonable Adjustments
We recognise that experiences of sexual violence are shaped by intersecting factors including:
- Race and ethnicity
- Disability
- Sexuality and gender identity
- Socio‑economic background
- Immigration status
- Faith and culture
We are committed to removing barriers and creating an inclusive workplace.
Applicants are encouraged to tell us if they require reasonable adjustments during the recruitment process,
such as:
- Alternative interview timings
- Additional time for written tasks
- Support relating to disability, neurodivergence or health needs
Learning and Development
As a charity undergoing growth and transformation, we welcome colleagues who are committed to ongoing learning and professional development. We provide induction, supervision, and development opportunities appropriate to the role.
This post is open to women only and is a Genuine Occupational Requirement under Schedule 9, Paragraph 1 of the Equality Act 2010 (where applicable).
How to Apply
Please submit:
- Your CV
- A cover letter outlining why this role appeals to you
- A supporting statement demonstrating how your experience meets the skills and requirements outlined in the person specification
- Applications should be sent in PDF format
- Closing date: Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis until the position is filled.
- Interview date(s): Two-stage process consisting of an informal conversation followed by an interview with the CEO and Chair.
Thank you for your interest in RCSL. If you have not heard from us within one month of the closing date, please assume your application has been unsuccessful.
AI in Job Applications
We understand that some candidates use AI tools when applying. While we welcome technology to support clear communication, your application should reflect your own skills, knowledge and experience.
cv and cover letter to be submitted in PDF
Providing specialist support to women and girls who have experienced rape and/or childhood sexual violence and abuse.



The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Dancers’ Career Development (DCD), the national charity that enables and empowers dancers to thrive professionally and personally leading up to and beyond their performance careers, seek two new Trustees to join our welcoming and experienced Board.
We are looking for people with lived professional dance experience or senior management experience in the performing arts, with a broad knowledge of the dance sector.
Trustees work closely with the Chair, fellow Trustees and the Executive Director to set and deliver DCD’s strategic priorities and realise the organisation’s charitable objectives.
No former Governance experience is required. The role of a Trustee is voluntary (unpaid). The time commitment is approximately two days a year.
If you are excited by this opportunity, resonate with DCD’s values and are passionate about making a positive difference to dancers’ lives, please get in touch; we would love to hear from you.
Please download the Recruitment Pack from our website for further information on becoming a DCD Trustee, and how to apply, please go to our website.
Applications must be submitted by 9am, Friday 5 June
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Actively Interviewing
This organisation is scheduling interviews as applications come in. They're ready to hire as soon as they find the right person. Don't miss your opportunity, apply now!
This Role Is Not Symbolic. It Is Structural.
Safeguarding is not a policy document.
It is not a checkbox.
It is not a compliance exercise.
In this CIC, safeguarding is the infrastructure that allows the work to exist at all.
We work with:
- Survivors of childhood sexual abuse (CSA)
- Vulnerable adults
- Young people
- Ex-offenders
- Volunteers with lived trauma
- Communities historically failed by institutions
If safeguarding fails, everything fails.
This role exists to make sure that never happens.
Purpose of the Safeguarding Officer Role
The Safeguarding Officer is responsible for designing, implementing, and protecting the safeguarding framework that allows the CIC to operate safely, ethically, and lawfully at scale.
This role ensures:
- Survivors are protected, not re-exposed
- Volunteers are supported, not exploited
- Risks are identified early, not ignored
- Safeguarding is embedded into every system, not bolted on
About the role:
To design and uphold safeguarding systems that protect survivors, volunteers and the organisation, ensuring safety, ethics and legal compliance are built into every practice as the CIC grows. Safeguarding is the infrastructure that allows the work to "SAFELY" exist at all.
Experience Qualification and Requirements
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Experience in safeguarding within:
Charity
Statutory services
Education
Health
Grassroots or community settings
- Experience working with vulnerable adults and/or children.
- Strong understanding of trauma-informed practice.
- Ability to respond to disclosures calmly and appropriately.
- Experience writing and implementing safeguarding policies.
- Risk assessment and incident management experience.
- Understanding of UK safeguarding legislation and guidance.
- Confidence challenging unsafe practice at any level.
- Ability to balance care with boundaries.
- Strong judgement under pressure.
- Clear written documentation skills.
- Capacity to work unpaid and full-time during build phase.
