Paula Vennells
Paula Anne Vennells is a British former businesswoman who was the chief executive officer of Post Office Limited from 2012 to 2019. She is also an ordained Anglican priest who ceased her clerical duties in 2021.
Vennells was the CEO of Post Office Limited during the latter part of the British Post Office scandal, in which more than 900 subpostmasters were wrongly convicted between 1999 and 2015 of theft, false accounting or fraud, owing to apparent shortfalls at their Post Office branches that were caused by flaws in Horizon, an accounting software used by the Post Office. Many more subpostmasters paid the Post Office for alleged shortfalls or had their contracts terminated. The actions of the Post Office caused the loss of jobs, bankruptcy, family breakdown, criminal convictions, prison sentences and at least thirteen suicides. Under Vennells, the Post Office led a costly and unsuccessful attempt to defend a group action brought by subpostmasters.
In 2019 she became the chair of the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, but left the role the following year. In 2021, after the convictions of 39 subpostmasters were quashed, she resigned from her non-executive directorships at the retailer Dunelm and the supermarket chain Morrisons. Vennells had been appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2019; the honour was formally revoked in 2024 for "bringing the honours system into disrepute".
Early life and education
Paula Anne Vennells was born on 21 February 1959, in Denton, Lancashire, where she grew up. Her father was an industrial chemist and academic, her mother a great-granddaughter of Sir James Watts of Abney Hall, mayor of Manchester in the 1850s and grandfather of Conservative party member of Parliament James Watts. Having won a funded place, she went to Manchester High School for Girls, then an all-girls direct grant grammar school in Manchester. She studied Russian and French interpreting with Economics at the University of Bradford, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1981.Career
Early career
Vennells initially wanted to be an interpreter, but decided instead to begin her career as a graduate trainee accountant at Unilever in 1981, where she worked at its subsidiary Van Den Bergh & Jurgens, and also began a foundation course in accountancy. She then began working in marketing, and later at another Unilever company as a junior product manager for pharmaceuticals.She later had product manager and marketing manager roles for L'Oréal, BAA, and Hamleys. She then became marketing director for Lunn Poly, and later held similar roles for Reed International Exhibitions, Dixons Group and Sears plc. From 1998 to 2001, Vennells was marketing and e-commerce director at Argos. She then worked as marketing director and then group commercial director at Whitbread until 2006.
Post Office Limited
In January 2007, she joined Post Office Limited as network director, responsible for around 15,000 post offices. In late 2009, she took on the role of network and sales director, a similar role but with additional responsibilities for the national sales department. She became Chief Operating Officer on 1 April 2010 and managing director on 18 October 2010.On 1 April 2012, she became the company's chief executive officer, at the same time as it was split from Royal Mail Group to become a separate government-owned company. In 2017, her title became Group CEO, as Post Office Limited expanded.
During her time as CEO, the Post Office went from losing £120 million in 2012/13 to reporting a profit of £35 million in 2017/18. The liabilities now known to have accrued over that period due to the Horizon scandal, however, were estimated in early 2024 to be £160 million in compensation and £298 million in ongoing legal fees already paid, and £1 billion of taxpayers’ money set aside for future compensation.
In her role leading the Post Office, Vennells earned a total of £5.1 million, peaking in 2018 when she received £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits. In 2016, she was appointed as a non-executive director of supermarket chain Morrisons, in addition to her position at the Post Office.
In February 2019, it was announced that she would step down from her Post Office role, and that month she was appointed as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office.
Later career
In April 2019, she took over as the chair of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust; she resigned from this role in 2021.Church of England
From 2002 to 2005, Vennells trained for holy orders on the St Albans and Oxford Ministry Course. She was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 2005 and as a priest in 2006. She has served as a non-stipendiary minister at the Church of St Owen, Bromham in the Diocese of St Albans. In January 2024, BBC News reported sources told them that, around 2017 when Richard Chartres's tenure as Bishop of London was drawing to a close, Vennells had been interviewed for the post – the third most senior role in the Church of England; she received support from the Archbishop of Canterbury, and reached the final shortlist of three. She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021, but remained an ordained priest at January 2024.In April 2021, following the Post Office scandal, Vennells agreed to step back from her duties as an associate minister. Alan Smith, bishop of St Albans and himself the son of a subpostmaster, said that it was "right" that Vennells did so. She stepped down from her membership of the Church of England's Ethical Investment Advisory Group in May 2021.
