General Auckland Rugby League

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Rebecca ā€˜The Duchessā€™ Russell quits Auckland Rugby League​

  • Chief executive Rebecca Russell has quit and is leaving Auckland Rugby League after two years and eight months in the job.
  • Her leadership exposed multiple conflicts of interest, management issues and fraud at Auckland Rugby League.
  • Former Auckland Rugby League chairman Cameron McGregor was stripped of his life membership in October over alleged management and governance failures. He denies wrongdoing.
The woman whose leadership exposed alleged conflicts of interest and fraud at Auckland Rugby League is leaving for a new role, saying her work is done.

Rebecca Russell came into Auckland Rugby League (ARL) as chief executive to then be dubbed ā€œThe Duchessā€ by leagueā€™s old guard once she started digging into 20 years of management and governance decisions.

The result was an explosive report from financial services giant PwC which alleged standard business and oversight processes had been sidelined for years.

It also revealed an alleged fraud by a long-serving staff member that had been going on under the eye of managers and board directors for at least a decade.

ā€œItā€™s been a wild ride,ā€ she told the Herald. ā€œOne thing I really reflect on for me and my team is the level of personal resilience. I have surprised myself with the level of resilience Iā€™ve had. Itā€™s been huge.ā€

Russell was the first female CEO at Auckland Rugby League.

ā€œI think Iā€™ve done everything with integrity. Iā€™ve always wanted the best for the game,ā€ she told the Herald.

Russell said she was leaving to run The Y North which operates 20 centres from the Bay of Plenty and Waikato up to Warkworth. ā€œThe Yā€ is a modern evolution of the YMCA which operates community programmes along with accommodation, camps, and fitness centres.

ā€œItā€™s big and itā€™s meaningful. Itā€™s an opportunity I didnā€™t want to pass up.

ā€œWith ARL, when I came into the role there were a couple of things I made clear ā€¦ that transformation would take two years, and itā€™s taken a little longer. And I said I never wanted to be part of the furniture.ā€

She said she now leaves the organisation with modernised systems and robust governance through a new constitution voted in by Auckland clubs.

When Russell came to ARL she found a paper-based office that had ā€œno processes, no procedures, no standardsā€. In her attempt to institute order, she developed concerns over decisions that had been made, so hired PwC to carry out a review.

The PwC report raised questions over $7.2 million of spending over the period it studied with some of leagueā€™s vaunted administrators caught in its inquiry into governance practices.

The PwC report alleged conflicts of interest along with poor decision-making with ARLā€™s new management describing the inquiry as painting a picture of an organisation with a 20-year history of slipshod management and governance.

It also alleged a long-serving staff member had taken $183,798 through credit card and invoice fraud and spent much of the money at SkyCity casino.

Three directors of ARL were suspended with long-time administrator Cameron McGregor the highest-profile among those singled out by name in the PwC report.

McGregor, an accountant, was stripped of life membership along with former ARL employee Pat Carthy with ARL citing alleged management and governance failures during their time on the board.

In an interview with the Herald, McGregor denied any wrongdoing, saying: ā€œI know what I have done is right and my values that I adhere to have never wavered and the truth will come out.ā€

He also backed the national sports body, New Zealand Rugby League, when it organised meetings with Auckland clubs without their own governing body ARL involved. NZRLā€™s Independent Appeals Committee also attempted to over-rule ARLā€™s suspension of directors.

ā€œIf the clubs come together ā€“ and thatā€™s what NZRL wants them to do ā€“ the clubs can control whatā€™s going to happen,ā€ he said.

Russell meanwhile says sheā€™s confident sheā€™s leaving ARL in good shape.

She said the Auckland clubs had voted on a new constitution that demands greater rigour at board level, an appointments panel to screen applicants for the right skills, an increase in independent directors, and the removal of voting rights for life members.

ā€œI think the clubs made it pretty clear they didnā€™t want any interference from NZRL.ā€

Only two of the current dozen life members turned up for the vote, she said, with one objecting to the removal of life member voting rights. The previous system had given ā€œhuge powerā€ to life members, she said.

She said the mix has increased the skill set of those running a $15m organisation that served the 10,000 players across 30 clubs, along with a role managing the $78m held in its charitable investment arm, the Carlaw Heritage Trust.

The new board was now made up of three independent directors (up from two), a director elected by each of the three Auckland regions and a ā€œwild cardā€ director elected by all regions.

Voting was currently under way to choose a new board which would then choose her successor in the new year. Russell is expecting to finish next month and start with The Y in February.

ā€œWhat weā€™re starting to see come through is really quality candidates. Weā€™re not seeing those with conflicts. It looks to me that it is no longer a popularity contest.ā€

She said the internal office systems were now strong with a shift to digital tools and a great team carrying out the work.

Russell said discussions with NZRL had largely resolved friction between the organisations with some matters from the appeals board still lingering.

