How we are run

Ducklings

Andrew Parkinson/2020VISION

How we are run

Who we are

Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust is a local registered charity (number 210531) concerned with all aspects of nature conservation. We are a membership organisation, governed by its Memorandum and Articles of Association. Over 18,000 members currently support our work.

Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust is an independent charity. We belong to a powerful conservation network of 46 Wildlife Trusts across the UK , The Wildlife Trusts acts as a national voice, generates support and provides leadership for the movement.

Together the Wildlife Trusts manage more than 2,300 nature reserves, campaign tirelessly on behalf of wildlife and run thousands of projects and events throughout the UK. Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust is your local partner in this powerful conservation network.

How we are organised

Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust is managed by a Council of Trustees (elected from its members) who oversee the governance and strategic direction of the Trust. Decision making is undertaken by Trustees at Council meetings and at the Annual General Meeting for members. You can find out more about these individuals and the skills and expertise that they bring to us below.

Our day-to-day work is delivered by a team of over 30 staff assisted by more than 700 volunteers. In addition, we have a network of local groups in the two counties that support our work.

Our Trustees

Chairman - Ann Tomlinson

Ann was born and educated in West Cornwall. After a degree in history at Oxford University, she moved to London, qualifying as a Chartered Accountant in 1982. She spent most of her career in the City of London, specializing in investment business. She latterly worked for a succession of financial services regulators, where she was responsible for developing and implementing policy for marketing, conduct of business, financial adequacy and compensation, at both national and European level. Ann and her husband John moved from London in 1998 looking for somewhere nice to live, and found Rutland. Ann ran her own consultancy business for several years and started volunteering at Rutland Water. In 2002 she became a member of Trust Council and Honorary Treasurer, holding this role until standing down in Nov 2021, when she was appointed Chair of LRWT.

Outside of her many and varied Trustee and volunteer activities, Ann was for a number of years Chair of East Midlands Environment Link, a grouping of environmental NGOs monitoring the impact of government policy at a regional level. She was Chair of the Rutland Natural History Society for ten years. Ann has always had an interest in natural history and finds it very satisfying that her business and policy skills can be used in helping protect the natural world. She has travelled extensively, usually looking at wildlife on the way, and has a particular fondness for Northwestern USA, central Europe, Southern Africa, pachyderms (not often found in Rutland), and all small cuddly animals.

Vice Chair - Bob Bearne

Bob moved to Leicestershire in 1984 to take up a job as a Probation Officer with Leicestershire & Rutland Probation Service, with whom he still works, now as an Assistant Chief Executive Officer. He has also been Chair of the Governing Bodies if two different schools. Bob has always been a keen amateur naturalist, a love for which he got from his father. His teenage son is a very keen and knowledgeable naturalist, particularly regarding birds, and many days and weekends are spent by them birdwatching around the country or locally. Whilst not claiming any specialist or professional conservation or environmental knowledge, Bob hopes to bring his knowledge of strategic planning, staff management and budgeting to his role on the Trust Council. In addition, having lived and worked in the city of Leicester for many years, he is particularly keen to broaden the demographic of those engaged in the work of the Trust to those living in urban areas without ready access to the natural world.

Hon. Treasurer - Andrew Thorpe

Andy is a proud Yorkshire man but moved to Leicestershire in 1986 to come to the University of Loughborough, where he has lived ever since. His degree was in Accounting and Financial Management and then working as an auditor he qualified as a chartered accountant before moving into industry.

He worked at a Nottingham based biopharmaceutical company for over 25 years, latterly as Chief Financial Officer but retired in 2021. Andy likes watching many sports particularly cricket and tennis and was a long-term member of a local amateur theatre group. He is a keen gardener and walker enjoying nature by being in the middle of it and has been a member of LRWT for about 25 years. Since retiring he has become a regular volunteer on the Thursday work parties at Rutland Water Nature Reserve as well as joining council as treasurer, where his financial and management skills have proved very useful.

Andy has been a trustee of three other charities. He was trustee for a development charity working in water provision in Africa that his brother started seeing it grow from start-up to over £2million income in around 8 years and has been treasurer and trustee for his local church and the charity overseeing a grouping of 12 local churches.

Trustee - Anthony Biddle

Anthony Biddle has been a member of Trust Council for over 30 years. He is a Chartered Biologist and was, until his retirement in 2013, Technical Director of a private vegetable research organisation. As a plant pathologist, he has specialised in crop protection and as a keen naturalist, has an appreciation of the need to integrate wildlife conservation with profitable agricultural production. He is Chairman of the Rutland Group of the LRWT and is very much involved in the organisation of local events for Rutland members.

