Friday, August 26, 2022

 

IAEA mission seeks to visit Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant amid concerns

26 August 2022, 11:24

A Russian serviceman guards an area of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station in territory under Russian military control in south-eastern Ukraine
Russia Ukraine Explainer. Picture: PA

Fire damage to a transmission line at Europe’s largest nuclear plant caused a blackout across the region and heightened fears of a catastrophe.

A mission from the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is expected to visit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant next week after it was temporarily knocked offline and more shelling was reported in the area overnight, Ukrainian officials said.

Fire damage to a transmission line at Europe’s largest nuclear plant caused a blackout across the region on Thursday and heightened fears of a catastrophe in a country still haunted by the Chernobyl disaster in 1986.

Lana Zerkal, an adviser to Ukraine’s energy minister, told Ukrainian media on Thursday evening that logistical issues are being worked out for the IAEA team to come to the Zaporizhzhia plant, which has been occupied by Russian forces and run by Ukrainian workers since the early days of the six-month-old war.

Ms Zerkal accused Russia of trying to sabotage the visit.

Destroyed houses after a Russian attack are seen in the village of Chaplyne, Ukraine
Destroyed houses after a Russian attack in the village of Chaplyne, Ukraine (Inna Varenytsia/AP)

Ukraine has alleged that Russia is essentially holding the plant hostage, storing weapons there and launching attacks from around it, while Moscow accuses Ukraine of recklessly firing on the facility.

“Despite the fact that the Russians agreed for the mission to travel through the territory of Ukraine, they are now artificially creating all the conditions for the mission not to reach the facility, given the situation around it,” she said, offering no details.

There was no immediate comment from Moscow to the claims.

The atomic agency’s head, Rafael Mariano Grossi, also said on Thursday he hopes to send a team to the plant within days.

Negotiations over how the team would access the plant are complicated but advancing, he said on France-24 television.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian officials said an area close to the plant came under a barrage of shelling overnight, amid mounting concerns that an armed conflict near a working atomic plant could cause more serious damage, even as Zaporizhzhia’s reactors are protected by reinforced concrete containment domes.

Dnipropetrovsk governor Valentyn Reznichenko said shelling in the city of Nikopol, which is across the Dnieper River from the Zaporizhzhia plant, damaged 10 houses, a school and a sanitorium, causing no casualties.

A power line has also been cut, leaving up to 1,000 local residents without electricity, he added.

People walk around destroyed Russian military vehicles installed in central Kyiv, Ukraine, on Wednesday
People walk around destroyed Russian military vehicles installed in central Kyiv, Ukraine, on Wednesday (Evgeniy Maloletka/AP)

Nikopol has been under nearly constant Russian shelling since July 12, with eight people killed, 850 buildings damaged and more than half the population of 100,000 fleeing the city.

On Thursday, the Zaporizhzhia plant was cut off from the electrical grid after fires damaged the last operating regular transmission line, according to Ukraine’s nuclear power agency Energoatom.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky blamed Russian shelling and said the plant’s emergency back-up diesel generators had to be activated to supply power needed to run the plant.

Zaporizhzhia’s Russian-installed regional governor, Yevgeny Balitsky, blamed the transmission-line damage on a Ukrainian attack.

It was not immediately clear whether the damaged line carried outgoing electricity or incoming power, needed for the reactors’ vital cooling systems.

A loss of cooling could cause a nuclear meltdown.

As a result of the transmission-line damage, the two reactors still in use out of the plant’s six went offline, Mr Balitsky said, but one was quickly restored, as was electricity to the region.

Many nuclear plants are designed to automatically shut down or at least reduce reactor output in the event of a loss of outgoing transmission lines.

Russian invasion of Ukraine
(PA Graphics)

The IAEA said Ukraine informed it that the reactors’ emergency protection systems were triggered, and all safety systems remained operational.

The three regular transmission lines at the plant are out of service because of previous war damage.

