FIGHTING THE COVER-UP
I was personally annoyed and dissatisfied that my local
authority could treat its citizens in such a cavalier manner, and I was
determined to investigate this disastrous chapter in the annals of Borders
local government after being told SBC had decided to simply write off their
losses and move on.
The only way to get at the facts would be via Freedom of
Information (FOI) requests although I realised this avenue was bound to be
littered with pitfalls and obstacles. Requests would have to be carefully
worded to guarantee some chance of a worthwhile return. And questions to the
council would have to be divided up into numerous sections to avoid refusal by
breaching the £600 cost ceiling allowed for each request.
The first FOI was aimed at discovering the true scale of the
financial loss to taxpayers as even this basic information remained a closely
guarded secret. Surely details of what had been spent on the aborted contract
should have been published as a matter of routine. Not in the secretive world
of local government.
- My FOI 7651 received a response in April 2015. It claimed
the costs involved during the lifetime of the contract totalled £1.968 million
(exclusive of 20% VAT), most of the money having gone to highly paid
consultants, most notably Edinburgh law firm Brodies who received £679,000 for
specialist legal advice even though the project was a complete failure.
In-house staffing costs were given as £356,400. There was to be additional
costs associated with post-contract expenditure.
My own feeling is
that the true losses linked to the NESG debacle were considerably higher than
this but unfortunately I have to accept what SBC has told me.
The response from SBC contained the following sentences
which indicated how they would resist further requests for information: “You suggest that ‘now that the contract
and the project have been abandoned the issue of commercial confidentiality no
longer applies.’ This is factually incorrect. The confidentiality clauses
pertaining to the contract remain in place for six years after termination of
the contract.”
So I’d have to wait until 2021 for full disclosure!
However, the loss of a substantial sum approaching £2.5
million surely warranted further investigation. I half expected an announcement
from Audit Scotland, the nation’s public spending watchdog, that it would be
launching an enquiry into the affair. But announcement came there none, and my
own repeated requests for their intervention have all been rebuffed.
I have copied Audit Scotland into correspondence throughout
the investigation. Unfortunately their email to me dated May 26th
2017 illustrates their attitude towards SBC’s multi-million pound loss of
public funds:
“Thank you for
forwarding the decision by the Scottish Information Commissioner, regarding
Scottish Borders Council and its waste management contract.
“This information has
been shared with the external auditor of the council. After full consideration
of the content of the decision, they are content that the audit work previously
completed by the external auditor of the council showed that the council
followed a reasonable process in the procurement of the waste management
contract.
“We believe the key judgement
for the council was whether continuing with the contract would have seen even
more public money lost. It is our opinion that the council came to a reasonable
judgement in terminating the contract when it did.
“We do not deny that a
loss of £2.4m is a poor outcome for the council. Therefore as part on the
2016/17 annual audit of Scottish Borders Council we will be reviewing whether
the council have identified any ‘lessons learned’ through their review of how
the waste management contract was managed. Any significant findings will be
reported to the council in our Annual Audit Report. This will be available on
the Audit Scotland website by October 2017.
“In your
correspondence you state your view that the commissioner’s findings represents
clear evidence of a deliberate cover up.
Although we do not agree with this view, we continue to encourage
councils to be as open and transparent as possible with the information they
hold.“
During the early stages of my own investigation I also attempted
to enlist interest from Scottish politicians and from Scottish parliamentary
committees. No luck there either. A £2.4 million gamble with public money did
not merit anyone’s attention. Shining a spotlight on bungling councillors of
virtually every political hue and holding the incompetents to account might be
disadvantageous for all of the parties involved, so avoid such scrutiny like
the plague appeared to be the stance taken.
It seemed all that was left would be a one-man campaign to
uncover as much information as possible and have it published in a bid to at
least embarrass those responsible for the losses. That’s pretty much how it has
panned out.
The council started to reject my FOI requests in late 2015.
In each of seven successive cases information was withheld on “commercially
confidential” grounds and after subsequent requests for reviews of decisions I
had to take each case individually to the Scottish Information Commissioner.
In the majority of applications for decisions the SIC found
in my favour, and in at least a couple of the Commissioner’s reports the SBC
arguments in favour of either keeping documents secret or redacting those they
offered to release were demolished and heavily criticised.