- Emotional regulation and professional restraint.
- Integrity, steadiness and clarity.
Main Responsibilities/ Key Duties
- Design, implement, and maintain a safeguarding framework that protects survivors, volunteers, members and the organisation.
- Develop and own safeguarding policies, procedures and reporting pathways covering:
Adults and children at risk
Volunteers and peer supporters
Digital spaces, storytelling, and online engagement
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Ensure safeguarding is embedded into:
Recruitment and onboarding
Training and supervision
Programme design and delivery
Digital systems and data handling
- Establish clear risk assessment processes for activities, campaigns, and content.
- Act as the safeguarding lead for concerns, disclosures, and incidents, ensuring:
Timely, appropriate responses
Accurate recording
Correct escalation to statutory agencies where required
- Build systems that prevent re-exposure, re-traumatisation, or exploitation of survivors.
- Ensure volunteers are supported, supervised and not placed in unsafe or inappropriate roles.
- Advise leadership on safeguarding risks, capacity limits and ethical boundaries.
- Deliver safeguarding guidance and training proportionate to role and risk.
- Monitor safeguarding practice across teams and intervene early where drift appears.
- Work closely with Digital, Membership, Fundraising, and Social teams to manage risk in:
Storytelling
Online engagement
Data use
- Maintain professional distance and emotional steadiness when handling complex situations.
- Review and update safeguarding systems as the CIC scales.
- Contribute to external accountability and transparency where appropriate.
You must:
- Be able to commit 80% dedication during the build phase
- Be comfortable working unpaid while the CIC is being built
- Be emotionally grounded and professionally boundaries
- Understand trauma without centring yourself
- Be able to hold complexity without collapsing into control or avoidance
You should have experience in some of the following:
- Safeguarding (statutory, charity, education, health, or grassroots)
- Working with vulnerable adults and/or children
- Trauma-informed practice
- Policy development and implementation
- Risk assessment and incident management
Formal qualifications are welcome but not essential.
Integrity, clarity and steadiness are.
This role is not for you if:
- You want safeguarding to be “light touch”
- You avoid difficult conversations
- You seek authority without responsibility
- You are uncomfortable challenging leadership when needed
- You are looking for a title rather than accountability
What You Gain:
- A founding leadership role in a CIC tackling real harm
- The chance to build safeguarding the right way
- Influence over how protection, care, and accountability coexist
- The opportunity to shape a future paid safeguarding role
- Deep purpose-driven work that actually protects people
As the CIC scales, this role is expected to evolve into a paid senior safeguarding position, shaped by the person who built it.
Formal qualifications are not required, but desirable.
Essential equivalent experience mandatory.
Next Steps:
Shortlisted applicants will be invited to:
- A values-led conversation
- A practical discussion about event planning, coordination, and execution
If you believe that well-organised, purposeful events can change communities, and that experiences inspire action, this role is for you.
A Final Word
Safeguarding is an act of love.
It is also an act of discipline.
If you know that:
- Survivors deserve better systems
- Vulnerable people deserve real protection
- Community work must be safe to be sustainable
Independent Chair and Non-Executive Director Recruitment
Somerset Skills & Learning CIC (SS&L)
Voluntary roles | Somerset / Hybrid
Changing lives through learning
Somerset Skills & Learning (SS&L) is a thriving Community Interest Company delivering education and skills to around 4,000 learners each year. Working with over 145 employers, we improve confidence, wellbeing, employability and life chances across Somerset and beyond.
We are now seeking two Independent Non-Executive Directors to join our Board at an exciting and pivotal time.
Following seven successful years on the Board, our Chair will step down in November 2026. As part of this recruitment, we will identify our next Non-Executive Chair, offering a unique opportunity to shape the future direction of a values-driven organisation making a tangible difference.
The Opportunities
Non-Executive Director – Finance & Sustainability
You will bring senior financial leadership experience to help guide SS&L’s long-term sustainability.
You will contribute to:
- Financial strategy, oversight and resilience
- Risk management, audit and governance
- Supporting sustainable, values-led growth
Non-Executive Director – Further Education Quality & Impact
You will bring expertise from the further education or skills sector to help ensure high-quality outcomes.