Ukraine cannot simply shut down its nuclear plants during the war because it is heavily reliant on them.

Its 15 reactors at four stations provide about half of its electricity.

Elsewhere, two people were killed and six more injured over the past 24 hours in the eastern Donetsk region, governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said on Friday.

In the north-eastern Sumy region, on the border with Russia, more than 100 munitions were fired over the past 24 hours, burning down a house, governor Dmytro Zhyvytsky said.

By Press Association

Best-selling organic chemistry textbook becomes open access

BY DALMEET SINGH CHAWLA
23 AUGUST 2022

The author of a popular organic chemistry textbook is making it freely available to students after learning about a loophole in his copyright agreement with the publisher.

John McMurry’s Organic Chemistry has been one of the best selling chemistry textbooks since it was first printed in 1984. Under his agreement with Cengage Learning, the book’s publisher, McMurry realised he could ask for the book’s copyright to be returned to him 30 years after it was first printed. Without copyright of the first edition, the publisher is unable to produce any more new editions, McMurry notes.

McMurry, an emeritus professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Cornell University, US, says the move was a tribute to his son who passed away from cystic fibrosis three years ago.




Source: © Cengage

The book’s ninth edition, released in 2015, is available for around £70 in the UK and $80 in the US

Now McMurry is writing the book’s tenth edition, releasing it for free next summer on OpenStax, an educational technology nonprofit run out of Rice University, US. The book’s ninth, 2015, edition is currently sold for around £70 in the UK and $80 in the US. The upcoming edition - and likely any future editions - will be freely available worldwide as digital download.

But the aim isn’t to make publishers go out of business, McMurry says. Cengage will still make money from McMurry’s book through the supporting online material. ‘We like to have them continue selling that because a lot of students want that,’ McMurry says. He explains publishers still do add value. ‘I would not want to see them disappear, but they’re not going to make anywhere near as much money in the future.’

‘Good for him,’ says Peter Atkins, a UK-based chemist who has written several chemistry textbooks, including the popular Atkins’ Physical Chemistry. ‘It’s a very brave move.’ Atkins acknowledges that textbook prices are extraordinarily high, particularly in the US, where there is a strong market for second-hand textbooks, so authors have to recoup their costs within the first year of publication. However, major textbook publisher Pearson has suggested publishers could start making money from book resales using blockchain technology.

Atkins says that one should not downplay the role of publishers who help authors develop their ideas, survey the market, undertake advertising, market the products, and carry out copyediting and typesetting.

David Harris, editor-in-chief of OpenStax, says under his firm’s business model authors are paid to write textbooks that are made freely available online. This is different to the royalties paid out by publishers under the traditional model. OpenStax gets its money from a variety of philanthropic individuals and organisations. ‘Our real role is to remove friction that exists in the way textbooks are published and used,’ adds OpenStax founder Richard Baraniuk, an electrical and computer engineer at Rice University.

McMurry decided to donate his OpenStax payments to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
Perseverance rover reveals rocks on Mars were repeatedly exposed to liquid water


SOURCE: © NASA/JPL-CALTECH

BY JAMIE DURRANI
26 AUGUST 2022

Nasa’s Perseverance rover has uncovered new details of the geochemistry of the Jezero crater on Mars. A series of articles published in Science and Science Advances explain how data collected by the rover’s on-board instruments offer insights into the volcanic history of the red planet.

Perseverance landed on Mars in February last year and has spent the last year and a half exploring the Jezero crater – a feature about 28 miles across, which is believed to have once been flooded with liquid water. A suite of on-board instruments including an x-ray spectrometer, a visual–infrared spectrometer, a Raman and fluorescence spectrometer and an x-ray fluorescence spectrometer, have been used to analyse rock samples collected during the first 3km stretch of Perseverance’s journey.


