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Watch: What is the future of Sheffield Wednesday?

Watch: What is the future of Sheffield Wednesday?

BBC News16-06-2025
Sheffield Wednesday owner Dejphon Chansiri has remained coy over the club's recent financial struggles with some players still waiting to be paid their wages for May.What does the future look like for the Owls? That's probably the main question on the lips of every supporter right now.BBC Radio Sheffield will be hosting a visualised Football Heaven special on Tuesday, 17 June looking at the ongoing problems at Hillsborough.Sheffield South East MP Clive Betts, football finance expert Professor Dan Plumley and others will appear on the show at 18:00 BST.You can watch and listen online via the BBC Sport website and app or on BBC iPlayer. The show will also be available after should you miss it.
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Roar to victory: what the papers say about the Lionesses Euro win
Roar to victory: what the papers say about the Lionesses Euro win

The Guardian

time19 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Roar to victory: what the papers say about the Lionesses Euro win

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Zero-hours contracts: peers accused of ‘trying to block stronger UK workers' rights'
Zero-hours contracts: peers accused of ‘trying to block stronger UK workers' rights'

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Zero-hours contracts: peers accused of ‘trying to block stronger UK workers' rights'

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Financial Ombudsman Service boss paid £230,000 after ousting
Financial Ombudsman Service boss paid £230,000 after ousting

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Financial Ombudsman Service boss paid £230,000 after ousting

The ousted head of the Financial Ombudsman Service received a pay-off of almost £230,000, it has been disclosed in the annual report. Abby Thomas, who left abruptly on 6 February, was paid £229,869 in severance payments on top of her normal salary. The payoff included £100,000 for loss of office, £107,692 in lieu of notice and £22,177 for a period of gardening leave that began on the day she left, the FOS said. MPs on the Treasury select committee have hit out at the manner of her departure and criticised the FOS chairwoman Baroness Manzoor for refusing to answer questions on why Thomas left and whether she was forced out. The FOS, which rules on complaints by consumers about financial services firms and can set compensation orders, is under pressure to reform. Rachel Reeves has pledged to curb its powers so it no longer acts like a regulator after complaints from the industry that it has increased the cost of 'mass redress events'. It has been dealing with a significant rise in claims, mainly related to car finance loans, but also because of concerns about other consumer loans and more people complaining about banks' handling of frauds. Dame Meg Hillier, chairwoman of the Treasury committee, said this month: 'The handling of this situation by the senior leadership has been deeply disappointing.' Thomas, a former Virgin Media executive, served for less than three years. She has been replaced by James Dipple-Johnstone as chief ombudsman and Jenny Simmonds as interim chief executive. Manzoor is due to retire on August 1. The FOS received 450,000 new inquiries in the year to March, up from 330,000. The motor finance industry is braced for a judgment from the Supreme Court this Friday that could determine the scale of compensation payments for failing to disclose commissions paid to dealers.

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