You will contribute to:
- Quality assurance and continuous improvement
- Learner outcomes and progression
- Strategic curriculum development aligned to community need
About the Roles
As a Board member, you will:
- Provide strategic oversight, challenge and support
- Help shape organisational direction and impact
- Work collaboratively with fellow Directors and the Executive team
From these appointments, we are particularly interested in individuals with the capability and interest to step into the Chair role.
Commitment
- Approximately 4–5 hours per month
- Four Board meetings per year (hybrid)
- Participation in sub-committees
- Voluntary roles (reasonable expenses reimbursed)
About You
We are looking for individuals who:
- Bring senior leadership or Board-level experience
- Can offer constructive challenge and strategic insight
- Share our commitment to inclusion, learning and community impact
We particularly welcome applications from individuals who reflect the diversity of the communities we serve.
How to Apply
Full details about this opportunity in the attached brief. For a confidential discussion, please contact Anna Jay, Managing Director, Public Leaders Appointments
Closing date for applications: Midday, 21st May 2026. Interviews 10th or 11th June 2026.
If you are inspired by the opportunity to help shape an organisation that is transforming lives through learning, we would love to hear from you.
Actively Interviewing
This organisation is scheduling interviews as applications come in. They're ready to hire as soon as they find the right person. Don't miss your opportunity, apply now!
Finance Trustee - Citizens Advice
Citizens Advice South Lincolnshire is seeking a trustee with financial experience to help shape the future of our high-performing advice charity.
With offices in Grantham, Spalding and Stamford, plus outreach centres across the region, we support a population of 225,000 people. Last year, we helped 14,000 clients with 60,000 issues and secured over £7 million of additional income for them. We are here for everyone to help people move on with their lives.
As a trustee, you will join a well-known, respected charity, influence strategy, strengthen governance and contribute to meaningful change. This is an opportunity to share your expertise with other professional, dedicated trustees, gain valuable experience, build on your leadership and strategy skills, and increase your employability. Previous Board experience would be an advantage, but is not essential.
You will guide the Board and the Chief Executive Officer on the key assumptions and financial implications of budgets and plans. You will use your financial knowledge and understanding to oversee the financial management of the charity and advise the Board.
You will monitor the charity’s financial performance and support the CEO and financial team in areas such as budgeting, clear and accurate financial reporting and financial compliance. This is an opportunity for you to:
· join a respected national charity
· make a positive impact for people in your local area, and
· gain valuable board experience and build leadership and strategy skills.
The time commitment is four in-person Board meetings and four or five remote committee meetings a year, a Board Away Day and an involvement of 1-2 days per month with the Finance Team.
What do you need to become a trustee?
Trustees don’t need specific qualifications, but we expect all trustees to have
six core skills:
● Insight into the organisation: considering CASL’s objects and its public
benefit strategically
● Challenging constructively: clarifying facts; stimulating thought
● Analysing issues: being objective; evaluating risks; using evidence;
planning ahead
● Weighing up opinions: using evidence; balancing long- and short-term;
prioritising value
● Interpersonal skills: communicating clearly; listening actively;
supporting a healthy culture, and
● Confidence and self-awareness: collaborating with others; treating
everyone with respect.
In addition, as Finance Trustee you will need:
● financial literacy, including experience of creating and managing
budgets
● ability to interpret financial information and communicate it clearly, and
● strong analytical skills.
For this role, we also value:
● experience of working in finance, accounting and/or audit
● experience in charity finance, SORP, or nonprofit financial management
● familiarity with financial software, and/or
● experience of Board or committee work.
Finally, competent trustees should have these six personal qualities to some
extent, and demonstrate them in their behaviours:
● Committed - motivated, dedicated, persevering; plays an active role.
● Responsible - accountable, independent, reliable; accepts collective
responsibility.
● Trustworthy - ethical, principled; is a critical friend and focuses on
continuous improvement.
● Collaborative - team-oriented, approachable; builds relationships and
seeks consensus.
● Confident - independent; contributes constructively and expresses
opinions courageously.
● Thoughtful - curious, adaptable, open-minded; appropriately challenges
the status quo.
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Actively Interviewing
This organisation is scheduling interviews as applications come in. They're ready to hire as soon as they find the right person. Don't miss your opportunity, apply now!
