Who are our Chair, Chief Executive and Board members?

The Independent Safeguarding Authority (ISA) will be made up of experts led by a Chair, Chief Executive and the ISA Board.

We will have the authority to make legally binding decisions on whether individuals can work with children and vulnerable adults.

Where cases are not clear, decisions will be taken by the Board.

The Chair, Sir Roger Singleton CBE

Sir Roger Singleton, The ChairThe Chair’s role is to set the strategic direction for the ISA in order to best prevent unsuitable people from working with children and vulnerable adults, as set out in the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006.

Sir Roger Singleton was Chief Executive of Barnardo’s for 21 years and was awarded a knighthood for his services to children in 2005. He is a former Chairman and Treasurer of the National Council of Voluntary Child Care Organisations.

He has served on public inquiries into child abuse in children’s homes and is involved in the governance and management of various charities. Sir Roger is also an accredited mediator.

The Chief Executive, Adrian McAllister

Adrian McAllister, The Chief ExecutiveThe Chief Executive is responsible for advising and leading the Board in delivering its strategic aims. Adrian McAllister is also responsible for executive leadership and day-to-day management.

His other responsibilities include:

advising the Board on the implications of government policies relating to the protection of vulnerable people; developing plans to meet the organisation's aims and objectives for Board approval; and ensuring the ISA balances the need to protect vulnerable people with the rights of the individual.

Adrian comes with twenty two years' experience working in the West Midlands, Merseyside and Lancashire police force - including several years as a senior detective. He was ACPO spokesperson on Disclosure and Criminal records, a role that involved close liaison with the CRB. He is a Graduate of Loughborough and Manchester Universities and holds a diploma in Applied Criminology from Cambridge University.

The Board

The Board members will support the Chair and Chief Executive in leading the ISA. This role includes:

  • ensuring all decisions are steered by guidance from the relevant minister or sponsoring department;
  • ensuring our staff operate to the highest ethical and professional standards; and
  • taking on the decision-making role in complex or difficult cases.

The Board members have recently been appointed by the Home Secretary under Office of the Commissioner for Public Appointments (OCPA) regulations governing public appointments. Each of them have extensive knowledge or experience in the safeguarding of vulnerable people.

Dr Valerie Brasse

Valerie graduated from the London School of Economics & Political Science with a masters degree and doctorate in economics.

After a brief spell as a financial journalist and a business school academic she joined the Department of Health in 1987 as an economic adviser, becoming a policy administrator in 1990.

She has led policy development and implementation in a number of key areas concerned with children’s social care and child protection, including implementing parts of the Children Act 1989.

In 2001, she was seconded as the social care adviser to the Victoria Climbie child abuse Inquiry. On retiring from the Civil Service in 2006 she was appointed secretary/adviser to the Cumberlege Commission established by the Catholic Church in England and Wales to review the Church’s safeguarding arrangements for children and vulnerable adults.

Dr John Belcher C.B.E

John has held a number of positions both in the UK and Canada.  He came to the UK to study at the London School of Economics & Political Science.

After returning to Canada he took up post at the Department of National Health, where he worked on issues such as unemployment insurance and researching and improving social welfare. On his return to the UK, John held a number of positions including being responsible for social and health services for the borough of Lewisham. He subsequently joined Bexley social services, Scope and then the London Borough of Redbridge.  He took up his current post as Chief Executive of Anchor Trust where he has since promoted a customer-focused culture and encouraged business efficiency. Anchor is now the leading not-for-profit provider of care, housing and support for older people in England.

Richard Black O.B.E

Richard qualified in social work in 1968 and practiced first of all in West Belfast. He was appointed Assistant Director of Social Services in 1973 and continued in that roll in various  districts of Northern Ireland before returning to North and West Belfast in 1986.

He became Unit General Manager in 1990 and subsequently Chief Executive of a new Health and Social Services Trust in 1993.  The trust provided health and social care to approximately 220,000 people.  This consisted of services to children and families including child protection and community paediatrics, elderly and disabled people, residential and nursing home units and psychiatric facilities.  The services also included community provision for people with learning disabilities both in the community and also in a large specialist hospital serving the Region which provided assessment and treatment facilities and forensic services for offenders.

He retired from this position on 31st March 2007.

Richard was awarded an O.B.E. in H.M.the Queen's Birthday Honours in June 2006.

He is married to Heather and has two daughters, Suzanne and Rachel.  He is a keen yachtsman and occasionally plays golf.  He enjoys collecting books.