It is worth reproducing just some of the findings outlined
by Acting Scottish Information Commissioner Margaret Keyse in Decision Notice
100/2017 issued in June 2017 as they demonstrate how flimsy the council’s
arguments in favour of secrecy really were.
The Commissioner's
conclusions
“The Commissioner
recognises that the Council made a significant investment in the integrated
waste management project in the belief that it would resolve some of the waste
disposal issues in the Scottish Borders Council area. The Council and NESG
expended considerable effort, time and money to ensure the project was a
success. If the project had completed successfully, it would have increased the
Council's household recycling performance by an estimated 2.6%[15]. However,
the contract was terminated on 19 February 2015, leading to the Council having
to write off at least £2.4 million.
“The Commissioner
accepts that there is significant public interest in understanding what steps
the Council had taken to ensure that the project was robust. There is a strong
public interest in understanding the measures that the Council had taken in
order to limit its financial exposure in a project which had been on-going for
four years and had involved substantial sums of public money.
“In the Commissioner's
view, disclosure of the withheld information would serve the public interest in
informing the public about the actions and decisions taken by the Council, the
basis for those actions and decisions, and the reasons why the project failed.
As noted above, the project had involved many years of work, and substantial
sums of public money. The integrated waste management project would have had a
direct effect on the residents in the Council area.
“The Commissioner has
given weight to the particular circumstances of this case, which incurred the
Council investing substantial time, money and resources, in a project that
ultimately did not come to fruition. In these circumstances, the Commissioner
finds it is legitimate for the public to seek to understand what happened, and
in the public interest for this understanding to be as complete as possible.
“The Commissioner
accepts that there will be cases in which it is in the public interest for
post-contract discussions and project discussions to be kept confidential.
However, in the circumstances of this case, the Commissioner considers that the
public interest in understanding the Council's role in the project is stronger,
for the reasons outlined above.
“Having considered all
of the representations made by Mr Chisholm and the Council, the Commissioner
has concluded that, even if she had found that disclosure of the information
would, or would be likely to, prejudice substantially the confidentiality of
commercial or industrial information in line with the exception in regulation
10(5)(e) of the EIRs, she would have found, in all the circumstances, that the
public interest in making the information available outweighed that in
maintaining the exception.”
All seven decision notices can be found on the Scottish
Information Commissioner’s website, reference numbers as follows: 185/2015;
069/2016; 078/2016; 097/2016; 220/2016; 061/2017 and finally 100/2017.
So the process of forcing SBC to release documentation has
taken well over two years because of the need to divide up requests which are all
linked to the same subject but would not pass the FOI test on cost grounds.
This has involved many hours of additional work preparing applications for the
Commissioner and dealing with necessary requests from SIC for more evidence or
clarification.
Meanwhile SBC staff and their legal experts must have
devoted countless hours in dealing with seven separate SIC investigations as they
sought to defend their corner and keep those sensitive reports out of sight.
Perhaps a FOI request asking for details of costs incurred by SBC over the
course of the seven cases might be justified!
At the end of the day with NESG bankrupt, NERR in
liquidation and PGIOM in the process of being dissolved there can be no
commercial confidentiality argument for a continuing cover-up of this tawdry
affair. Every document on the SBC Waste Management Project file must be
published.
However, that is clearly not how SBC sees it. The last of my
successful applications to the SIC was concluded on June 28th 2017
when Ms Keyse issued her decision completely in my favour. The council was
given until August 14th 2017 to comply – some six weeks. But they delayed
releasing the documents they had withheld until August 11th, waiting
until virtually the last day allowed before obeying the orders of the
Commissioner.
An earlier release of the information would not have proved
difficult. I originally requested the material in early 2016, and following
their refusal to make copies available on two separate occasions my SIC
application was lodged on August 5th 2016.
During that same month SBC was asked to send the SIC the
withheld information – 86 documents among 200 relating to the case. So it is
clear the council had sorted through and assembled the requested reports at
least a year before they complied with Decision 100/2017.
They could have been
sent to me within days of the June 28th decision, but SBC – as they
did on previous occasions – decided I could wait for the maximum period allowed
under SIC rules. Little respect there for Freedom of Information.
COMING NEXT - REVELATIONS AND ISSUES THROWN UP BY THE
INVESTIGATION