Trustee - Andrew Moffat

Andrew is a Fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, having originally qualified as a rural practice surveyor, he is also a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Society of Arts.  In addition he is a Chartered Environmentalist and Chartered Geographer and Certified Facility Manager. Andrew has spent his career as a civil servant working for the Ministry of Defence in a senior management position. He has a MA from Kings College, London having earlier studied at the Royal Agricultural College, Cirencester and at the Joint Services Command and Staff College. Andrew’s main skills and interests are in strategic real estate management, operational planning, sustainable development and conservation. He is a life member of Falklands Conservation, the National Trust, the Royal Scottish Geographical Society and the Royal Agricultural Society of England and an annual member of numerous organisations including the Farmers’ Club, Country Landowners Association,South Georgia Association and various other sporting and special interest societies. As well as being a trustee of LRWT he is a local committee member (and former Chair) for the CLA, Honorary Secretary of the Shackleton Scholarship Fund and a Trustee of the United Kingdom Falkland Islands Trust.

Trustee - Helen Nott

Helen grew up in Hertfordshire and then studied Biology at University in York and a PhD in Animal Behaviour at Reading University. She moved to Leicestershire in 1988 to work for Mars (then Pedigree Petfoods) initially as an animal behaviourists studying wild bird feeding and developing a range of toys for dogs and cats. Her career at Mars moved to market research and then marketing and in 2008 she moved into the charity sector as a Director for the Woodland Trust. Helen now runs her own consultancy business supporting organisations that do good with strategy, audience insight, marketing and fundraising. She has worked with a number of environmental and conservation charities including The Wildlife Trusts, Earthwatch and the Soil Association, as well as a range of smaller regional charities from London to Sheffield. Helen’s love of wildlife was kindled by long walks with her Gran who was a mine of folklore and plant names. She is heritage warden for her village, a trustee for its community park and desperately tries to encourage her daughters to recognise plants. She’s keen to inspire more people to appreciate wildlife and to value it as part of their daily lives.

Trustee - Peter Williams

Peter lives in Anstey with his wife, Alison and is a father of two girls. Having moved to Anstey in 1979 he worked for Leicestershire County Council in various roles, including as Head of Environmental Management, until his recent retirement. With the County Council he was fortunate to be involved with various environmental programmes including land reclamation in the Leicestershire and South Derbyshire coalfield, National Forest, Country Parks and Rights of Way service, and Climate Change initiatives. Peter is a keen birdwatcher, having formed an interest in Norfolk and Cyprus in the 1960's and is ViceChairman of the Leicestershire and Rutland Ornithological Society (LROS) and is President of the Leicestershire and Rutland Ramblers. Peter is an Ambassador for the National Forest and a Board Member of the National Forest Charitable Trust. He enjoys volunteering at Beacon Hill and Watermead country parks and with LROS.

Trustee - Silviu Petrovan

Silviu is a qualified vet with a PhD in Animal Ecology and working as Senior Researcher at the University of Cambridge. Before that he worked as Head of Conservation at Froglife for five years (2011-2016) and remains a trustee there. He is broadly interested in understanding the effects of anthropogenic changes on biodiversity and improving evidence-based solutions for counteracting negative effects at population or landscape scale. His main areas of work have been on:

(1) road impacts (mortality, fragmentation,  isolation, pollution) and evidence-based mitigation solutions for amphibian and small and medium-sized mammals. This includes movement patterns and using road-based surveys for large-scale monitoring

(2) harnessing the power of citizen science in long-term datasets for biodiversity monitoring, including for emerging diseases

(3) how landscape management shapes the outcome of plant-animal interactions such as grazing and species distribution in relation to lagomorphs.

His current work at Conservation Evidence includes the update for the Bird Conservation book as well as editing the annual What Works In Conservation volume. Some of his research work has been featured widely in the media: 

Wildlife and livestock a risk factor in future pandemics, say studies | Infectious diseases | The Guardian

Trustee - Abigail Wilkin

Abigail was born and raised in Lutterworth, Leicestershire, where she developed a love for nature and wildlife from a young age. Growing up she was home-schooled, which meant a unique opportunity to experience more outdoor learning. 

In 2024 she graduated with a BSc in Environmental Science with The Open University, and she would like a career in the environmental sector.

Abigail’s passion for wildlife and environmental sustainability shines through in her voluntary experience, which includes Youth Speaker for Greenpeace, Residential Volunteer at the Scottish Dolphin Centre, and Young Ambassador for Warwickshire Wildlife Trust. 

This is Abigail’s first experience of being a trustee, and she has been a member of council since 2021

Our finances

Finance Summary for 2023 - 2024 detailed below.

2324 LRWT ANNUAL REVIEW FINANCE PAGES

2324 LRWT ANNUAL REVIEW FINANCE PAGES

Read our 2023 - 2024 Annual Review here

Our Annual Reviews

At Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust, we believe in being open, transparent and honest in our reporting. We submit full reports and accounts annually in accordance with our charitable status and objectives, and you can read our previous reports below, if you would like a copy from further back or more information, please contact us.

Annual Review 2022-2023

Annual Review 2021-2022

Annual Review 2020-2021

Annual Review 2019-2020

Annual Review 2018-2019

Annual Review 2017-2018