Source: © Science/AAAS
Orbital images of the Jezero crater where Perseverance drilled 15 metres below the surface of the red planet


The new research provides information on the chemical make-up of rocks reaching down to a depth of 15 metres below the surface of the crater floor. The material is mainly made of an igneous mineral called olivine, and is layered by density and composition. The igneous composition of the rock reveals its volcanic origins, while the layering suggests that the material was repeatedly exposed to liquid water.

The lowest exposed geologic feature in the crater, known as the Séítah formation, was found to be predominantly composed of coarse crystalline olivine, while iron and magnesium carbonates detected in the material indicate reactions with carbon dioxide-rich water. The rocks also contain sulfates and perchlorates, which researchers believe were introduced later by evaporation of salt-rich water.

Samples of the rock have been stored on the rover in the hope that they may be brought back to Earth for closer inspection by a future Mars mission in the 2030s.

References

KA Farley et al, Science, 2022, DOI: 10.1126/science.abo2196
New stem cell research has far-reaching potential for understanding early embryonic development and the future of human organ transplants

New stem cell research has wide-reaching implications



Natural and synthetic embryos side-by-side to show comparable brain and heart formation.
 Credit: Armadei and Handford

One of the most common times for a pregnancy to fail is in the first few weeks – often before the parent realises they are pregnant. This biologically fragile time has long remained a mystery for researchers as it involves the implantation of a tiny embryo in the womb, so it’s been pretty much impossible to observe the process.

Until now.

Researchers from the University of Cambridge have been able to create embryos from mouse stem cells (rather than the usual way by combining an egg and sperm) in the lab, guiding their development to form a fully beating heart and the foundations of the entire brain – a first for this kind of study.

Embryonic stem cell research may aid scientist’s understanding of how early pregnancies fail. Credit: Oscar Wong/Getty Images

“This period is the foundation for everything else that follows in pregnancy. If it goes wrong, the pregnancy will fail,” say Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, who led the research published in Nature. “This period of human life is so mysterious, so to be able to see how it happens in a dish – to have access to these individual stem cells, to understand why so many pregnancies fail and how we might be able to prevent that from happening – is quite special.”

Formation and development of an embryo in the womb results in stem cells creating three different types of tissue structures: the embryonic tissue, the placenta and the yolk sac.

In the lab, the team combined cultured stem cells to represent the three main types of tissues, thereby creating an environment similar to the womb. They found that not only did extraembryonic tissues (those outside the embryo) communicate with embryonic tissues via chemical signalling, but also through touch. Through these communications, the embryo was able to successfully self-assemble and develop.

This communication between tissues is crucial for the embryo’s survival, explains Zernicka-Goetz. “We looked at the dialogue that has to happen between the different types of stem cell at the time – we’ve shown how it occurs and how it can go wrong.”

Read more: Inside biology’s black box

This research is a step forward in stem cell science as the foundations for the whole brain were formed – the most progressed development of such embryonic tissue to date. “This opens new possibilities to study the mechanisms of neurodevelopment,” says Zernicka-Goetz.

This research may one day lead to better understanding of synthetic
 organs for human transplantation. 
Credit: Uchar/Getty Images

The team is also excited about the prospects of using similar techniques on human models, which may help guide the development of “synthetic” organs (that is, organs manufactured, rather than developed in the usual way inside an animal’s body), bringing hope for humans waiting for transplants. For some time, advances in stem cell research have been hotly anticipated to have the potential to develop safe and effective treatments for a number of ailments.

“What makes our work so exciting is that the knowledge coming out of it could be used to grow correct synthetic human organs to save lives that are currently lost. It should also be possible to affect and heal adult organs by using the knowledge we have on how they are made.”

IRONIC

LastPass suffers a security breach: hackers steal source code from password management company

LastPass logo on laptop

LastPass, the firm behind the eponymous password management software, has revealed that it fell victim to a security breach two weeks ago. Although the company is quick to point out that passwords stored by users have not been exposed, the incident remains hugely significant.

