South East Water chief to forgo bonus following Kent and Sussex water outages


South East Waterโ€™s boss said he will forgo a bonus this year after recent outages left thousands of customers without drinking water in Kent and Sussex.

Chief executive David Hinton, who receives a ยฃ400,000 salary, said he has made the decision not to receive any additional โ€œperformanceโ€ payment for the 2025/2025 financial year.

Mr Hinton also apologised to customers for the โ€œunacceptable outagesโ€ in a statement released on Tuesday after his appearance in front of the Parliamentary Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee.

Tunbridge Wells saw major supply disruptions in November and December before thousands of properties across Kent and Sussex suffered an outage in January.

Customers were left with no tap water, unable to shower or bathe and could not flush their toilets, while a number of schools were forced to close.

โ€œWe recognise the serious impact this has had on our customers and know that we fell short of what is expected of us,โ€ Mr Hinton said.

โ€œIn recognition of this, I have made the decision not to accept any bonus for the 2025/2026 year.โ€

It came after he was grilled by MPs alongside SEWโ€™s chairman Chris Train about their response to the multiple supply interruption.

During the hearing, Mr Train first revealed that Mr Hinton indicated he would surrender any bonus the board may have chosen to pay him this year.

The chairman said: โ€œThe performance payment for this year โ€“ we have not finalised. But Dave has indicated he is not prepared to take a bonus this year.โ€

Challenged by committee chair Alistair Carmichael if the board was prepared to give him one, Mr Train appeared to suggest that was not necessarily the case, saying: โ€œNo.โ€

Mr Hinton, who was appointed chief executive of the company in 2020, was paid ยฃ457,000 last financial year for 2024/25, including a ยฃ115,000 bonus, with some reports saying he will receive a 30% uplift in his basic salary this year.

Mr Carmichael also pressed Mr Train on why the board had rewarded bonuses and increased bossesโ€™ salaries despite years of failings at the firm.

Mr Train replied that the boardโ€™s remuneration committee โ€œbenchmarks the salaries of the executive in order that we make sure that we are getting the best balance of quality of executive for the organisationโ€.

Pressed on these executives failing customers and shareholders, Mr Train said: โ€œWe are disappointed. Dave has surrendered his bonus, even if we were going to give (one) as a remuneration committee.

โ€œThat made the conversation probably a lot easier than it might have been otherwise.โ€

In a tense exchange later, MPs repeatedly questioned Mr Train on why there had been no changes in the leadership team, highlighting the major failings as well as criticism from the Prime Minister, its shareholders, customers and a whole range of public and private bodies.

But Mr Train defended the boardโ€™s decisions around governance and leadership, saying: โ€œWe have looked as you would expect us to do at what the appropriate leadership of the organisation is going forward.

โ€œThe board has given its commitment and its backing to Dave and the executive team going forward as the right solution for delivering what is best for South East Water customers.โ€

He added that the firm is โ€œbolsteringโ€ the executive with a number of external hires that will cover a โ€œbroader spectrum of leadership across the organisationโ€.

Pressed repeatedly on customers no longer having confidence in the companyโ€™s leadership, he said: โ€œWe are accountable for where we are.

โ€œWe as a board, we have to step back and ask the questions that youโ€™re asking. We have to look at the broad context of the organisation.

โ€œWe have to look at the context of the industry and the sector and we have to do what we think is best in the best interest of South East Water customers.โ€

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