- Michael Bichard, Baron Bichard
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Michael George Bichard, Baron Bichard, KCB, is a former public servant in the United Kingdom, first in local and then as a civil servant in central government. He currently serves as the Director of the Institute for Government and as Chair of the Design Council. He was a created a life peer on 24 March 2010.
Contents
Career
Bichard served as the Chief Executive of Brent and then Gloucestershire Local Authorities during the 1980s.
In 1990, he was appointed Chief Executive of the Benefits Agency.
In 1995, Bichard was made Permanent Secretary of the Department for Employment. When it merged with the Department for Education (DfE) to form the Department for Education and Employment (DfEE), he became Permanent Secretary of the combined department, under Gillian Shephard, and then, post-1997, David Blunkett. He became extremely close to Blunkett, even at one point intervening personally - according to the Daily Mail - to ensure that details of an affair that Blunkett was conducting with his Private Secretary should not become public.[1] During his time as Permanent Secretary, he introduced several modernising reforms to the Department, notably in bringing its use of information technology and new media up to date. He oversaw some significant changes to the education policy landscape, such as the introduction of the Learning and Skills Council to fund further education and apprenticeships.
In May 2001 he retired from the Civil Service, when DfEE and the Department for Social Security were split into the Department for Education and Skills and Department for Work and Pensions.
Post-retirement
In September 2001 Bichard was appointed Rector of The University of the Arts London.
In 2004, the Home Secretary David Blunkett (previously Bichard's minister as Secretary of State for Education and Employment) appointed Bichard to chair an inquiry into the "Soham murders" of two 10-year-old girls; the inquiry has since been known as the "Bichard Inquiry".
He was non-Executive Chair of RSe Consulting from 2003-2008. RSe Consulting provided strategic and management consulting services to local government and became part of Tribal Group Plc in 2008.
Bichard was appointed Chair of the Legal Services Commission in April 2005. There he introduced a range of reforming measures aimed at modernising the legal aid system. He was also chair of the educational charity Rathbone.
Bichard left these two roles in September 2008 when he became the Director of the Institute for Government.
Bichard is now Chair of the Board of FILMCLUB, a nationwide after-school film club scheme which is free to state primary and secondary schools and an efficiency advisor to the Ten Group.[2]
Honours and peerage
Bichard was appointed as a knight in the Order of the Bath in the Queen's Birthday Honours in 1999.[3] On the recommendation of the House of Lords Appointments Commission, he was created life peer 24 March 2010,[4] as Baron Bichard, of Nailsworth in the County of Gloucestershire.[5] He was introduced in the House of Lords on 29 March,[6] where he will sit on the crossbenches.
Offices held
Government offices Preceded by
Vincent ScrogginsChief Executive of the Benefits Agency,
Department for Employment
1990-1995Succeeded by
Peter MathisonPreceded by
Sir Nicholas MonckPermanent Secretary of the
Department for Employment
1995Succeeded by
Himself
as Permanent Secretary of the
Department for Education and EmploymentPreceded by
Himself
as Permanent Secretary of the
Department for EmploymentPermanent Secretary of the
Department for Education and Employment
1995-2001Succeeded by
Sir David Normington
as Permanent Secretary of the
Department for Education and SkillsPreceded by
Sir Timothy Lankester
as Permanent Secretary of the
Department for EducationSucceeded by
Rachel Lomax
as Permanent Secretary of the
Department for Work and PensionsReferences
- ^ Walters, Simon; Bevan, Stephen (5 December 2004). "Second mistress threat to Blunkett". Daily Mail (London). http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-329630/Second-mistress-threat-Blunkett.html.
- ^ Guardian Society announcement
- ^ BBC News (12 June 1999). "Queen's Birthday Honours: Order of the Bath". http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/1999/06/99/queens_birthday_honours/366660.stm. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
- ^ New Peers since 1 January 2010
- ^ London Gazette: no. 59377. p. 5439. 29 March 2010.
- ^ House of Lords - Minute
External links
Categories:- Permanent Under-Secretaries of State for Employment
- Permanent Under-Secretaries of State for Education and Employment
- Living people
- Knights Commander of the Order of the Bath
- People's peers
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