The hackers were able to breach the security of a developer account and took advantage of this to steal "source code and some proprietary LastPass technical information". While LastPass is at pains to stress that it has seen "no evidence that this incident involved any access to customer data or encrypted password vaults" it is an incident that will nonetheless dent user confidence.

Karim Toubba, CEO of LastPass, published a blog post about the incident saying: "I want to inform you of a development that we feel is important for us to share with our LastPass business and consumer community".

Going on to detail what happened, Toubba says:

Two weeks ago, we detected some unusual activity within portions of the LastPass development environment. After initiating an immediate investigation, we have seen no evidence that this incident involved any access to customer data or encrypted password vaults. 

We have determined that an unauthorized party gained access to portions of the LastPass development environment through a single compromised developer account and took portions of source code and some proprietary LastPass technical information. Our products and services are operating normally.

In response to the incident, we have deployed containment and mitigation measures, and engaged a leading cybersecurity and forensics firm. While our investigation is ongoing, we have achieved a state of containment, implemented additional enhanced security measures, and see no further evidence of unauthorized activity. 

LastPass has also published a short FAQ to try to answer the concerns of users:

1. Has my Master password or the Master Password of my users been compromised?  

No. This incident did not compromise your Master Password. We never store or have knowledge of your Master Password. We utilize an industry standard Zero Knowledge architecture that ensures LastPass can never know or gain access to our customers' Master Password. You can read about the technical implementation of Zero Knowledge here

2. Has any data within my vault or my users’ vaults been compromised?  

No. This incident occurred in our development environment. Our investigation has shown no evidence of any unauthorized access to encrypted vault data.  Our zero knowledge model ensures that only the customer has access to decrypt vault data.  

3. Has any of my personal information or the personal information of my users been compromised? 

No. Our investigation has shown no evidence of any unauthorized access to customer data in our production environment.   

4. What should I do to protect myself and my vault data?  

At this time, we don’t recommend any action on behalf of our users or administrators. As always, we recommend that you follow our best practices around setup and configuration of LastPass which can be found here. 

5. How can I get more information? 

We will continue to update our customers with the transparency they deserve.  

LastPass says that it is "evaluating further mitigation techniques to strengthen our environment".

The internet's dunking on student loan debt complainers with PPP loan receipts

Beware of the 'this you?'

By Tim Marcin on August 25, 2022

Beware the "this you." Credit: Getty Images / Ivan Martynov / Screenshot: Twitter: @Tylerdinucci

There are few things the internet enjoys more than collecting and dropping receipts. So it's natural folks went digging once the complaints of student loan debt forgiveness began popping up on our Twitter feeds. At their disposal? A searchable database of PPP loans forgiven by the government.

In case you missed it, President Biden announced Wednesday (Aug. 24) that the government would erase up to $20,000 of federal student loans for borrowers who met certain criteria. For instance, an individual making less than $125,000 would qualify for $10,000 in forgiveness and $10,000 more if you received a Pell Grant.

Certain people online, often conservatives, were quick to denounce the plan. The "this you" tweets began flooding as soon as people started criticizing the plan. Republican members of Congress who took Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, for instance, were instant targets.

It's worth noting, of course, the PPP loans and student loans are not exactly the same. The PPP loans were given to people and businesses during the worst of the pandemic — even if, sometimes, those who didn't necessarily need the money received it. But there is some irony in people condemning taking government loan forgiveness in some instances but being angry when others do the same.

It all goes to show that on the internet everyone is always looking for receipts. As always, tweet at your own risk.


Same goes for Newsweek and an editor there.

And on and on and on.


UK

Micro Focus shares surge 90% as London-listed software giant falls prey to £5.1bn takeover by Canadian rival 

Opentext had agreed to pay 532p per share in an all-cash deal

That represents a near-90% premium to yesterday's closing price

Micro Focus shares jumped 93% on Friday to 516p


By CAMILLA CANOCCHI FOR THISISMONEY.CO.UK

PUBLISHED 26 August 2022 


Micro Focus, one of the few remaining London-listed tech companies, has fallen prey to a £5.1billion takeover from larger Canadian rival Opentext.

