Sunday 9 February 2014

Grayling's Secret Revolution

Apologies for not posting something this morning, but a birthday party-induced hangover precluded this and the comments thread from yesterday has become confusingly long. So, this might turn out to be Monday's post, but published early as a platform for more comments, if nothing else. 

Thanks to Mike Guilfoyle for pointing me in the direction of this blog post by Richard Johnson on the Buying Quality Performance website 'Grayling's Secret Revolution' and here are some edited highlights:-

Chris Grayling, the UK’s Secretary of State for Justice and “Tory attack dog”, is about to do what Thatcher and successive Prime Ministers (of all persuasions) were unable to achieve – throw the public sector open to total privatisation.
This is evidently and undeniably the transfer of the service from one business to another. As the Ministry of Justice stated in their original brief on this ‘rehabilitation revolution’:
“We expect that the majority of staff currently performing probation roles will transfer to new providers. These transfers will occur under statute, and in their new roles staff will have the opportunity and flexibility to work on rehabilitating offenders. We will take a sensible and managed approach to making this transition.”
As such, the employees who are shifted from an existing probation trust to a new CRC and onwards to a successful bidder might reasonably expect to be protected by TUPE, the Transfer of Undertakings and Protection of Employment (TUPE).
When a local council, for example, outsources refuse collection, looking for cost saving, TUPE is legislation that protects the outgoing employees, preventing the incoming contractor from realising savings by simply slashing the terms and conditions of the staff. They can, and invariably will, redesign the service and this will lead to redundancies. They will employ any new staff on different, cheaper terms and conditions. But those original transferring employees retain their salary levels, their right to redundancy payments and, crucially, their pension rights.
It is this last element, not political conviction or union determination, that has stood in the way of wide scale privatisation of public services. The size of the pension liability has meant there has been no market for much that could theoretically be outsourced. There has been no one – not Serco nor G4S and certainly no smaller or third sector organisation – willing or able to shoulder the risk.
Of the 139 prisons in the UK, only 14 are privately run. Of these, all but one are new build (PFI financed). If a prison is built from new, there is no transfer of existing service and therefore no staff to transfer with their public pension liability.
Grayling, however, has waved his magic wand and made this problem go away for his ‘rehabilitation revolution’. The new CRCs are not being transferred to incoming contractors – they are being sold for £1. Because this is simply, therefore, a change of the shareholder, TUPE does not apply.
Additionally, all historic pension liability is to remain with the Ministry of Justice. The ongoing cost of pension contributions becomes the responsibility of the new shareholder/owner, but at a reduced rate. Some redundancies will be made prior to the sale of the CRC and then, in the first year, the cost of further redundancies will, at least in part, be covered by the Ministry.
The outsourcing of probation may result in reduced cost and a decrease in reoffending. Virtually everyone I talk to in probation acknowledges there is considerable waste and inefficiency in the system. The professionals within the industry, and in many of the impressive charities in the sector, point at well-evidenced service revisions/extensions that could reduce recidivism.
The point is, however, that under cover of this procurement there is a secret revolution of a different sort. If this model of shareholder switch can be applied to probation, thereby creating a market where one could not exist before, then why not apply it to everything else? How soon before prisons are turned into Incarceration and Rehabilitation Companies and ‘sold’ to incoming contractors?
When coupled with price competition, it is highly likely that the organisations winning some of these probation contracts will be those that offer the worst terms and conditions for their staff. As discussed previously on this blog, this was not the case in welfare-to-work contracts such as the Employment Zones, when fixed outcome payments incentivised investment in frontline services in order to earn higher rewards from higher performance. It is always the case when cost becomes the overriding consideration – when the procurement of a service like offender rehabilitation is treated like the procurement of paperclips.

Then there is this in the Observer today by Will Hutton. Writing on the theme of 'the public sector isn't perfect, but it doesn't fleece us', he eventually gets around to our situation:-

