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Commonwealth Local Government Conference

Commonwealth Local Government Conference. Local Government Procurement Policies for LED. Agenda. Challenges and policy initiatives to support LED in Wales. Steve Robinson, Operational Manager, Corporate Services - Procurement & Supplies, Cardiff Council. About Wales.

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Commonwealth Local Government Conference

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  1. Commonwealth Local Government Conference Local Government Procurement Policies for LED

  2. Agenda

  3. Challenges and policy initiatives to support LED in Wales Steve Robinson, Operational Manager, Corporate Services - Procurement & Supplies, Cardiff Council

  4. About Wales • A population of three million • A constituent country of the United Kingdom and part of the European Union • Deprivation related ill-health in Wales is the highest in the UK • Small, Medium Enterprises account for 99% of Welsh businesses • 344,000 employed by public sector (27.5% of all employees) • This leaves Wales vulnerable to budget cuts in public sector

  5. Importance of Procurement in support of LED • The Welsh public sector spends over £4.3 billion per annum, or around one third of its budget, on external goods and services • Multiplier Effect – could result in as many as 2000 jobs being created both directly and indirectly as a result of a 1% increase in public sector spend within Wales. • Community Benefits –regeneration of communities through training and employment and community projects

  6. About Cardiff Council • Unitary authority since 1996 – serving the City and County of Cardiff • Largest employer in Wales – 22,000 employees • Deliver a wide and diverse range of public services including: • Social Care • Education • Highway Maintenance • Waste Management • Culture, Leisure and Parks • Housing

  7. What do we buy 2009/10 spend on bought-in goods, services and works - £328 million

  8. How do we buy During 2009/10 we traded directly with 9,800 suppliers and contractors 60-65% with SMEs

  9. The Challenge • Public sector facing unprecedented financial pressure and need to reduce overall cost • Deliver improved citizen-focused services • Need to secure greater efficiency and effectiveness • Focus on procurement • Deliver improved value and cashable savings • Reduce overall spend • Process efficiency improvements

  10. Implications for LED • Reduction in non-essential spend – buying less • Benefit from economies of scale by aggregating spend and increasing collaboration across the public sector – buying bigger • Will lead to a consolidation in the number of suppliers • Larger value contracts • Huge potential implication for Welsh SMEs and local economy

  11. Need to Change • Council recognises implication for suppliers and the need to change • Source Cardiff study with University of Glamorgan • Improving access to opportunities • Supporting supplier development • Delivering the Opening Doors Charter / Barriers to Procurement recommendations • Maximise opportunities for Community Benefits

  12. Legislation and Procedures • The Council must comply with EU and UK Public Procurement legislation • EC Treaty Principles • Non-discrimination and equal treatment, transparency, proportionality and mutual recognition. • Obligation of transparency means that a contracting authority must ensure a degree of advertising - sufficient to allow the services market to be opened up to competition and the impartiality of procedures to be reviewed – you cannot favour local • EU Public Procurement Directives • Requires all tenders / contracts with spend in excess of £156k for goods and services and £3.9m for works to be subject to open competition across EU • Principles should be adhered with for lower value contracts • Specific requirements in terms of procedure and timescales

  13. eThekwini initiatives to improve the procurement process and use it to support SMME development and LED Winile Mntungwa - Business Support Programme Manager, eThekwini Municipality, South Africa

  14. Thresholds and Advertising / Consortia and Tier Opportunities Dr Kath Ringwald and Scott Parfitt Glamorgan Business School University of Glamorgan

  15. Thresholds and Advertising • SMEs and local businesses want public sector opportunities advertised more widely and at SME-friendly thresholds. • Policy on thresholds and advertising varies across the public sector. • The paradox • Aggregation – consortia purchasing, category management – increases contract value • Fears that increased advertising will increase transaction costs, no advantage.

  16. Thresholds • Each public sector body will have their own thresholds for quotations, tenders and advertising. • Upper limits defined by EU Procurement Directives • Reports and recommendations • Gershon (2004) • Opening Doors Charter, Value Wales (2005) £25,000 • Glover (2008) • Glover (2008) • Ringwald & Cahill et al (2009) £25,000 • WLGA (Nov 2010). £50,000 • Construction contracts excluded from these thresholds

  17. Advertising • Evidence in Wales 2005-2009, very limited increase in advertising. SMEs reported very little change. • Buyers reported concerns over unwanted responses to advertised opportunities. • 2009-2011 (following Barriers report) shows a considerable increase in advertising. • In the current financial year 772 lower value opportunities have been advertised – an increase of 24% when compared to the corresponding period in the previous financial year. • This means that 57% of opportunities advertised were below OJEU level. • Currently undertaking research to assess the implications on the workload for procurement staff

