IOC fellow Jacqueline O’Donovan made OBE in King's Honours list

Rate this item
(2 votes)

Institute of Couriers Fellow, the first woman to lead the UK’s waste management and recycling industry at final mile, Jacqueline O’Donovan, has been made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the King’s Birthday Honours list and recognised for her outstanding services to Recycling, to Safety and to the transport Industry.

 

 

IOC fellow and high-profile businesswoman and social entrepreneur has led the UK waste and recycling industry to final mile for more than 36 years and has been pivotal in transforming the sector’s safety and sustainability practices. She was recognised with a National Courier award as a trailblazing female business leader in transport. She is an advocate of safe, green, and sustainable operations.

“I cannot express how honoured I am at being recognised with this OBE for my work within recycling, waste, sustainability and safety,” Jacqueline said. “To come from such humble beginnings, and to leave school with little to no qualifications and do a job that I absolutely love in an amazing transforming industry is such a surreal feeling.” “Having attended local state junior and senior schools and recalling my teachers telling me to listen or I wouldn’t get a job, makes me chuckle, and proves that anything is possible if you put your mind to it. I am blown away with this recognition and truly honoured.” “To wake up on Saturday morning to messages of congratulations from Lord’s, Professors and many friends and colleagues is a dream come true.”

It was a very humble start for Jacqueline; both in life and in business. Her parents moved from Cork in southern Ireland in the 1950’s to northwest London, or what was fondly Jacqueline O’Donovan known as County Kilburn due to the predominance of Irish families, and where all four O’Donovan children were born. Life was hard. All six members of the family living in a cramped one-bedroom flat until Jacqueline was aged five and the family moved to north London. Life was to get harder when her father, Joe, who worked in construction until 1959 before starting his own demolition company, and then moving into waste management passed away unexpectedly in 1985 at the young age of 51. Jacqueline and her siblings continued their father’s legacy and the business grew with Jacqueline leading the family firm as Managing Director from the tender age of 19. Starting small and growing from £175,000 annual turnover to £20 million plus. While at the helm, Jacqueline built a successful company that now leads the way in safety, ethics, and sustainability.

She implemented a raft of safety and environmental practices that have revolutionised the sector. In an industry that is predominantly male, Jacqueline has never been bothered by the gender disparity. She strived to make her mark and to make the industry safer, cleaner and more inclusive and appealing to all. Jacqueline’s profile is well-recognised in the UK and Ireland business community where she has received various accolades for her work, including a national Courier Awards, the PwC UK Private Businesswoman of the Year, Growing Business Awards Entrepreneur of the Year, Building Awards Female Leader, Institute of Directors Family Director of the Year Award.

IoC