Shares in the Newbury-based software company shot up more than 90 per cent this morning after the companies said Opentext had agreed to pay 532p per share in an all-cash deal.

It represents a near-90 per cent premium to Micro Focus' Thursday closing price. Micro Focus shares rose 92.6 per cent to 515.80p in morning trade on Friday.



The takeover of Micro Focus further dilutes the number of tech firms listed in London

Micro Focus chairman, Greg Lock, said: 'I am pleased to be recommending OpenText's offer to our shareholders.

'The premium offered demonstrates the significant progress we have made transforming the business.

'OpenText not only shares our values but will offer new opportunities for both our customers and employees.'.

The deal, which is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2023, will have to approbed by regulators.

It will create 'one of the world's largest software and cloud businesses', Opentext's chief excutive, Mark Barrenechea, said.

However, the firm also said the deal will result in 'moderate headcount reduction' across the merged group.

'At this stage, no decisions have been made in relation to the extent to which headcount reductions in any geographies or areas of the business might contribute towards the targeted cost savings', it added.



Micro Focus shares remain well below their peaks in 2017 and 2019

Analysts said the deal further diluted the number of tech firms listed in London.

'This is a loss for London's listed technology market as one of its key players, Micro Focus prepares to shift overseas under Canadian ownership,' said Victoria Scholar, head of investments at interactive investor.

'However it is most certainly a win for the software company itself, which is subject to an unrefusable offer at a drastic premium to its previous share price.'
This is a loss for London's listed technology market as one of its key players

Since going public in 2005, Micro Focus enjoyed a stellar rise, with the stock soaring more than 1,800 per cent to reach a peak around the end of 2017.

However in 2018, the departure of Micro Focus' chief executive at the time, combined with disappointing sales and a botched merger with HP's software division, saw its share price plunge.

The company dropped out of the FTSE 100 the following year, and is now part of the FTSE 250.

The gloomy outlook for the UK economy, the weakness of sterling and the fall in valuations of many London-listed companies have left them vulnerable to overseas bids.

Another London-listed tech company, Darktrace, revealed earlier this month that it was in early-stage takeover talks with a US private equity firm.

UK 

Charity staff paid 7% less per hour than wider economy, research finds

22 Aug 2022 News

Charity workers are paid 7% less per hour than their counterparts in the wider economy, a report by Pro Bono Economics (PBE) has found.  

The charity sector would have to increase pay by £1.47bn a year to close the gap with the wider economy, estimated the report, which warned that low pay threatens to weaken the sector, and shows its work is being undervalued.

PBE’s report said that the cost-of-living crisis is causing the pay gap to grow, with the sector needing to spend an additional £3.3bn by 2024 to ensure wages do not fall in real terms.

“Four in five charities already say they are struggling to recruit at present, and systemic low pay is likely to exacerbate the problem,” it said.

Figures from the charity sector responded to the research, with some saying charities were currently unable to increase pay due to a lack of funding.

PBE’s analysis, which was drawn from the largest household survey in the UK and conducted for the Law Family Commission on Civil Society, also found that the pay gap between charity sector staff and those in the wider economy was particularly wide for men and older workers.

Charity sector would have to spend extra £3.3bn to keep up with inflation

The issue of low pay in the sector is only likely to get worse due to rising inflation, PBE predicted. 

Average wages in the year to May 2022 rose by approximately 3.8% among charities compared with 5.6% for other businesses, according to recent Bank of England data.

And the study said the sector would have to spend an additional £3.3bn by 2024 to ensure wages do not fall in real terms. 

“Funders, philanthropists and policymakers need to address pay seriously and support charities to attract and retain committed, talented and diverse staff,” it said.