Then there are Serco and G4S, with their litany of failures as holders of government contracts. The root of their difficulties is, whatever their original virtues, both have built a culture in which exploiting, rather than serving, the customer comes first – whether it's Serco charging the state for electronically tagging prisoners who did not exist or G4S woefully underproviding security guards for the Olympics. The same dynamic – transient, greedy owners and pay systems that over-reward short-term financial success and cutting corners – produces the same result.
Now large parts of the probation service are to be run in the same way by the same kind of company, with the justice secretary, Chris Grayling, absurdly promising more " reform" and "efficiency". He is outdone by his colleague Dan Poulter at health, selling off 80% of Plasma Resources UK, the NHS company that secures blood plasma for British patients, to Bain Capital, the private equity company built by presidential candidate Mitt Romney. Bain's sole interest is financial, constrained only by its fear of a reputational disaster if patients start dying as it cuts costs and over-rewards managers who try to fleece the NHS, as they necessarily will. Who could consign the provision of blood plasma to such custodians? Only a fool, knave or Tory politician.
The NHS takes a daily pummelling, but enter its portals and a very different culture rules. Despite all the efforts of successive New Labour and Conservative ministers intent on reproducing the private sector "disciplines" that so animate Lloyds, Bombardier, Serco, G4S et al, it still manages to combine humanity and efficiency. Its systems are not extravagant, but there is a sense, as I recently discovered with a close family member in a long spell in hospital, that the patient remains at the centre of everyone's preoccupations.
The public sector is imperfect: it is run and operated by fallible human beings. There are spectacular failings, ranging from the BBC's wasted £100m on its digital media initiative to the unfolding IT disaster over universal credit. But what it does not deserve is universal castigation because a priori it must be useless. It is accountable. It does not loot its users. It is pretty efficient. It is humane.   

17 comments:

  1. It sends a chill down my spine. The fight is clearly much wider and more advanced than I understood. NAPO and UNISON need to issue a call to arms to all the other Public Sector unions. We need to fight together with teachers, social workers, solicitors, doctors, and fire fighters; a general strike of the Public Sector.

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  2. Jim, you`ve created a life-line for many many people, but you don`t need to apologise for nearly missing a day. Even with the Omnishambles there can be days of inactivity, honest.

    I must confess to checking the blog regularly, but I have no right to expect something new from you each time.

    Thank you.

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    1. I agree. Thank you for this blog. You are allowed a day off. Although you would be missed!

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  3. CHIVALRY Road!!! Hahahaha! I think Napo might have to move. http://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/chivalrous

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  4. Yes why don't all public sector workers unite to defeat this government and to he'll with gagging orders, lets tell the public like it is.

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  5. And if your thinking of putting a sick note in because you're overworked, stressed or just can't cope any longer with all that's going on be careful you may be getting a medical assessment from ATHOS, G4S or SERCO.
    Anyone of them of course could be employed by your own employer.
    NAPO may have to shoulder a lot of failings for the people they claim to represent, but TR itself is born from extreme right wing ideology.
    And to be very frank, when I read that Grayling is complaining about the BBC indoctrinating the nation with left wing thinking, I get a bit frightened of where all this may end up.

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    1. Sorry ment to include this (not hard to see where its going) news article above.

      http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-26105246

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    2. People off sick for more than four weeks are to be offered advice to get them back to work more quickly under a scheme being set up by the government.

      The Health and Work Service, which will cover England, Wales and Scotland, will offer non-compulsory medical assessments and treatment plans.

      It will be run by the private sector and paid for by scrapping compensation to employers for statutory sick pay.

      Ministers say employers will save money overall by having fewer staff off sick.

      They said it may save companies up to £70m a year in reduced sickness pay and related costs.

      Labour's shadow work and pensions minister, Kate Green, said: "Any help to cut number of days lost to sickness is welcome, but with the government's Work Programme helping just 5% of people on sickness and disability benefits into jobs, it is clear much more needs to done to help people get back to work."

      he new scheme will not entail any change to existing laws.

      At present, staff who are off work for more than four weeks are considered to be long-term sick and entitled to Statutory Sick Pay of almost £90 per week from their employers.

      That will not change under the new arrangements - but the government wants the Health and Work Service to cut the number of people on long-term sick leave.

      Under the scheme, employers or GPs will be able to refer employees for a work-focused occupational health assessment.

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  6. The BBC's "left-leaning and metropolitan" bias is so ingrained that it is evident in its dramas, the Justice Secretary has said.
    Chris Grayling, who worked at the BBC before he became an MP, said the corporation has been on the "wrong side" of the debate on immigration and Europe.
    He said that people who work for the BBC has a "particular viewpoint" and that those with a "left leaning" view are "disproportionately represented".
    The BBC has been criticised by senior Tories for its coverage of the government's benefits cuts, while Nick Robinson, the corporation's political editor, admitted it made a "terrible mistake" over the immigration debate.
    Boris Johnson criticised the corporation after an episode of Sherlock featured a newspaper article which said the current Mayor of London is "dithering and incoherent" and planned to turn the Thames into an express waterway.

