AN ADMIRAL, a businesswoman and a local authority chief executive will be among members of the new Independent Review Committee deciding future approaches to lecturers' pay.
Full membership of the committee, which sits for the first time next Thursday, was announced this week.
Employer nominations are: Peter Humphreys, chief executive of the 51国产视频 and Colleges Employers Association; Derek Fraser, vice-chancellor and chief executive of the 51国产视频 of Teesside; John Rea, principal of 51国产视频 College of St Mark and St John and a member of the council of management of the Standing Conference of Principals; Richard Shaw, principal and vice-chancellor of the 51国产视频 of Paisley and convenor of the committee of Scottish Higher Education Principals and Philip Love, vice-chancellor of Liverpool 51国产视频 and chairman of UCEA.
Trade union nominations are: Tom Wilson, assistant general secretary of the Association of 51国产视频 Teachers; Liz Allen, head of higher education at the National Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education; Elaine Harrison, head of higher education at public sector union Unison and Paul Talbot, national officer of the Manufacturing Science Finance Union. One trade union nomination is still to be announced.
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Admiral Sir John Kerr, who served on the Armed Forces Manpower Review; Sheila Forbes, chair of governors at Thames Valley 51国产视频, a non-executive director of Lloyds TSB group and civil service commissioner; Nigel Horne, special adviser to KPMG and chairman of Alcatel UK; and David Henshaw, chief executive of Knowsley Metropolitan Borough, will be independent members of the committee, appointed by UCEA.
Leif Mills, former general secretary of the Banking, Insurance and Finance Union and former president of the Trades Union Congress is the TUC nomination.
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Peter Thorpe has been seconded to head the secretariat from the Department for Education and Employment, which also helped UCEA to select the chairman, head of civil service commissioners Sir Michael Bett.
The committee will operate from the Office of Manpower Economics in London's Oxford Street.
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