Role Purpose
The Chief Governance & People Officer (CGPO) is a senior C-suite executive responsible for ensuring the organisation operates with strong governance, legal compliance, and a healthy, engaged volunteer culture. The CGPO provides strategic leadership across governance, legal support, HR, culture, learning, and volunteer experience. They oversee multiple Heads of Department, set strategic direction for their portfolio, and collaborate closely with the CEO, Trustees, and other C-level Officers to drive organisational performance and long-term development.
Key Responsibilities
1. Executive Leadership & Strategy
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Lead governance, legal support, and HR strategy across the organisation.
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Drive portfolio performance and ensure alignment with organisational goals.
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Contribute to C‑suite decision‑making and long‑term planning.
2. Governance Leadership
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Maintain an up‑to‑date governing document and ensure regulatory compliance.
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Oversee GDPR and data protection standards.
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Support Trustees with governance advice and reporting.
3. Legal Support Oversight
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Oversee legal risk management and compliance processes.
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Review key legal documents and guide legal research.
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Strengthen organisational understanding of legal responsibilities.
4. HR Leadership & Culture Development
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Oversee recruitment, onboarding, and volunteer checks.
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Provide strategic oversight of conduct, standards, and people policy.
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Promote a positive volunteer culture and engagement.
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Lead development of training pathways and HR policies.
5. Portfolio Management & Line Management
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Line‑manage Co‑Heads of HR and the Head of Governance & Legal Support.
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Provide strategic direction, coaching, and performance oversight.
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Ensure effective cross‑department collaboration and clarity of roles.
6. C‑Suite Collaboration & Organisational Leadership
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Work closely with the CEO, Deputy CEO, COO, CPO, and Trustees.
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Shape organisation‑wide policies, frameworks, and strategic initiatives
Person Specification (Applicant Criteria)
Essential Criteria
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Strong understanding of governance, compliance, or legal frameworks.
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Experience in HR, people management, or organisational culture development.
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Ability to lead multiple departments and manage senior volunteers.
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Excellent communication, judgement, and decision‑making skills.
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Ability to interpret policies, regulations, and legal documents.
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Experience handling sensitive information with discretion and professionalism.
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Strategic thinker with the ability to translate organisational goals into actionable plans.
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Demonstrated commitment to ethical leadership and safeguarding good practice.
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Ability to work collaboratively at executive level.
Desirable Criteria
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Experience working with Trustees or governance boards.
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Knowledge of GDPR, data protection, and risk management.
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Background in law, HR, organisational development, or compliance.
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Experience in volunteer‑led organisations or the charity sector.
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Ability to design and deliver training or learning programmes.
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Experience managing organisational change or culture initiatives.
Purpose of the role
Are you passionate about health justice and human rights? Join us as our new Treasurer!
The purpose of the Board of Directors is to provide leadership, guidance, checks and balances on the structure and operation of the organisation.
The Board of Directors:
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Fulfils the duties and responsibilities of Company Directors
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Advises on and approves strategic plans, annual roadmaps, and budgets, and any changes to these
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Identifies any risks to the organisation and advises on these
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Advises on and approves organisational policies and commitments, including grant and commercial agreements
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Advises on and approves organisational structure, including the structure and composition of the Board and any other Boards and Committees it deems necessary
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Provides oversight on the Executive Director, including their appointment, performance reviews, remuneration decisions, and delegated powers
Additional duties as Treasurer:
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Chair the Finance and Risk committee
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Monitor the financial sustainability of the organisation
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Take a lead in interpreting financial information to fellow Directors
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Support the team in their participatory budget setting process
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Make sure that all financial policies, procedures and the appointment of external support are reviewed regularly
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Provide guidance on the preparation of the annual accounts where necessary
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Provide ad-hoc support to the Senior Operations Officer who deals with the day-to-day finances (using Xero)
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Support the production of management accounts
“Our dedicated Directors form a great team that I love being a part of. We really care about the work and staff team, and we're keen to add value through our expertise as well as being eager and open to learning. Through mutual respect and listening to each other our meetings and interactions are really fruitful. I know I get a lot out of being part of this team and the opportunity to support the great work of Just Treatment.”
Adina Claire, Chair
“We’re very excited to be adding a Treasurer to our board. As we’re launching into our next four year strategy we need to build our board to create a team that can help us meet this moment. Our financial sustainability and the stewardship of our treasurer are central to this.”
Diarmaid McDonald, Executive Director
The Practicalities
Time commitment:
We have four full board meetings per year. Three of these are online and last for two hours, and one longer full day meeting is in person (likely in London. All costs will be covered). Directors are expected to attend these, and come prepared, having read all board papers in advance.
