John David Rimington , CB (born 1935) is a retired British civil servant.
Born in 1935, Rimington attended Jesus College, Cambridge , before completing on National Service in the Army. He entered HM Civil Service in 1959 as an official in the Board of Trade .[ 1] From 1965 to 1969, he was a first secretary for economic matters in the British Embassy in New Delhi . After a year at the Department of Trade and Industry , he entered the Department of Employment in 1970. After another period abroad from 1974 (as a counsellor in the UK's permanent representation to the European Economic Community ), he was transferred to the Manpower Services Commission in 1977.[ 2]
In 1981, Rimington became director of the safety policy division of the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), and he was appointed Director-General of the HSE in 1984,[ 1] serving until he retired in 1995.[ 2] He was also a deputy secretary in the Department of Employment from 1984[ 2] and between 1992 and 1995 was Second Permanent Secretary in the department.[ 3] For his service, Rimington was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in 1987.[ 4] In retirement, he has held a visiting professorship at the University of Strathclyde and delivered the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents ' Allan St John Holt Lecture in 2008.[ 1]
Personal life
In 1963 he married Stella Whitehouse, whom he knew from school. In 1984 they separated, with Stella retaining custody of their two daughters. They did not divorce[ 5] because it "seemed a faff", and in later life reconciled, living together during the covid lockdown of 2021 . Stella Rimington commented "It's a good recipe for marriage, I'd say: split up, live separately, and return to it later".[ 6]
References
^ a b c "John Rimington" , History of Occupational Safety and Health (Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents ). Retrieved 3 February 2022.
^ a b c "Rimington, John David" , Who Was Who (online ed., Oxford University Press , 2021). Retrieved 3 February 2022.
^ Author notes, John Rimington, "Public Management and Administration: a Need for Evolution" , The Political Quarterly , vol. 80, no. 4 (2009), pp. 562โ568.
^ The London Gazette , 30 December 1986 (supplement, issue 50764), p. 3.
^ Rimington, Stella (10 July 2011). "The Perfect Spy". Daily Telegraph .
^ Rimington, Stella (23 April 2022). "I fell into intelligence by chance". Daily Telegraph .