Low pay ‘weakens the sector’

The report said that while the charity sector workforce is vital to the functioning of the economy and society, charity employees face “systemically lower pay”. 

This is likely to make the sector a less attractive place to work, reduce levels of diversity and organisational morale, which is likely to affect recruitment and retention in the sector and therefore reduce its impact, the report warned.

Jamie O’Halloran, economist at Pro Bono Economics, said: “The widening pay gap identified in this research poses a serious threat to the sector and its impact, especially during a cost-of-living crisis. Lagging pay could lead to an exodus of talented staff and acts as a barrier to many from diverse backgrounds considering a career in the sector.

“Amid soaring inflation and with a recession predicted, the economic challenges faced by charities are compounded by the issues created by low pay, at exactly the time the nation needs the sector to be firing on all cylinders.”

Men paid 12.3% less in charity sector than wider economy

Wages for men in the charity sector are 12.3% lower than those in the wider economy, compared to a 4.7% pay gap for women, the report said.

But women in the charity sector, who make up 60% of the workforce, are still paid 4.1% less per hour on average than men, the report said.

This is partly due to their being underrepresented in more senior roles. The gender pay gap in the charity sector is absent or small until people are around 35, at which point it widens. 

However, the gender pay gap in the sector is smaller than in the rest of the economy, estimated to be around 12%. 

pay gap 2.jpg
The price of purpose? Pay gaps in the charity sector by Pro Bono Economics for the Law Family Commission on Civil Society, p. 8. 

 

The report’s data shows charity workers in their early 20s earn on average 2.7% less per hour than those in the wider economy. However, for workers between 36-40 this shoots up to 8.4%, growing to almost 10% for those aged 46-50. 

Charity workers with higher qualifications experience a bigger difference in their pay than those with lower qualifications, with graduates earning an average £40,000 less over their working lives than similarly qualified peers in the rest of the economy.

‘Not sure that the low pay drives away talent’

Charity sector leaders shared their reactions to the study. 

Debra Allcock Tyler, chief executive of DSC Charity, said in response to the report that the sector underpays because it cannot afford not to. She said: “We do underpay. But: not for greed; not for profit; not for private wealth. Largely because we can’t afford to do it and maintain services.

“Especially now, most of us are searching for pennies down the back of the sofa just to keep the lights on. It would help if the government would change its stance on irrecoverable VAT (roughly estimated at not far off £2bn of cost) and we had a fairer playing field like the private sector. Not sure our low pay drives away talent though. No evidence for that that I’ve seen.”

Jane Ide, chief executive of ACEVO, said she has seen examples of people leaving the sector to work elsewhere for better pay.  

Former NCVO chief executive Karl Wilding tweeted that the research: “Very much confirms/extends what any serious commentator needs to know about charities: high pay for CEOs is not the problem. It's low pay that people should be worried about if you want good services that people rely on.”

Charity leaders concerned about managing demands for higher wages

Neil Heslop, chief executive of the Charities Aid Foundation said: “This helpful new data provides insight for charity leaders as they consider the challenges to come over the next year.

“Charities are under significant pressure to meet increasing demand from their communities due to the cost-of-living crisis, whilst being impacted on many fronts by rising costs and significant wage pressures themselves. Our own research found that four in five charity leaders are concerned about managing demands for higher wages from staff.

“Volunteers and workers in the charity sector are largely driven by a desire to help people and make a difference. But they face the same concerns as those in other sectors about how they can continue to look after their families experiencing rapidly rising bill

- See more at: https://www.civilsociety.co.uk/news/charity-staff-paid-7-less-per-hour-than-wider-economy-research-finds.html#sthash.WP0qmqvQ.dpuf

UK

Class in the charity sector: The forgotten corner of diversity

26 Aug 2022 In-depth

By TimeShops / Adobe

Social class is not a protected characteristic under the Equality Act 2010, unlike race, gender reassignment, sexual orientation and more. It does not need to be recorded by employers, and as such, is often the forgotten corner of diversity. 