She said reflecting on the period of her leadership brought no second-guessing on decisions. ā€œIf you know in your heart and mind youā€™ve done things with integrity then you donā€™t have regrets.ā€

The $500,000 cost of the PwC report was the price paid for skipping processes for years, she said. ā€œIf it had been managed, we wouldnā€™t have this one-off cost. I donā€™t see it as a cost. I see it as an investment.ā€

Did Russell leap or was she pushed.

I get the feeling she sorted out an amateur organisation but upset a lot of people along the way.

The proof will be if the ARL stays ā€˜corporateā€™ or goes back to a more amateur route once sheā€™s gone. My pick is in 5 years weā€™re back to an old boys club running things again.
 
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Sad to see another Kiwi great has gone.
Just read that Roy Christian passed away this morning .
Former Otahuhu Auckland and Kiwi rep and captain.
RIP Roy
 
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Apart from the fiscal & admin clean out which was well overdue has anyone seen improvements in the footy side of the game?
Considering the damage of covid on the grassroots game in Auckland, the game is really thriving, especially in junior footy. The Warriors success last year and the new junior rep and womenā€™s opportunities are behind the success.

I know the rot at the top that has the public thinking that the whole ARL is a basket case but I know of some excellent people doing really good things in the organisation. Ironically, they missed out in buying the Warriors but have more people working for the Warriors now than theyā€™ve ever had. Adding to that, the Warriors have a lot of local coaches involved in the pathways teams to lighten the load. We can thank the owner and Gould for that probably.

I also believe that thereā€™s some good young refs coming through that could move on to the NRL and are getting professional training here to hopefully make that happen.
 
Considering the damage of covid on the grassroots game in Auckland, the game is really thriving, especially in junior footy. The Warriors success last year and the new junior rep and womenā€™s opportunities are behind the success.

I know the rot at the top that has the public thinking that the whole ARL is a basket case but I know of some excellent people doing really good things in the organisation. Ironically, they missed out in buying the Warriors but have more people working for the Warriors now than theyā€™ve ever had. Adding to that, the Warriors have a lot of local coaches involved in the pathways teams to lighten the load. We can thank the owner and Gould for that probably.

I also believe that thereā€™s some good young refs coming through that could move on to the NRL and are getting professional training here to hopefully make that happen.
Getting the top sorted is massive. Losing $4m in the purchase and sale of the Warriors is massive and then the mismanagement on top of that hurts too. That money going in to support the clubs and grass roots makes a difference.
 
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Getting the top sorted is massive. Losing $4m in the purchase and sale of the Warriors is massive and then the mismanagement on top of that hurts too. That money going in to support the clubs and grass roots makes a difference.
Yeah, how they keep shooting them selves in the foot is mind boggling. Too much power and money in too few hands IMO. Buying the Warriors was madness.

BTW, theyā€™ve done a massive upgrade of their website: https://www.aucklandleague.co.nz/
 
Yeah, how they keep shooting them selves in the foot is mind boggling. Too much power and money in too few hands IMO. Buying the Warriors was madness.

BTW, theyā€™ve done a massive upgrade of their website: https://www.aucklandleague.co.nz/
Thanks for posting this.

My son wanted to play league last year. Well more tag for his age. I tried to get him to check with his classmates what rugby club they were with and that didn't go very far.

I tried some of the local league clubs and it looked like their sites hadn't been updated for years. Even going past it looked like no one went to the club. I have seen people there, training and playing since.

I even had a friend post on FaceBook about playing league and contacting the ARL. I did that and went back and forth. They didn't have any contact information for one of their own clubs.

Seen them listed there so might be able to move forward now. I'll leave the boy to deal with his mother.
 
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Thanks for posting this.

My son wanted to play league last year. Well more tag for his age. I tried to get him to check with his classmates what rugby club they were with and that didn't go very far.

I tried some of the local league clubs and it looked like their sites hadn't been updated for years. Even going past it looked like no one went to the club. I have seen people there, training and playing since.

I even had a friend post on FaceBook about playing league and contacting the ARL. I did that and went back and forth. They didn't have any contact information for one of their own clubs.

Seen them listed there so might be able to move forward now. I'll leave the boy to deal with his mother.
Some of the really small clubs didnā€™t survive covid or had to scale back to recover. I donā€™t think Mt Wellington survived and a number of the other clubs only have a few teams. A good example of this is ECB who had strong prems teams just 15 years ago but donā€™t have any seniors now that I know of. The womenā€™s grades have breathed new life into the Auckland game IMO.
 
If the ARL could dominate tag, it would help local league too. NZTag have gotten too money hungry and their nationals and Oceania comps for juniors arenā€™t as popular as they used to be. ARL should throw some time and money at tag to grab the market. I like the ARL modules and rules compared to NZTag.
 
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