Carrie Gracie — the BBC journalist who resigned after learning she was paid 50 percent less than her male colleagues — has donated her backdated pay from the BBC to other women fighting for equality.
SEE ALSO: BBC journalist quits after discovering she earns 50% less than male counterpartsIn a joint statement,perfect teen sex video the BBC and Carrie Gracie announced they had "reached an agreement to resolve their differences." Per the statement, the BBC has apologised to Gracie for underpaying her, and she has received backdated pay.
In January, Gracie resigned her post after discovering what her male colleagues were being paid. "With great regret, I have left my post as China Editor to speak out publicly on a crisis of trust at the BBC," wrote Gracie at the time.
Gracie said she was "glad" to have been able to resolve it with the BBC's Director-General Tony Hall. "It shows that we can make progress," she said in the statement. Gracie added that she's also "pleased" that her work as China Editor has now "been properly recognised" by the corporation, which is funded by licence-fee payers.
"For me, this was always about the principle, rather than the money. I’m delighted to donate all the backdated pay from the BBC to help women striving for equality at work," she added.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Gracie donated her backdated pay to the Fawcett Society, the UK's leading charity campaigning for gender equality and women's rights. The money will be used to set up a fund for "women who need legal advice on equal pay claims and to support Fawcett’s strategic legal work," per a statement emailed to Mashable.
Per a Fawcett Society spokesperson, the money will fund "access to a legal support service" to help women fight for equal pay. "This new service will be initially for women earning below £30K per year without access to advice," reads the statement.
"My own experience has taught me how lonely and challenging this can be."
The money will also pay for "strategic legal cases and interventions" which aim to strengthen the law. It will also pay to establish a "strategic legal interventions panel" of experts to "support this work."
The amount of money Gracie donated will not be specified at this time, the statement said. The fund is set to launch later this year, and is not currently in operation.
"When my case became news, women wrote to me from all over the country to recount horror stories about unequal pay and the difficulties they faced in trying to put it right," Gracie said in a statement emailed to Mashable. "My own experience has taught me how lonely and challenging this can be."
"I am relieved my own battle is over. Now I want my back pay to help other women win equality at work, especially women who lack the personal funds, union support or public profile to get access to legal assistance," Gracie continued.
Sam Smethers, chief executive of the Fawcett Society, praised Gracie for her tireless campaigning for equal pay. "I want to pay tribute to Carrie who is a fearless and principled champion for equal pay," says Smethers. "Her generous donation means we can get the fund underway."
On Twitter, women commended Gracie's actions.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Claire Cohen, women's editor at the Telegraph, said Gracie's donation is a "good reminder that this isn't about women greedily wanting MORE money — simply about being paid equally."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Gracie's colleagues at the BBC expressed their pride
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Congratulations and thank you, Carrie!
#WakandaTheVote activists are registering voters at 'Black Panther'Fat unicorn cakes are the adorable trending dessert we're eating upBelgian artist Carsten H?ller installs 93#WakandaTheVote activists are registering voters at 'Black Panther'Adam Rippon just brilliantly sassed the judges at the Winter OlympicsAustralia's government bans politicians from sleeping with their staffLet us remember how very bad presidential portraits were until the ObamasArtists behind the Obamas' portraits also have some pretty incredible InstagramsMexican Olympic skier finishes last but still gets a hero's celebrationLet us remember how very bad presidential portraits were until the Obamas Best tablet deal: Save $45 on Amazon Fire HD 10 A star was wrongly accused of a cosmic crime: devouring its own planet Walking Away from Omelas Wordle today: The answer and hints for April 11, 2025 Take This Job and Love It? Save $362 on Garmin epix Pro Gen 2 Sapphire Edition smartwatch at Amazon Anker raises Amazon prices amid US tariffs Something for Nothing Best LG TV deal: LG UT70 4K drops to $349 at Best Buy OpenAI is retiring GPT
0.209s , 14308.578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【perfect teen sex video】Enter to watch online.Carrie Gracie donates backdated BBC pay to help other women fighting for equality,Global Perspective Monitoring