Diocese of Bangor governance review

On Friday 6 March 2026, the Diocese of Bangor published the findings of an independent governance review, commissioned as part of their ongoing commitment to strengthening accountability, transparency and good governance across the diocese. Extracts[*] from the Press Release are reproduced below; the full report (19pp) may be accessed here.


Diocese of Bangor publishes independent governance review

The Bangor Diocesan Board of Finance and the Bangor Diocesan Trust have today published the findings of an independent governance review, commissioned as part of their ongoing commitment to strengthening accountability, transparency and good governance across the diocese.

The review by Jim Clifford OBE and Alice Hulbert of Sonnet Advisory & Impact, charity specialists, examined the charities’ governance arrangements, financial oversight and organisational culture. It acknowledges the proactive steps taken by trustees in commissioning the assessment and sets their work within a wider effort to ensure that diocesan structures remain robust and effective.

The review describes the breakdown of good governance and proper processes within the charities over five or more years. The charities should have been led by laity, and the BDBF should have formed a counterbalance and critical friend to the Bishop’s Ministerial focus. That positive dynamic tension was lost, and the trustee boards lost sight of their function and importance. Since mid-2025, and on through the period of the review, the report recognises that significant progress has been made to redressing that situation. These improvements include new and clearer leadership, more structured board meetings, improved information flow and decision‑making processes, strengthened financial reporting, and the introduction of formal budgeting and multi‑year financial planning.

The review offers a series of practical recommendations to support the next stage of development. These include merging the two diocesan charities into a single body, updating membership and responsibilities of the trustee boards, and enhancing financial planning and reporting. It also proposes clearer arrangements for risk management, trustee training, staff structures and record‑keeping, together with consistent procedures for overseeing major projects.

Taken together, these steps form a positive and constructive way forward to ensuring that the charities’ and thereby the Diocese’s governance arrangements are fit for purpose and able to support its mission with confidence.

[…]

Notes for editors

1. The governance review concerns two principal diocesan charities: the Bangor Diocesan Board of Finance (BDBF) and the Bangor Diocesan Trust (BDT). The BDBF is responsible for administering diocesan‑wide finances, receiving central grants, overseeing the Bishop’s Ministry Fund, and employing the staff team supporting ministry across the Diocese. The BDT holds diocesan property and funds, both restricted and unrestricted, and makes grants that support ministry areas, church buildings, and statutory education functions. The review recommends that these two bodies should ultimately merge into a single, reconstituted charity with a revised governance structure to ensure clarity of accountability, a stronger skills‑based trustee body, and more effective oversight of diocesan resources.

2. Sonnet Advisory & Impact are an impact-focused research, financial, design and strategic consultancy. Regulated as a firm of chartered accountants, and structured as a social enterprise, they are part owned by Sheffield Hallam University.

3. Jim Clifford has over forty years’ experience advising charities in the UK and beyond on matters including regulatory, governance and financial reviews. An Hon. Professor at Sheffield Hallam University, and a Senior Fellow at Centre for Charity Effectiveness, City St. George’s, University of London, he was awarded an OBE in 2013 for services to Social Investment.

[*] In our reporting of Press Releases, the Extracts used frequently omit the “he said, she said” quotations as in most cases these add little to the understanding of the legal issues involved, and in many cases these can be categorized “MRDA“.


Comment

The Report was reviewed in the Church Times article (£): Weak financial controls and ‘disempowered’ trustees were background to Bangor débâcle, review says.

Cite this article as: David Pocklington, "Diocese of Bangor governance review" in Law & Religion UK, 10 March 2026, https://lawandreligionuk.com/2026/03/10/bangor-governance-review/

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