We have additional committees such as Finance and Risk, and the Treasurer will be expected to chair this committee. There may be other events that Directors are invited to attend, and other opportunities to get involved. We also expect that Directors will provide ad hoc support based on their expertise and available time, with the Treasurer working with the Senior Ops Officer, Executive Director, and Chair to prepare and secure support for our budget and other key financial processes. We estimate the time commitment to be around one day per month (with peaks during the financial cycle).
What qualities should our board members have?
Our Board members are diverse while all having:
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Alignment with Just Treatment’s values
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Commitment to Just Treatment's mission
In addition the Treasurer should bring:
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Significant senior-level financial background
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Experience of risk management
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Confidence working at Board level
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Charity or non-profit experience is desirable
Our Board includes people who have:
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lived experience of the issues we work on
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experience leading and growing non-profit organisations in the UK, including leading their strategy and planning cycles, and fundraising efforts
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experience with different organisational forms and governance structures
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experience with shaping organisational cultures, policies and processes
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knowledge of health policy and health justice
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understanding of campaigning, advocacy, and organising practice
Patient-led campaigning to win everyone the healthcare they need by demanding patients and the NHS are put before profits.
External Trustee – Leeds Trinity Students’ Union
Leeds Trinity Students’ Union is entering a period of transformation and we are looking for three External Trustees who want to play a central role in shaping our new strategy. This is a chance to bring fresh thinking, clear judgement and constructive challenge to an organisation that is actively working to strengthen its future.
We are seeking a purpose-driven individual committed to improving outcomes for students and supporting organisational transformation.
What we’re looking for
We’re seeking an External Trustee who brings:
A genuine passion for the student experience
You believe in the value of representation, community and support and you want students to feel the impact of a strong, effective students’ union.
Strong experience and knowledge of Students’ Unions
You understand the sector’s landscape, governance expectations and operational realities and can apply this knowledge in a practical, proportionate way.
Confidence in holding senior leaders to account
You’ll work collaboratively with the Board to provide constructive challenge and support to the CEO, ensuring clarity, accountability and progress.
Experience leading through change
You’re steady, strategic and comfortable supporting an organisation through periods of uncertainty, transition and transformation.
Desirable experience
While not essential, we would particularly welcome applications from candidates with experience in one or more of the following areas:
Income generation and sustainability
Experience supporting income diversification, commercial activity, fundraising or long‑term financial sustainability in the charity, education or students’ union sector.
Human resources and people management
Knowledge of HR practices, organisational development, culture change or employment relations, with an understanding of how strong people practices support organisational performance.
Finance and risk oversight
Experience interpreting financial information, contributing to budget setting, financial planning or oversight of risk and assurance at Board level.
What this role offers
This is a hands‑on, high‑impact opportunity to:
· Influence the strategic direction of a Students’ Union at a defining moment.
· Strengthen governance, culture and long‑term resilience.
· Support a leadership team committed to improvement.
· Help shape a renewed vision for student representation and support.
· Be part of a Board determined to build something better.
Time commitment
We aim to make the role meaningful but manageable. The expected commitment is:
· Four Board meetings per year, typically held in the early evening.
· Additional ad‑hoc meetings or events is response to organisational needs. This is expected to be more front-loaded during the initial change period.
· Pre‑reading and preparation ahead of each meeting.
· Participation in the CEO’s annual appraisal and periodic performance reviews.
Recruitment timeline
· Advert opens: Tuesday 21 April 2026
· Advert closes: Sunday 10 May 2026
· Interviews (virtual): Tuesday 12 May 2026
Interested in an informal conversation?
Requests for informal conversations can be directed to Ammarah Pandor, Interim Chair of Trustees.
How to apply
Applications should include a CV and a cover letter (maximum two sides) and be submitted in line with the process outlined on our webiste.
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Creative Support is a national not-for-profit social care and supported housing provider with charitable status. We deliver personalised care and support for younger and older adults with learning disabilities, autism, mental health needs, physical disabilities and those at risk of homelessness or social exclusion.
Creative Support is governed by a dedicated Board of Trustees with expertise across social care, health, housing, finance, legal and related fields. As our current Chair approaches the end of her term, we are seeking a new Chair with senior social care experience and a strong understanding of commissioning, quality, risk, workforce, regulation and partnership working. The ideal candidate will champion our values and mission and lead with clarity and compassion.