With the popularisation of social mobility and the language of meritocracy, many could be forgiven for thinking what class you are born into no longer matters. Certainly, that is what the government and some businesses may be striving for - but it is not yet a reality.  

Several charity professionals who had a working-class upbringing have shared with Civil Society News the challenges they have experienced in the sector.

Meanwhile, campaign group Non Graduates Welcome has explained the educational barriers people from lower-income backgrounds may face and how charities could be more inclusive.

Lack of class data

Despite there being anecdotal evidence of working-class people being the minority in the sector, quantitative data is severely lacking. 

Sarah Atkinson, chief executive of the Social Mobility Foundation (SMF), said the lack of data on working-class representation in the charity sector is “not unusual” as this is the case for many parts of the economy. 

“It's something that people often don't understand how to measure, or are nervous about having conversations about. It can feel quite awkward and personal talking about your class and social background,” she said.

The Social Mobility Employer index, which Atkinson’s charity runs every year, has received less applications from charities than other businesses in previous years. However, more have applied to the 2022 index, which is set to be released this autumn. Big names such as Wellcome and the British Red Cross will be included. 

What barriers face working-class people entering the charity sector?

Even when people from working-class backgrounds enter professional occupations, they still earn £6,000 less than their more privileged counterparts, SMF has found. Career progression is also slower for people from working-class backgrounds. 

Atkinson said working-class people entering the charity sector can face “hard barriers” around things like qualifications and finances, as well as “softer cultural barriers” around behaviours, accents and other cultural markers.

“When you talk to people from working-class backgrounds against whatever sector there is evidence that they have been treated differently because of their class background. The barriers are very visible, very evident,” she said.

Non-Graduates Welcome (NGW) agrees. The group works to lobby organisations to remove “qualified to degree level” from their job descriptions as they feel this disadvantages people who were unable to attend university. 

Research from the Institute of Employment Studies shows that fewer than one in five young people from working class groups participate in higher education.  

“Access to university is not a level playing field. While universities continue to take steps to make themselves more inclusive there are still many groups who are under-represented. This includes people from a working-class background,” a spokesperson from NGW said.

Classism in the charity sector

Sarah Hughes, chief executive of the Centre for Mental Health, shared she found networking difficult and experienced workplace classism on more than one occasion.

“For a long, long time, networking just filled me with complete dread and I've had some really kind of outrageous things said to me at events. I remember on one occasion telling somebody that I was the chief executive of my current organisation, and them almost jumping out of their skin, as if to say, ‘what?’ And in fact, they did say, ‘Are you sure?’”

Hughes said she thinks there are a lot of reasons for this – her North London accent being one of them. 

“I've had a lot of that. He certainly wasn't the first and it won’t be the last. I've been at high-profile, important events and completely felt like I was the only person like me in the room. No one spoke like me, or looked like me for a long time. I mean, I think that's changing now, but for a long time, chief executives of national charities came from Oxford or Cambridge. So, coming into that I remember thinking, I've either got to abandon my heritage, create a new persona, or I almost have to inhabit it completely.”

Chris Sherwood, chief executive of RSPCA, shared in a recent interview that he was amused by the discrepancy between his predecessors and his own background. 

Sherwood also disclosed that he was once mistaken as having an upper-middle class background by a colleague in the sector, and was initially quite happy about it. But afterwards, he thought: “That's awful, why should I feel embarrassed to come from the kind of background that I am?”

“I have a background, which isn't like many of my predecessors, but I'm still doing a job as the chief executive and I seem to be doing it reasonably okay,” he said.

He said there were expectations that he would come with “a network of investment bankers who are going to give money to the charity”.

“My best friend is a social worker, and my other best friend is an air steward. My best friends aren't investment bankers or children of the gilded aristocracy, you know, but that's not the kind of network that I would bring to the organisation,” he said.

