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The People vs Camden Council
Government agencies are encouraging local
authorities to adopt strategic procurement arrangements but the
courts are taking a dim view of them
“The tenants said ousting the duty to
consult boiled down to an application to enter into any kind of
agreement with contractors for any kind of work at any rate that
Camden chose”
Errr, ah, hmmm … framework contracts. Comfy?
Well, it all depends. The shout from the government is
“strategic procurement”. That shout puts local authorities under
pressure and their answering shout puts contractors under
pressure. And there is a shout from an unexpected quarter: the
people. There is a feeling that all is not entirely tickety-boo.
Tethering yourself to a five-year deal for hundreds of millions
of pounds worth of building work is tricky.
So there you are, a contractor, gazing at a
five-year deal. You ask Beryl the fortune-teller to help you
guess what the price of fish will be next year and more besides.
She shrugs. So you do like we used to do on term contracts – put
a lump into the rates and prices and shrug and pray. And the
councils shrug, too; after all, these boys and girls are under
the cosh from the government to pretend it’s all a good idea.
And then come the people, like they did just recently when they
scuppered a five-year deal with the London Borough of Camden. It
was unfair, they said – and the court agreed with them.
Here’s the story. In its wisdom, Camden
decided that a £55m-a-year programme of external refurbishment
and electrical works on its housing stock would be procured
through framework and partnering agreements. The idea was to
hold a competition to coax some contractors to agree to carry
out this work for agreed unit costs over five years. It’s all
very attractive – if you keep to the surface selling points.
From the council’s point of view it corrals a
group of contractors on a guaranteed call-up basis. It saves all
that expense on procuring contracts on a one-off basis,
especially when contractors become mardy with certain customers.
It brings, argues Camden, benefits of reduced capital costs and
whole-life costs. And it reduces supply and construction time,
it reduces the level of defects (eventually leading to zero
defects), it reduces accidents, increases the predictability of
time and costs, improves quality, increases productivity and
finally it improved sustainability. Ah, errr, hmmm, yes, yes, of
course. All that applies, apparently, to partnering agreements.
Then there is the framework agreement with another eight to
12 contractors. Whereas the partnering folk would be guaranteed
work, the framework folk would not.
Well now, said the judge in the case of
Davis Auger & Association of Camden Council Leaseholders
vs London Borough of Camden, I’m not interested or
concerned with the general wisdom of whether or not to enter
into partnering or framework agreements. That is for Camden to
decide.
What this court was concerned about was the
duty owed by Camden to its tenants and who would have to pay for
all this work. Now we are into landlord and tenant law. The big
bugbear for Camden was that its leaseholders said all this fancy
framework and partnering contract stuff clashed with Camden’s
duty to consult for building works with their leaseholders. So
these folk came to court demanding that the duty to consult is
preserved. Camden sought “dispensation” from that duty.
It was contended by Camden that bearing in
mind the nature of the partnering agreements “it would not be
practical or perhaps not even possible to meet some of the
consultation requirements and that it would be reasonable to
dispense with these requirements bearing in mind, among other
matters, the benefits that such partnering agreements would
bring to Camden tenants.”
The tenants said Camden’s idea of ousting the
duty to consult boiled down to an application to enter carte
blanche into any kind of agreement with contractors for any kind
of work at any rate that Camden chose. When the case came to the
leasehold valuation tribunal, Camden won the right to go ahead
and dispense with consultation. Then on appeal this was
reversed; it lost.
Look, the tenants in a block of flats want to
know all about any proposed works in advance and scrutinise
need. Then they want to see the estimates obtained by the
landlord and put up their own contractors for the bids. The
judge was not at all convinced that all this
partnering/framework stuff had afforded the tenants protection
against being asked to pay more than a reasonable amount for
works carried out. So, it’s back to the drawing board.
It may just be that the intuitive sniff of
the people detects an error in the procurement strategy. In
short there is a sense that long-term unit rates are a shortcut
not worth paying for. Beryl said she would have a word with one
or two politicians but didn’t say which ones.
Readers are invited to forward recent
judgments for reporting in this column (with full
acknowledgement) to: Tony Bingham, 3 Paper Buildings, Temple,
London EC4Y 7EU. DX: 37164 Biggleswade
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