The employee worked as the chair of Harry’s sustainable non-profit Travalyst
A senior employee has quit Prince Harry’s sustainable company, marking yet another blow for the Sussexes, who have reportedly now lost at least 19 staff members in recent years.
India Gary-Martin, who worked as the chair of sustainable non-profit Travalyst, has left the company after serving less than two years.
Travalyst confirms she left before to concentrate on her own , Leadership For Execs, and has been replaced by ex- executive Gianni Marostica.
When Gary-Martin landed the position, she was “really excited” to announce she’d accepted the role, adding that it was a “responsibility and honour” to ensure that “people of colour are central to conversations about sustainability”.
Gary-Martin’s exit marks the latest of at least 19 staff members to leave the employment of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex since they tied the knot back in 2018.
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It marks yet another blow for the Sussexes, who’ve now lost at least 19 staff members
In fact, the Mail reports that so many workers have left the couple that ex-employees are said to count themselves as members of the ‘Sussex Survivors Club’.
Other prominent Harry and Meghan include PR executive Josh Kettler, who served as the couple’s chief of staff for just three months, and Bennett Levine, who worked as co-ordinator for Archewell Productions.
In September last year, Travelyst CEO Sally Davey told magazine that “restored” her hope for travel sustainability after feeling “frustrated and disillusioned”.
She went on to say that the Duke is “remarkable” and “committed” to “making a difference”, adding that Harry had been an “absolute joy” to work with.
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Prince Harry and Meghan have also faced pressure for their use of private jets
According to its official website, Travalyst is a not-for-profit global coalition of various travel and tech firms and seeks to provide “credible, consistent sustainability information to the mainstream” to help people make “more informed travel choices”.
It says that it strives to offer sustainability information, ensuring travellers can access “transparent” information that allows them to make decisions when they book.
However, and have also faced pressure for their own use of private jets, with royal journalist previously asking if the Duke “should be flying on private jets when he is championing a sustainable travel initiative”.
He told “These are things if I was their publicist I would be telling them not to do.”