Arfan Hanif, chief executive of Touchstone, said that, like Sherwood, his network is dissimilar to the usual chief executives in that it does not consist of investment bankers. 

“I don’t really hang around with my peers, more on-the-ground service users. I’ve been invited to so-called executive breakfasts. I’d rather have breakfast at home or at the community cafe. Are they only calling me because I'm now a CEO?” he said.

Elizabeth Balgobin, a charity consultant, trustee and former interim chief executive of the Small Charities Coalition, said the class divide in the charity sector dates back to the Victorian era. She feels there can be a tension between some charity leaders because of this divide. 

“Larger charities CEOs are often of a professional standing, and are appointed through having a good address book, and as we know, people don’t often mix outside their social classes. People from lower social classes often run smaller grassroots charities that are aware of what their community needs so there can be a tension with them with leaders with professional backgrounds because there is a clash of ideology because working-class people can feel as if they are being taken over,” she said.

What are charities missing from not employing working-class people?

People from low-income backgrounds may be more likely to have been in contact with charities, and thus have a connection to the cause. 

Atkinson said that SMF advises the employers it works with that it is not about taking pity on young working-class people, they are great in their own right and may be more likely to have particular skills or attributes such as cost consciousness.  

“Nothing makes you conscious of value for money like not having very much money. And so, there is definitely a kind of cost consciousness and tight sharpness on value for money that can be really valuable, and for charities can be phenomenally valuable,” she said.

The ability to multi-task and prioritise is also a great strength for many working-class people, Atkinson said. She gave the example of a person that might have to had worked several jobs while studying at university. 

“There's a hard work ethic, but there's also sort of juggling and problem-solving capability that sometimes comes from not being not having had an easy route. And not necessarily having a typical route can create resilience. Which is really useful and is really valuable to employers,” she said.

“We're a sector that's about valuing people, and understanding people, and it’s about dignity for everybody. And so, perspectives from every part of the country, perspectives from every income level, are incredibly important.”

She added that charity boards can also benefit from including people from low-income backgrounds, who may also have lived experience of being a service user.

“A really clear perspective from someone who's been in that position or being a user of those services can cut through a lot of extremely well-meaning worry about whether something is right or not. And I've seen that done really effectively.”

How charities could be more inclusive of working-class people

NGW’s spokesperson said: “In order to encourage more working-class people to apply, charities need to move past the outdated notion that there is only one acceptable route into the sector. The #NonGraduatesWelcome campaign is calling on charities to be more explicit about the skills, experience and knowledge they actually require for the job, empowering applicants to then decide how best to evidence their suitability for the role. 

“This will require (often middle-class) recruiting managers to be open to the idea that an applicant’s career journey might look very different to their own, understanding that there are countless ways someone might gain the qualities needed to excel in the sector.”

And once a charity hires someone from a working-class background, Atkinson said it is important to help them to succeed.

“If you have both the financial freedom and the knowledge and the confidence that comes from being from a more privileged background, you know how these things work and you'll have an already established network,” she said.

“Certainly, in the charity being supported by someone senior is really important but can be ambiguous or it can be tricky to know how these things work. And networking is incredibly important, of course, and visibility.”

Networking is something that SMF work with their young people on, but are conscious about not trying to make them “assimilate” into a different class or make themselves different to fit in. 

‘It’s really important we normalise conversations about class’

Atkinson said while class barriers are evident, they may not be for people at the top of an organisation. 

“Whatever your background, you don't always see it. And so, it’s a really important part of any organisation, however big or small, to normalise conversations about class background because it's shaped us all,” she said.

Sherwood made a similar point. He said: “I think we do have to challenge the perceptions of what a leader looks like in the sector.”

- See more at: https://www.civilsociety.co.uk/news/class-in-the-charity-sector.html#sthash.wM7jx5FY.dpuf