Following his departure from the BBC, Checkland suggested at a
Royal Television Society conference that the corporation's governors and the chairman
Marmaduke Hussey had been out of touch: they thought, as he put it, that
FM (as in
FM radio) "stood for fuzzy monsters!" Following his retirement from the BBC, Checkland became closely associated with the
National Children's Homes charity. He has since become involved in a range of other charities and public bodies: Director of the
National Youth Music Theatre (1992–2002), Chairman of the
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (1995–2001), Governor of
Westminster College, Oxford (1993–97), Governor of
Birkbeck College London (1993–97), Visiting Professor at the International Academy of Broadcasting,
Montreux (1995–97), the
Peabody Awards
Board of Jurors (1994-2000), and Chairman of the
Higher Education Funding Council for England (1997–2001). In 1997–1998 he was served as vice-president of the
Methodist Conference, the highest lay position in the
Methodist Church of Great Britain. Checkland is a trustee of
Reuters, chairman of
Horsham YMCA, chairman of
Horsham Arts Festival, chairman of the
University of Brighton and a board member of the
Wales Millennium Centre. He was a member of the
Independent Television Commission from 1997 to 2003, and chairman of
Brighton Festival from 1993 to 2002. Checkland now lives in Sussex and has three children and two grandchildren. == References ==