Donald Findlater

Donald graduated from the University of Kent and East Anglia where he gained a law degree and Masters in social work in 1981.

He has since followed a career in the probation service, specialising in work with convicted sex offenders both in prison and in the community from 1989. Since then he has been seconded to the Lucy Faithful Foundation which was set up to manage the Wolvercote clinic, a child protection charity, specialising in the prevention of child sexual abuse.

Donald is currently Director of Research and development at the Foundation. Following the recommendations of the Sir Michael Bichard Inquiry, Donald has assisted the DFES in the design and implementation of ‘safer recruitment’ training. Since early 2006, Donald has worked on Sir Roger Singleton’s ‘Expert Panel’ assisting in recommendations to the DCSF regarding the barring of individuals referred due to their past misconduct or potential future risk to children. He currently sits on the Surrey Safeguarding Children Board.

Tom Davies

After completing his science degree at Liverpool University, Tom enjoyed a 20 year career as a teacher, Deputy Head and Head at a variety of comprehensive schools in North Wales and Cheshire.

Since then, he served for ten years as Director of Education in Cardiff before taking up post of Director for Wales and the Princes Trust. Since 2003, he has been commissioner for the Independent Police Commission with responsibility for Wales.

Mehmuda Mian

A former solicitor in private practice, Mehmuda has worked for the Office of Supervision of Solicitors before being appointed as a member of the Police Complaints Authority.

She is currently a commissioner at the Independent Police Complaints Commission (part-time) with responsibility for the Metropolitan Police (South East). Mehmuda has been a non-executive director of North Birmingham Mental Health Trust and the NHS Litigation Authority. In November 2006, Mehmuda was appointed as a BBC Trustee.

Professor Don Grubin

Don is professor of psychiatry at Newcastle University and Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist in the Northumberland Tyne and Wear NHS Trust. He is also Project Director of the Newcastle Sexual Behaviour Unit. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.

After obtaining his BA from Oxford, he undertook his medical training at the University of London, and his training in psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry, and the Maudsley and Broadmoor Hospitals.

In addition to his clinical work with offenders, he has researched and written widely on the assessment, treatment and management of sex offenders.  He is a member of the Correctional Services Accreditation Panel, a board member of the Scottish Risk Management Authority, a member of the Newcastle and Hexham Diocesan Safeguarding Commission, and he sits on the Northumbria Strategic Management Board for MAPPA (multi-agency public protection arrangements). 

He is also a psychiatric adviser to the prison and probation services sex offender treatment programmes.  In April 2006, he was appointed to Sir Roger’s Independent Panel of Experts to advise on referrals to List 99.

Debbie Ariyo

Debbie is the founder and Executive Director of AFRUCA – Africans Unite against Child Abuse, an organisation established in 2001 to promote the welfare of African children in the UK.

She holds a Masters degree in Urban Policy from the University of North London and Bachelors in French and Education from University of Benin, Nigeria. As a child rights campaigner, Debbie has been vocal in highlighting issues affecting the safeguarding of African children in the UK.

Debbie has also written and spoken extensively on issues affecting the welfare of children in the UK. She is a Governor at a foundation school in South London and has received many awards and commendations for her work with African children in the country.

Moira Murray

Moira has worked for The Children’s Society for the past ten years and is currently their Safeguarding Coordinator responsible for all aspects of safeguarding and child protection, including historical abuse.

Having obtained a Bed degree in 1974 from Goldsmith’s College, University of London, Moira decided to enter social work and having qualified in 1979, she has been involved in safeguarding and child protection work for over 30 years. Her experience includes working for Inner London Boroughs and as a Guardian ad Litem. In April 2006, she was appointed to Sir Roger’s Independent Panel of Experts to assess the suitability of adults referred to the panel to work with children and was subsequently seconded to the DCSF to undertake an historic file of review of cases previously referred to the Department’s List 99.

Peter Withers

Born and brought up in the West Midlands, Peter was educated at Oldbury Grammar School and RAF College Cranwell and has a degree in Aeronautical Engineering.

He was a career Governor in the Scottish Prison service from 1972 culminating as Governor of  Barlinnie, Scotland’s largest prison, from 1989 to 1995. He then spent  ten years on the SPS Board in operational roles as Director of Custody, Area Director and, lastly, Director of Prison Services until he retired in 2006. Peter is currently a Board Member for the Tayside Health Board and Risk Management Authority as well as voluntary role as Executive Vice Chairman [Resources] for the Civil Service Sports Council.

His specialist professional interests include Corporate Governance, Risk Management and Human Resources [Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development].

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