    Mr Grayling said that the "cultural view" is not just reflected in the corporation's news coverage but also dramas, where "throwaway lines" betray the views of staff.
    He told House magazine: "There is still a cultural view within the BBC, not just within current affairs.
    "It's less [to do] with current affairs than within general entertainment, the throwaway lines in a drama which still suggest that actually the BBC's got some way to go before it really to my mind fulfils the role it has to be a genuinely dispassionate public service broadcaster.
    "I think there's still an inclination to cover issues in a way that is very much about the culture of a slightly left-leaning, metropolitan group of people who are disproportionately represented there."
    Ben Stephenson, the controller of drama commissioning at the BBC, previously faced criticism after calling for the corporation to promote "left of centre thinking".
    He said in a blog that the corporation needs to "foster peculiarity, idiosyncrasy, stubborn-mindedness, left-of-centre thinking".
    Mr Grayling said: "I think the real problem for the BBC is not that there is an intentional bias at senior levels, not that it is institutionally biased against us. But it's that there is a cultural leaning towards the Left.
    "The people who work at the BBC have a particular viewpoint on life more often than not. It's something that people like Martin Lewis have identified.
    "And so it makes it much more of a challenge for people at the top who I genuinely believe want to be impartial in the way they present issues.

    "The BBC is generally very good, but there are moments when it really does things in ways that you think 'this is just not right and proper for a public broadcaster who's trying to present a dispassionate view on life'."
    Mr Grayling also said that he is sympathetic to Nigella Lawson, who complained that she felt she had been put on trial when she appeared as a witness in a case against her housekeepers.
    He said that the judiciary should be acting as the "guardian of witnesses" and being doing more to protect them.
    He said: "It is the case that in [the] adversarial system we've got being a witness can be challenging, and it's very much for or judiciary to say 'actually, you're stepping over the line there'."
    The Justice Secretary defended the use of private firms, despite the "shocking" offender electronic tagging scandal involving G4S and Serco.
    "It's very easy to say because we've had two problems with two companies that all private sector relationships are bad and there are some who would do that. I don't buy that argument at all.
    "But it is a lesson to those who work with government that if you try to behave in a way that is not acceptable, actually you will get caught and it will do you immense damage."

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/bbc/10622891/Chris-Grayling-BBC-dramas-are-left-leaning.html

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  7. http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/feb/09/state-pension-service-privatisation-dwp-plans

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    1. The government is considering saving money by privatising the delivery of the state pension, according to Whitehall documents seen by the Guardian.

      In an effort to make up billions more in austerity savings, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has initiated a review of how it issues 4.5m pension statements each year and the administration of £100bn in public money to millions of pensioners in the UK and worldwide.

      The review, entitled DWP Efficiency Review, runs to more than 80 pages and is marked "restricted". It also considers how to make cost savings in the way the department handles 750,000 phone calls and the distribution of £98bn in benefits and tax credits.Whitehall's biggest department is facing an "unprecedented reform challenge", says the document, which was distributed to senior civil servants in January.

      By 2016, work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith will have his operational budget slashed by 34% to £6.3bn from £9bn in 2009-10. Almost £2bn savings will need to be made in the next two financial years.

      The document says ministers and civil servants need to "consider some more strategic shifts" such as looking at how the state pension and other benefits for over-65s are managed in order to meet demands by the chancellor, George Osborne, to cut their overheads. "This includes a review of the pension service's current delivery model and alternative delivery models," the document says.

      It adds: "Opportunities to go further [with savings] are limited … [as] much of the 'low hanging fruit' has already gone. This is largely a result of the department pursuing all possible avenues for efficiencies. To deliver anything greater, the department needs to look more fundamentally at how it delivers its business, and consider some more strategic shifts."

      Currently, the government runs 10 pension centres, including in Dundee, Newcastle, Swansea and Blackpool. The service employs 7,000 staff who help to administer £80bn in state pensions, £7.7bn in pension credits, £2.8bn in other pensioner benefits to people living in the UK and a further 1.2m to pensioners around the globe.

      The review will examine if the "Tell us Once" bereavement service – which helps people report deaths and the termination of social security payments – could be run more efficiently if it was outsourced.

      The chair of the Commons work and pensions committee, Labour's Dame Anne Begg, said she would not want to see the service tendered out to private companies and said 93% of pensioners were satisfied or very satisfied with the current model. "If you're saving money, it's coming from somewhere. And if you end up with a poorer service as a result then it's not good value for the taxpayer."

      The pensions expert, Ros Altmann, said she was concerned by the idea that firms such as Capita, Serco or G4S could be brought in to administer £100bn in public money to millions of pensioners. "We're dealing with a vulnerable group and a massive number of people, so I would be seriously concerned about outsourcing a service like this, which is working well, with a view that it might make some short-term savings," Altmann said.

      Altmann said an outside company could feasibly save money in two main ways – by reducing the pay and conditions of staff or by reducing the quality of the service. "In the long run, you could end up paying a lot more because either the service becomes a monopoly and the charges can go up or customer satisfaction and engagement goes wrong." She also had concerns about the bereavement service being run by a for-profit company. "To imagine that the private provider will be able to engage sensitively at low cost with people is rather difficult."

