Who, exactly, controls CSD?

The more you look into the Customer Service Direct fiasco, the odder things seem.  Here’s another example from the company documents.  In the 363(a) for 2005 – a company’s annual return – the shareholdings are given as follows:
Mid Suffolk District Council – 350 Shares – 3.5% control
Suffolk County Council – 1640 Shares – 16.4% control
BT – 8010 Shares – 80.1% control
The councils have “A” shares and BT has “B” shares, although a separate resolution after the company was set up show that these classes were designated as “pari passu in all respects” which means that they had equal rights.

Wot, No Contrition?

Sorry to go on about this but the Customer Service Direct contract is looking more expensive every time it gets revisited.  Just to put it in context the overspend is more than two times this year’s savings.  Some of that overspend may genuinely be extra services that weren’t envisioned at the time that the council signed it, but few people who were not tied to it think it makes up the majority of the overspend.

As Ipswich Spy have proved the remnants of the Suffolk Labour led regime are remarkably complacent about this.  Paraphrasing former senior comrade Julian Swainson, Ipswich Spy said “As our eagle eyed reader from up Norfolk way pointed out, the big problem with the CSD contract is the lack of scrutiny of the contract since 2005.”  Even as partisan sniping that fails, as a Labour opposition would be a crucial part of that scrutiny.

And that’s before pointing out that despite Jeremy Pembroke’s other failings, at least he made sure a County Councillor was named to the board, something that doesn’t seem to have been a priority when the red flag was flying over County Hall.

Companies House documents

I was going to upload the Companies House documents I recovered on the Customer Services Direct fiasco, but they’ll take a lot out of the hosting account, so I’ll send them to you if you ask nicely at james@bridgeward.org.uk

You can get other company documents on Customer Services Direct at this address:

http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk/f8dfbde3dc2fd06e06f904bd449563bb/wcprodorder?ft=1

…if you feel like crowd sourcing this effort.   It costs £1 per document, although you can get them all for free if you already have the £60 per annum Companies House account.

Suffolk left unrepresented in Public-Private Partnership

I’ve been looking into the company documents around the BT Customer Services Direct fiasco and something seems to have come out that seems to border on negligence, Suffolk County councillors for the first crucial year was not represented on the board of Customer Services Direct, the ten year multi-multi-million biggest public-private partnership in Suffolk County Council to date.

There were two company secretaries appointed Newgate Street Secretaries Limited, a City outfit and Philip Richard Willis, who although he has an address in Wickham Market I can find no other trace of him.  The directors include Stuart Gemmil, a Mid Suffolk District councillor (but not Suffolk County Council) and Michael More, the then chief executive of Suffolk County Council.

There are four other names, Peter Carruthers, Stephen Crabbe, Andrew Peach and Michael Reynolds.  They all have addresses that are out of the county, but to make sure I’ve looked for them on Google, checked their names with two County councils and checked their name against the 2001 County Council election results and I can’t find a single County Councillor there.

So it seems that in the first crucial year there was not a single County Councillor on the board of Customer Services Direct.

I’ve gone to the current appointments and both Jeremy Pembroke and Andrea Hill are listed as directors.  Jeremy Pembroke joined the board on 15th September 2005.  Mid Suffolk are still represented, this time by the council leader Tim Passmore.

So what on earth is going on?  Why did the electorate of Mid Suffolk have a voice on the board of Suffolk County Council’s biggest public-private partnership and Suffolk County Council did not?

There clearly was not a problem later.  Did Bryony Rudkin’s prejudicial interest in the matter mean that there was no one to speak out for the council tax payers?  If so, why couldn’t she delegate the task to another elected member?

PS.  I’ve got another Freedom of Information request to ensure that I’m not missing anything out.

The CSD dog that didn’t bark

One aspect of the customer services direct fiasco that has not been explored very much has been the unenthusiastic response of the district councils.  This has been pointed out to me by a number of people who see this as the dog that didn’t bark.

As Mid Suffolk was involved then it clearly was designed to get the other councils on board.  But to date Mid Suffolk is the only district council on board.  Was the design of the system predicated on the majority of district councils coming on board, and the councillors in charge too proud or too inflexible to change the structure of the deal when it was clear that they could not come on board?

There may have been a suspicion of the Labour run Suffolk council in this, but Mid Suffolk was a Tory council, Ipswich had a Liberal presence in the administration and Suffolk became Tory a year and a bit later – so the district councils could have got on board then.

I’ve a report from St Edmundsbury borough council (2006, so two years after) which say that CSD wasn’t customer focussed enough and that the promised savings were “aspirational” (a polite way of saying piffle). I’ve also got some minutes from Suffolk Coastal where it’s quite clear that both they and Waveney did not think CSD was up to the job, although it’s not clear why.  I’ve put in a freedom of information request for the reasons from Ipswich, and hopefully this will beef up some of the things I’ve been hearing off the record.

If it was predicated on economies of scale, this does not seem to be clear from any of the public documents that I’ve seen so far – understandably- although it stretches credulity that CSD was only expected to run with Mid Suffolk.

This dog really seems like she was born without enough legs to run.

UPDATE:  Looking for something else, I came across this “When the joint venture company is up and running, the partners expect more organisations to become involved as the project develops to meet the needs of the county”