Post Office scandal
Vennells was the CEO of Post Office Ltd during the latter part of the Post Office scandal, which involved more than 900 subpostmasters being wrongly convicted of theft, false accounting and fraud between 1999 and 2015 because of shortfalls at their branches that were in fact errors of the Horizon accounting software used by the Post Office. Thousands of subpostmasters paid for shortfalls caused by Horizon and/or had their contracts terminated. The actions of the Post Office caused the loss of jobs, bankruptcy, family breakdown, criminal convictions, prison sentences and at least thirteen suicides. In total, over 4,000 subpostmasters would eventually become eligible for compensation.In 2013, Post Office Limited hired forensic accounting firm Second Sight, headed by Ron Warmington, to investigate the Horizon software losses. Warmington discovered the system was flawed and faulty, but Vennells was unhappy with Warmington's report and terminated their contract. Prior to her role as CEO, Vennells was the Chief Operating Officer of Post Office Ltd, a position in whichaccording to the evidence of the then CEO, David Smithshe had responsibility for management of the "operational use" of the Horizon software.
Acting as a private prosecutor, the Post Office repeatedly failed to make full disclosure of known Horizon problems either to defendants or to the courts in hundreds of cases. According to the Criminal Cases Review Commission, the nondisclosure is "the most widespread miscarriage of justice the CCRC has ever seen and represents the biggest single series of wrongful convictions in British legal history".
In Bates & Others v Post Office Ltd, a group action brought by 555 subpostmasters against the Post Office, the presiding judge, Mr Justice Fraser described the Post Office's approach to the case as "institutional obstinacy". Vennells subsequently issued a statement, saying: "It was and remains a source of great regret to me that these colleagues and their families were affected over so many years. I am truly sorry we were unable to find both a solution and a resolution outside of litigation and for the distress this caused." The Post Office spent £100 million of public money in unsuccessfully defending the case. Following the conclusion of the case Vennells's tenure as CEO was criticised in Parliament. The Conservative peer Lord Arbuthnot of Edrom said that "The hallmark of Paula Vennells' time as CEO was that she was willing to accept appalling advice from people in her management and legal teams. The consequences of this were far-reaching for the Post Office and devastating for the subpostmasters", and he described the behaviour of the Post Office under her leadership as "both cruel and incompetent".
In March 2020, Vennells resigned her position as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office. The Care Quality Commission discussed concerns about Vennells's continuing role in the NHS on 8 July 2020. On 3 December 2020, it was announced that Vennells would step down as chair of the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, a position for which she was paid £50,000 a year, in April 2021, for personal reasons.
In a BBC Panorama programme screened on 8 June 2020, reporter Nick Wallis is seen phoning Vennells, who terminates the call rather than answer his questions. Wallis says "this is one of the biggest frustrations of covering this story ... the consistent refusal of the chief executive and the people at the top to answer serious questions about what has been happening".
In June 2020, the Criminal Cases Review Commission sent 47 cases, in which subpostmasters had been prosecuted, to the Court of Appeal, as potential miscarriages of justice. During the case, the Post Office's conduct under Vennells's leadership was described as an instance of "appalling and shameful behaviour". In April 2021, 39 former postmasters had their convictions quashed, and another 22 cases were still being investigated by the Criminal Cases Review Commission. She apologised, saying "I am truly sorry for the suffering caused to the 39 subpostmasters as a result of their convictions which were overturned last week".
On the same day, she resigned her non-executive directorships at UK supermarket chain Morrisons and furnishings group Dunelm. She also resigned as a governor of Bedford School, a position she had held since 2014.
Vennells was portrayed by Lia Williams in a four-part television drama series, Mr Bates vs The Post Office, broadcast on ITV in January 2024 and released in its entirety on ITVX.