      The right-leaning thinktank the Institute of Economic Affairs said it welcomed an overhaul in how the state pension was delivered and how it was funded.

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  8. It’s been mentioned previously about people having to pay for Probation in the USA, but here’s a link to a recent post from America …. "Skip Meals or Go to Jail? How the For-Profit Probation Industry Preys on the Poor".

    It’s not a major leap of the imagination to suppose that there have been conversations behind closed doors and the overall aim is to get the English and Wales Criminal Justice down this route. In a few years we’ll see Grayling talk about “hard working families” not paying for criminal’s rehabilitation.

    There’s a video from Human Rights watch and a quote from the article states …”In one of several cases documented in the report, Georgia resident Thomas Barrett wound up in jail after failing to pay more than a thousand dollars in accumulated probation fees. His original crime: stealing a $2 can of beer. Barrett skipped meals and sold his blood plasma to pay down his debt, but didn’t make enough to keep up with growing costs”

    http://www.thenation.com/blog/178271/skip-meals-or-go-jail-how-profit-probation-industry-preys-poor#

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    1. It's getting that way. Individuals in court are being overloaded at the same hearing with punishment, fines, compensations and victim surchages which have already seen increased to £60 for a community order and £80 for suspended sentence.

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  9. The following needs extracting & highlighting from Jim's headline blog:

    "TUPE is legislation that protects the outgoing employees, preventing the incoming contractor from realising savings by simply slashing the terms and conditions of the staff. They can, and invariably will, redesign the service and this will lead to redundancies. They will employ any new staff on different, cheaper terms and conditions. But those original transferring employees retain their salary levels, their right to redundancy payments and, crucially, their pension rights...The new CRCs are not being transferred to incoming contractors – they are being sold for £1. Because this is simply, therefore, a change of the shareholder, TUPE does not apply."

    My understanding of this (please anyone else, tell me I'm wrong) is that MoJ have created the 21 CRCs, and these are now living commercial & legal entities with nominal directors. As & when the winning bidders are selected each of the 21 CRCs will be sold for £1 to the winning bidder - "transfer of share ownership" - at a time convenient to all concerned (not the employees, mind). At this point the notion of protected terms & conditions is meaningless as the company is merely changing hands and the new owners are not obligated by any previous owners' arrangements?

    Does this mean that the "hard won" assurances of NAPO & UNISON are utter bollocks, and that CRC staff are as vulnerable as hell once the shares are transferred? Any "promise" made by MoJ/NOMS will be meaningless to the new owners?

    This might help make sense of the piss-take attitude of NOMS/MoJ during any negotiations, i.e. were they just a pointless exercise that will have no meaning once the £1 has been handed over? It sounds more & more like the $1 wager of commodities traders Mortimer and Randolph Duke (Trading Places).

    If so, this more than likely means that those appointed as CEOs (designate) for the CRCs are aware of this deception, doesn't it? We already know that £90K salaries don't stop people being complete dicks - but can it be true that those accepting the CRC CEO posts are prepared to sell their souls for £1? Quick, best get down to the crossroads Mr Johnson.

    NAPO - I pay my subs (and have for many years - £several thousand to date). Seeing as its highly unlikely I'll get my share of the alleged £135K handed out to 'the former employee' perhaps you'd be kind enough to negotiate with, say £3K of my subs, and get employment lawyers to provide some proper legal advice about this situation?

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    1. All the statements I have read about the transfer agreement say the 7 year period of protection will be 'written into the contract of the incoming company.

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  10. I think even The Windmill Theatre closed on Sundays!

    This is about much more than reforming the probation service(s) - it is a much bigger project, that has as a tactic dividing public sector workers in one way or another.

    Sadly the enthusiasm of some to take on leadership jobs in NPS & a CRC or to be part of a 'new' professional probation association (institute) - Napo having rather - spilled a whole bucket of ink on it's/our copybook, has aided the divide and rule aspect of things.

    The best we can hope for is that the practicalities delay the actual 'sales', letting of contracts and that there is enough left of the probation service(s) for them to be reunified at the local level, without first crime and custody levels both rising significantly, along with the costs.

    Andrew Hatton

    Andrew Hatton

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  11. A sign of things to come ......Anyone not persuaded on what this government is like should listen to Pickles blaming the Environment Agency for the floods , he suggested that they thought they had experts in the agency ! A swingeing put down of a decimated service - no mention of the £100m cuts and significant job cuts, or that they ignored advice from the EA............What will be the response for an SFO??? The NPS will be this government's whipping boys

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