About Creative Support:
We are one of the UK’s largest social care providers, supporting over 6,000 people each year across 70 local authorities and employing around 5,000 staff. With an annual turnover of £197 million, we are also a registered social housing provider with over 1,000 supported housing units and significant housing assets.
Creative Support is an Investor in People Gold employer, a Stonewall Diversity Champion and an inclusive organisation committed to increasing Board representation from BAME, LGBTQ+ and disabled communities, with zero tolerance for discrimination.
Our Mission and Values:
Creative Support promotes independence, inclusion, and wellbeing. We do this by working with the people we support, their families and others to meet individual needs and aspirations in a person-centred way. We provide high quality homes and support, enabling people to say:
- I live my best life in a place I call home
- I feel listened to, respected and valued
- I enjoy choices and rights and have control over my life
- I am supported to feel safe
- I am doing the things that matter to me
- I enjoy relationships with others
- I am connected to my community
- I am supported with my wellbeing
- I feel able to reach my full potential
Our We Care values underpin everything we do at Creative Support. We are: Welcoming, Empowering, Compassionate, Aspirational, Respectful, Effective.
About the Role:
The Chair is responsible for leading the Board, ensuring effective governance, and holding the Chief Executive and Board to account for delivering our mission, vision and strategy. The role involves providing inclusive leadership, ensuring Trustees understand their responsibilities, and working closely with the Executive Team to offer oversight, support and constructive challenge.
We are looking for a highly motivated individual with senior-level social care expertise, a commitment to our charitable purpose and person-centred values, and a belief in co-production with the people we support. The Chair must demonstrate vision, sound judgement and an inclusive, respectful leadership style.
The Chair is expected to commit sufficient time to:
- Attend six annual Board meetings, and relevant committee meetings (typically 2–3 hours in duration);
- Prepare thoroughly for meetings, including reading papers in advance;
- Lead the induction, support and supervision of Trustees;
- Undertake appraisal and support of the Chief Executive Officer;
- Act as an ambassador for Creative Support at internal and external events.
- Visit national services and engage with staff, the people who we support, and tenants.
The estimated time commitment for the Chair is approximately 4 days per month/48 days per year, although this may increase in response to organisational needs or during periods of change. Appointments are made for an initial period of 3 years and are subject to an annual appraisal. Terms begin at the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting in which the Chair is appointed.
The role of Chair of the Board of Trustees is remunerated in recognition of the significant time, responsibility and contribution required. The current remuneration for the Chair is £12,000 per annum, payable in monthly instalments of £1,000. This payment is taxable and is processed through the organisation’s payroll. Trustees, including the Chair, are appointed as office holders and are therefore neither workers nor employees. Remuneration arrangements are subject to periodic review in line with the organisation’s governance and remuneration policies.
We also pay all reasonable expenses associated with the role, including travel, overnight accommodation, subsistence and child care expenses if needed. Appointment will be made subject to the following satisfactory checks:
- References
- Declarations of Interest
- Fit and Proper Person Check
- Personal Declarations
- Enhanced DBS
- A £1.00 payment for shareholding membership (this can be provided in person when you first attend our Head Office)
We can send you a copy of our most recent Annual Report & Accounts - details on how to request this can be located on this roles listing on our company website or consult the FCA Mutuals Website, type in Creative Support and search under ‘documents’. You will find all previous annual reports and accounts listed and these can be viewed or downloaded at no cost.
Please note that Creative Support is a Community Benefit Society with charitable status registered with the FCA, not a company or registered charity so you will not be able to access information about Creative Support via Companies House or the Charity Commission.
Recruitment Timeline:
Closing Date for Applications: 13 May 2026
Meet and Greet and Stakeholder interview panel: 17 June 2026
Final panel interviews: 30 June 2026
Offer and recruitment checks: July - August 2026
Co-opt at Board meeting: 10 September 2026
Formal vote at Annual General Meeting: 24 September 2026
Please keep these dates available upon application
Creative Support is a not for profit provider of person centered care and support



The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Inclusive Boards is delighted to be working with Sheffield Hospitals Charity in their search for a new Chair!
