A Joint Blog from the Barnet Bloggers
Barnet's Conservative led administration has never been so divided.
Since the local elections last May, new
members of the Tory group have been confronted with the legacy of their longer
serving colleagues’ failure in office: the crisis over the Capita contracts, a
massive budget deficit, and the exposure of fraud by a Capita manager,
enabled by a failure to put in place any adequate system of financial controls.
Members of the previous administration
appear not to have grasped the seriousness of the situation, or at least are
reluctant to acknowledge the extent of the problems facing this borough.
After receiving payment of a paltry £4
million from Capita in ‘compensation’, Tory councillors have now voted to delay
any immediate severance of ties, in favour of a long drawn out process of
assessment, during which time Capita will continue its contractual partnership
with this borough, and our services will continue to be left in their control.
We believe this is quite wrong, and, it
seems, so do some Tory members.
At last week's Audit meeting, for
example, it was revealed that BDO, the authority's external auditors, are now
obliged to visit Capita's offices in Darlington, where their administration of
Barnet's Local Government Pension Scheme is based. This extra work will incur
an additional charge on top of the audit fee. Capita continue to administer
this scheme, despite very serious concerns about standards of performance.
Also at last week's Audit meeting, there
was discussion about why new systems that should have been implemented
following the £2 million fraud by a Capita employee were not in use.
Grant Thornton, Internal Audit, Senior
Council Officers and Capita’s Partnership Manager in Barnet had all agreed
these control systems should be implemented immediately. A Capita employee,
however, based in Chichester, where these payments are handled, had taken it
upon themselves not to implement this critical system, a failing only
identified when Internal Audit carried out a follow up check.
At least one of the Tory members had
grave misgivings about the continuing partnership with Capita.
Councillor for Hale, Laithe Jajeh, said
at the meeting, “I find it really worrying that someone from Capita (can do
this)..it’s almost the tail wagging the dog …’ He also commented on twitter
that assurance from Capita on implementation of Grant Thorntons’
recommendations was ‘not reassuring whatsoever …’
He added that Capita’s performance was
not good enough and that he was not confident that promised dates for
completion would be met.
Implementation of GT recommendation 15 was not completed due to a Capita employee instructing its’ staff not to undertake the instruction to do so from Cllrs, officers etc. As I put it to the Chair this evening, the tail is wagging the dog. Absolutely not good enough from Capita— Laithe jajeh (@Laithe_Jajeh) January 31, 2019
At a further point in the audit meeting
it was identified that 51% of the internal audit recommendations were not
completed, the majority of which were the responsibility of Capita. Labour
councillor Alison Moore suggested that such a high level of actions not
implemented was a sign of an unhealthy organisation. The Head of Assurance said
it was a very serious matter from the officers’ perspective.
The Committee Chairman, however, wanted
to take a ‘positive’ view of the situation and suggested that we do not look at
criticisms. There was a clear consensus, however, that Councillors, both
Conservative and Labour, were not satisfied.
At last there is an acknowledgement, at
least from councillors who were not involved with the original outsourcing
exercise, that the partnership with Capita may not be the great panacea we were
promised, under the lure of ‘Better services for less money’.
We are facing a review of the contract
in February, yet there is a very real concern that decisions have already been
made.
The dispersed structure of the contract,
with Capita offices situated all around the country, makes it hard to implement
change, hard to control, and hard to monitor. Different reporting lines in
different organisations mean that it is difficult to pin down responsibility
for actions or inaction. This exacerbates and complicates the failure in accountability
between the management of local services, and the local community itself.
Derek Dishman
John Dix
Theresa Musgrove
Roger Tichborne
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