The Baroness Greengross | |
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![]() Official portrait, 2021 | |
Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal | |
In office 10 February 2000 – 23 June 2022 Life peerage | |
Personal details | |
Born | Sally Ralea Rosengarten (1935-06-29)29 June 1935 Hendon, England |
Died | 23 June 2022(2022-06-23) (aged 86) |
Political party | Crossbench |
Spouse | |
Children | 4 |
Alma mater | |
Sally Ralea Greengross, Baroness Greengross,OBE (née Rosengarten; 29 June 1935 – 23 June 2022) was a British politician. Awarded an OBE in the1993 New Year Honours,[1] Greengross was raised to the peerage asBaroness Greengross, ofNotting Hill in theRoyal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in 2000,[2][3] sitting as acrossbencher.
Greengross was born inHendon on 29 June 1935.[4] Her family moved toBrighton after the outbreak of World War II, and she was educated atBrighton and Hove High School, a girlsprivate school.[4] She went on to study at theLondon School of Economics and Political Science.[5]
Greengross was Director General ofAge Concern England from 1987 until 2000; also until 2000, she was joint Chair of the Age Concern Institute of Gerontology atKing's College London, and Secretary General of Eurolink Age.[6]
Her appointments included that of Chair of the Advisory Groups for theEnglish Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) and the New Dynamics of Ageing (NDA); and Chief Executive of theInternational Longevity Centre - UK, President of the Pensions Policy Institute and Honorary Vice President of theRoyal Society for the Promotion of Health.[citation needed]
Greengross was an independentcrossbench member of the House of Lords from 2000 until her death in 2022 and co-chaired five All-Party Parliamentary Groups: Dementia, Corporate Social Responsibility, Bladder and Bowel Continence Care, Social Care and Ageing and Older People. She was the Vice Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Groups on Choice at the End of Life and Longevity, and was the Treasurer of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Equalities. She was also Chair of the cross-party Intergenerational Fairness Forum. In December 2006, it was announced that she would be a Commissioner for theEquality and Human Rights Commission. Whilst Chair of the Association of Retirement Housing Managers, Baroness Greengross made the following statement in the House of Lords on 23 April 2012:
"It is difficult, not least for the providers of schemes, who are dealing with people who are often prepared to spend 12 or more hours a day focusing on those issues and who can make amazing barrack-room lawyers – I do not want to be insulting – because they have so much time to concentrate on that. So it is a difficult as well as an important issue. Housing designed for older people whose needs change as they age faces an almost built-in conflict of interest. They need more services as they age, so the costs are going to rise as more care is provided. Their income tends to be less over the years. They wish to reduce the cost but they need more services. Older and frailer residents are more costly, so when residents manage the schemes themselves they may wish to sell to active, fit and therefore younger people."[citation needed]
In 1959, she marriedAlan Greengross; the couple had three daughters and one son.[7] Alan died in August 2018.[8] She was an honorary associate of theNational Secular Society.[9]
Greengross died on 23 June 2022, aged 86.[10]
Greengross held honorary doctorates from several British universities. She was awarded an HonoraryDoctor of Letters (DLitt) degree by theUniversity of Ulster in 1994,Brunel University in 2002,University of Keele in 2004. She was awarded aDoctor of the University (DUniv) degree by theKingston University in 1996, theOpen University andLeeds Metropolitan University in 2002. She was awarded an HonoraryDoctor of Laws (LLD) by theUniversity of Exeter in 2000.[5]