Sheffield Hospitals Charity provides additional funding to Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Sheffield Health Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust who support people at every stage on life’s journey. From welcoming babies into the world on the Jessop Wing, supporting cancer care at Weston Park, specialist care at the Royal Hallamshire, Charles Clifford and the Northern General, to improving the mental, physical and social wellbeing of people in our communities. The support provided by Sheffield Hospitals Charity helps to improve the lives of people across Sheffield from patients and their families to our NHS staff who take care of them.
The Chair plays an important role in the governance of the charity, providing leadership to the Board of Trustees to work together, reach good collective decisions, and manage any conflicts. The responsibilities of our Chair are as follows:
Oversight and governance
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Lead the Board of Trustees to support development of and approve the charity’s strategy and corresponding plan.
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Lead the Board to make key strategic decisions in the organisation’s best interests and in line with its charitable objects.
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Lead the Board in ensuring there is financial strategy oversight, and the organisation’s resources are managed responsibly.
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Ensure the organisation is operating in line with charity law, charity regulation and its own governing document.
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Build an effective, diverse board that can work well together for the good of the organisation.
Working with trustees
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Support trustees with development and annual one-to-one reviews.
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Help the Board work as a team, drawing on specific expertise, lived experience, and diversity of thought across the Board.
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Chair board meetings and work with the CEO and EA to ensure they are well planned and minuted and that actions are circulated and followed up.
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Ensure trustees are given the information they need to make decisions effectively.
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Support the recruitment of trustees, identifying any skills or knowledge gaps.
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Build a diverse board that functions in an accessible and inclusive way. The
Chair-CEO relationship
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Manage the relationship with the CEO, providing appropriate challenge and support to help them effectively lead the charity.
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Conduct the CEO appraisals and reviews and support their leadership development. Lead on CEO recruitment.
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Relate any concerns of the Board to the CEO and Senior Leadership Team.
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Work with the CEO to make sure the Board has all the information required, in a timely manner, to make strategic decisions.
Ambassadorial responsibilities
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The Chair may be required, from time to time, to act as a champion and ambassador for the Charity.
Person specification
Candidates will need to demonstrate that they have the necessary experience and will need to demonstrate the following skills, experience, and attributes.
Essential
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Passion for the National Health Service and an understanding of the role of health charities.
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An ongoing and meaningful connection to Sheffield and good standing within the city.
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Experience as a board member, trustee, non-executive director, or chair.
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Strong comprehension of charity law, regulation, and the roles and responsibilities of a charity chair and trustee.
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Skilled in strategic planning, financial management, risk management, and organisational performance.
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Excellent interpersonal skills, including the ability to engage, influence, and negotiate with a range of senior stakeholders diverse in sector and profession.
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Capable of building and maintaining relationships in a complex stakeholder environment with competing priorities.
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Robust communication skills, both written and verbal, and the ability to communicate complex information to a range of diverse stakeholders.
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The ability to lead effectively and inclusively during times of transformational change within and beyond an organisation.
Desirable
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Previous chairing experience at the non-executive level.
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Experience in working within the health and social care and/or charity sectors – either as an employee or appointee.
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Experience in charity fundraising, income generation, marketing and communications.
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Understanding of health-related research and innovation and impact assessment skills.
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Well versed in people management, wellbeing and learning and development.
How to apply
The recruitment process is being undertaken by Inclusive Boards on behalf of Sheffield Hospitals Charity. If you wish to apply, please supply the following by 11:59pm on 10/05/2026:
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A detailed CV setting out your career history including responsibilities and achievements.
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A cover letter (maximum two sides of A4) highlighting your suitability for the role and how you meet the person specification. Please note, your cover letter is an important part of your application and will be assessed.
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Details of two professional referees together with a brief statement of their relationship to you and over what period of time they have known you. Referees will not be contacted without your prior consent.
Please consider filling out our diversity monitoring form. The information provided to us is confidential, stored securely and separately from your application, and is only used to ensure we are meeting our obligations for equal opportunities under the Equality Act 2010.
For more information, visit Inclusive Boards' website.
We are a local charity rooted since 2007 in the Hackney community, helping and supporting migrants with their immigration status and access to services. Our long-standing and committed local volunteers work together with a small number of paid staff to deliver our work. We are looking for a Chair to come and help us to help others. We have a new Vice-Chair, an experienced Treasurer and a CEO in post for 18 months so you'll be joining a strong leadership team. We are particularly interested in applicants with lived or learned experience of migration to the UK; and/or previous experience chairing a board of trustees; and/or senior management experience.
