Dame Deirdre Mary HuttonDBE (born 15 March 1949),[1] is a British public servant. Termed by The Daily Telegraph as "Queen of the Quangos"[2] and "The great quango hopper",[3] among other roles, she was the chair of the UK's Civil Aviation Authority from 2009 to 2020.
She developed her career in championing consumer issues within public sector bodies, particularly in health and food standards and regulation, including: Chair of the Foresight Panel on the Food Chain and Crops for Industry; Chair of the Food Chain Centre; member of the 2001–2 Policy Commission on the Future of Farming and Food (Curry Commission).[4] She chaired the board of Rural Forum Scotland in 1999 when it collapsed due to insolvency.[5] She was, until June 2008, the Vice-Chair of the European Food Safety Authority Management Board. She is Honorary Vice-President of the Institute of Food Science and Technology.[1]
Hutton was a non-executive Director of the Scottish Borders Health Board and a member of The King's Fund Organizational Audit Council. She was a member of the Wilson Committee on Complaints in the National Health Service, and of the General Dental Council.[1]
During 2008, she was on the three-member panel that conducted an independent review of the postal services on behalf of the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform. Hutton was (2011–16) a non-executive Director of Castle Trust,[9] and non-executive member of the Treasury Board, and Thames Water.
Appointed to the board of the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) as a non-executive director in April 2009,[10] Hutton was appointed chair in 2009 by Transport Secretary Geoff Hoon,[3] replacing Sir Roy McNulty;[11] she was paid £130,000 for two days' work a week in 2010,[12] which was still the case as of 2015, making her one of the 328 most highly paid people in the British public sector at that time.[13] She retired from the role in 2020.[14] On 1 August 2020, she was appointed as Chancellor of Cranfield University.[15]