  18. Approved Lists of Suppliers • Once a common feature of public sector procurement. • Companies would be required to ‘qualify’ for the list, then expect to be invited to quote / tender for business • Approved lists, when run badly, could be open to legal challenge • Some public sector bodies claim they have no lists. • Some are operating a phased withdrawal • In reality there will always be exceptions due to specialist qualification eg: contracts for care

  19. Key to effective use of thresholds and advertising • Choose contracts which lend themselves to SME friendly approaches eg: lotting strategies • Prepare thoroughly. SMEs will de-select themselves if they can see they do not meet the criteria. • Use appropriate pre-qualification processes • Fair and transparent processes, with feedback

  20. Consortia Bidding • Encouraging groups of SMEs to collaborate to submit a more attractive bid. • The Supplier Development Service report that this is unpopular with SMEs • Difficult to find SMEs willing to exchange commercially sensitive data. • Problems with legal entity as a basis for the contract • Suspicious of motives for collaboration • These views supported by research • ‘Barriers’ Report (2009) • Scottish Government ‘Opportunities and Barriers to Consortia Bidding for Public Sector Contracts (2009) • Limited success found where complementary offerings exist

  21. Tiering • Collaboration, aggregation and consortium procurements leads to economies of scale, but large ‘lots’ which can exclude small suppliers • Contracts with 1st tier suppliers can require the 1st tier to advertise 2nd and 3rd tier opportunities to local SMEs. Used for London 2012 Olympics procurement. • Sell2Wales facilitates this. • SMEs argue that this limits their opportunities • No guarantee of winning work • Margins reduced • Public Sector does not ‘police’ this requirement with sufficient rigor.

  22. Tiering • Public sector argue • Cannot ‘impose’ a local quota on 1st tier suppliers • Can impose social clauses eg. Employing local labour, advertising contracts in SME friendly ways. • Public sector has no legal influence beyond 1st tier. Where is SCM? • Lotting strategies, Framework Agreements • Possibilities for Supplier Networks linked to Category Management.

  23. Pre-Qualification and Community Benefits Dr Sue Hurrell Value Wales

  24. Pre-qualification • Which bidders are capable? = pre-qualification • Which bidder demonstrate the best quality and price? = tender stage • Often done in two distinct “stages” under EU law • Suppliers say pre-qual is bureaucratic, opaque and biased towards big business. • More than £20m spent by suppliers in pre-qualifying each year in Wales • 90% of questions (and answers) the same each time, but data is rarely re-used.

  25. SQuID • Suppliers want more standardisation, AND more tailoring to each project • = contradiction? • Solution – a set of standard, common, core questions • Answers stored for re-use • Risk-based methodology for buyers to choose questions – not value-based • Flexible process – questions added/deleted, project-specific • “If you don’t know why you’re asking a question, or what you’re going to do with the answer, don’t ask it!”

  26. Risk assessment • What costs are incurred if the supplier fails to deliver? • Penalties • Reputational • Cost of temporary alternative • Re-procurement costs • E.g. staff uniforms vs. software for social care workers with at-risk children…

  27. SQuID

  28. Consultation and Training • Paper version developed at workshops with practitioners • 8 month period of testing on live projects • 450 procurement staff from all sectors trained • On-line version being built on www.sell2wales.co.uk

  29. Will it help SMEs? • Yes – reduces bid costs and encourages newcomers • But – reduces bid costs for bigger suppliers too • Wider advertising attracts more competition – more “losers” • Yes – greater clarity allows self-deselection (reduces wasted effort) • Maybe – will acceptance thresholds be set too high? • Maybe – will scoring favour bigger bidders • It all depends on how it is used!

  30. Community Benefits ‘Public procurement can make an enormous difference to the social, economic and environmental well being of Wales and I would urge all those involved in spending public money to use this guide to ensure they get maximum value for every pound we spend.’ Jane Hutt – Minister for Business and Budget

  31. “One Wales” – coalition plan • “we will ensure that all projects seeking to benefit from public funding, including all structural funds, seek to meet sustainability criteria” • “we will encourage procurement which incentivises training opportunities for the unemployed” • “we will, by working within the European legal framework, make it easier for small local firms in all parts of Wales to win government contracts” • “we will improve targets for recycling with legislation and support for better and more coordinated waste management”

  32. Main aims: • Specifying and including in contracts: • Recruiting and training economically inactive people • Supply chain initiatives

  33. Other aims • Retaining existing workforce • Training existing workforce • Promoting Third Sector and Supported Businesses & Factories • Equal opportunities • Contributions to education • Resources for community initiatives • Community consultation and engagement • ‘Considerate Contractor' schemes • Environmental benefits

  34. Outcomes Reseach into 3 recent Welsh construction projects: Including community benefits clauses in the contract helped deliver 30% more value for the Welsh economy

  35. Thank you for listeningQuestions and Answers Sessionkringwal@glam.ac.uksparfitt@glam.ac.uk

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