Skip to main content

New non-executive director for Redflex

Redflex Holdings has announced the appointment to the board of non-executive Director, Adam Gray, who is co-founder and managing partner of Coliseum Capital Management, an investment firm that focuses on long-term investments in both public and private companies. Prior to this, he had approximately twenty years of private equity and operating management experience. He is currently a director of New Flyer Industries and Uno Restaurant Holdings Corporation. Gray brings significant investment and operation
December 19, 2013 Read time: 1 min
112 Redflex Holdings has announced the appointment to the board of non-executive Director, Adam Gray, who is co-founder and managing partner of Coliseum Capital Management, an investment firm that focuses on long-term investments in both public and private companies. Prior to this, he had approximately twenty years of private equity and operating management experience. He is currently a director of New Flyer Industries and Uno Restaurant Holdings Corporation.

Gray brings significant investment and operational experience to the Board of Redflex, having led a variety of operational turnarounds, financial restructurings and strategy development over the course of his career.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Optibus believes in unicorns
    May 17, 2022
    Bus scheduling specialist says it's first tech firm in public transport to achieve $1bn valuation
  • FLIPPER - improving the provision of flexible transport services
    February 2, 2012
    John Nelson and Brian Masson, Centre for Transport Research, University of Aberdeen, UK, describe the FLIPPER initiative which is intended to improve the provision of flexible transport services
  • Motown morphs into Mobility City
    August 7, 2018
    Detroit was once a byword for urban decay – but ITS America recently held its annual meeting there. This gave David Arminas a chance to assess how fast Motor City is moving down the road to recovery. Motor City, as Detroit is still called, was on its financial knees only five short years ago. The future looked bleak as the city and greater urban area bled jobs and population. It was on 18 July 2013 that Motown, as Detroit is also known, filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection, the
  • Smart Cities put people, prudence and businesses before technology
    December 4, 2014
    Caroline Haynes tells ITS International that transport planners and equipment suppliers need to adopt different thinking and the smartest cities don’t call themselves smart. The term Smart Cities has been around for some time and has become something of a catch-all term applied to novel or futuristic technology deployed in an urban setting.