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
We are looking for a new independent trustee who can bring fresh perspectives and objective judgment from outside our immediate membership to join our very committed board. The successful candidate will need to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of charity law and regulation.
Location: Attendance at 4 board meetings (mainly online but with 1-2 in London) each year, and attendance at the Board strategy day.
You may also be required to attend the Council’s annual general meeting and any other general meetings. There may also be additional requirements upon appointment and periodically thereafter for training days in the Council’s office in central London. There will be a full induction as part of the onboarding process.
Remuneration: This is as voluntary unpaid role. Reasonable travel expenses will be reimbursed.
About: The Council of Deans of Health is a membership organisation and charity representing over 100 UK universities and colleges engaged in education and research for nursing, midwifery, and the allied health professions. At any one time, our members educate around 200,000 current and future professionals and carry out research that improves the population’s health and wellbeing.
Our Board of Trustees is responsible for oversight of the administration and management of the Council, which is led by the CEO who is accountable to the Board. The role of the Board includes setting and monitoring the implementation of the Council's strategy, and ensuring its financial sustainability and its compliance with legal requirements. The Board of Trustees will play an important role in taking forward the Council’s strategy, overseeing the continued growth of the Council, ensuring its financial sustainability, and avoiding exposing the charity’s assets, beneficiaries or reputation to undue risk. The Board comprises a mix of trustees drawn from our member organisations and independent trustees from a range of different professional backgrounds and experience.
Key responsibilities:
- Contribute to the overall strategic direction of the Council, including taking forward the Council's agreed strategy.
- Ensure the Council complies with its governing document, company law, charity law and any other relevant legislation or regulations.
- Oversee the Council’s financial management with the overall aim of achieving financial sustainability.
- Safeguard the organisation and advise on diversification of income to support the Council’s development.
- Work effectively and collaboratively with the Chair and other Board members in providing support and effective scrutiny to the Council's senior staff team.
Some of the essential competencies we are looking for all Trustees:
- Demonstrate a commitment to understanding the Council's business, the sector context and wider policy issues across the four nations of the UK.
- Demonstrate excellent communication skills and an enabling, inclusive approach.
- Ability to think strategically and offer advice, guidance, support and constructive challenge to oversee the effective delivery of the Council’s strategic objectives.
- Demonstrate a track record of collaborative working in an organisation with a wide range of internal and external stakeholders.
- Ideally, have experience at senior management or board level in other organisations and experience of charity governance.
Full details of the role and responsibilities required can be found in the candidate information pack. Please apply by following the instructions in the candidate information pack. The closing date is 22 May 2026 at 4pm.
The Council, on behalf of the UK university healthcare education sector, advances and promotes healthcare education & research for the public benefit.
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
This is an unsalaried volunteer role.
Are you an experienced charity fundraiser? We are looking for a new Trustee with strong fundraising experience who shares a passion for our work and who, through their professional expertise, can offer support, guidance, and strategic insight to our Board, CEO, and senior management, helping to bring about positive impact and lasting change through the work of our Christian partners.
ROLE PURPOSE
Embrace the Middle East is a Christian Development charity (registered No. 1076329), established in 1854, with a mission to improve the lives of vulnerable and disadvantaged people in the Middle East by working in partnership with local Christians, focussing on education, healthcare and community development. Its Board of Trustees (the Board) is responsible for the overall governance, monitoring and strategic direction of the charity. It works with the charity’s management to ensure that the charity fulfils the objects defined in its Articles, acts in accordance with the charity’s vision and mission, and complies will all legal and regulatory requirements.
Key responsibilities of trustees are:
To formulate and regularly review the strategic aims of the charity in accordance with its legal objects and to ensure that the policy and practices of the organisation are in keeping with its aims.
- To monitor the performance of the charity against the agreed strategic aims.
- To ensure that the organisation functions within the legal and regulatory requirements of a charitable organisation and strives to achieve best practice.
- To act as guardians of the charity’s assets, both tangible and intangible, taking all due care over their security, deployment and proper application
For further information about the role, please download the Candidate Pack.
To express an interest in becoming a trustee at Embrace the Middle East, please complete the online application form via the apply button.
The closing date for applications is 4 May 2026.
