HIGHWAYS

Council blocks scrutiny over bizarre £7m contract roll-over

Greenwich LBC has refused to disclose why it has handed out a £7m contract without a competitive tender and has blocked scrutiny of the move.

Greenwich LBC has refused to disclose why it has handed out a £7m contract without a competitive tender and has blocked scrutiny of the move.  

In a formal notice, the authority cited ‘unforeseen circumstances' behind its decision to roll over its highways term maintenance contract with JB Riney for a further year.

However, Greenwich refused to say what those circumstances were.

The MJ's sister publication Highways understands the council has also blocked the decision from being 'called in' by the relevant scrutiny committee.

Greenwich recently published a Voluntary ex ante transparency (VEAT) notice disclosing the award of the contract to JB Riney for 12 months under a process described as ‘negotiated without a prior call for competition'.

It said this reflected ‘extreme urgency brought about by events unforeseeable for the contracting authority'.

By way of explanation, the VEAT notice stated its highways maintenance term contract was competitively tendered for and ended on 31 March 2022, but that due to ‘unforeseen events that occurred prior to the end of the contract, a competitive tender exercise could not be organised'.

The notice added the short-term contract was required in order for the council to have a highways term contractor in place to fulfil its statutory duties under the Highways Act 1980 and to allow for a new competitive tender exercise to be organised.

Greenwich awarded the previous contract to Riney in 2013.

This article originally appeared on Highways

HIGHWAYS

The Procurement Act: Getting the basics right

By Louise Bennett | 23 September 2024

With procurement reform on the way, it has never been more important for local authorities to examine how they are proactively managing contracts, writes Lou...

HIGHWAYS

Reviving councils' dormant powers

By David Williams | 12 September 2024

David Williams looks at how councils’ positive Victorian legacy has been curbed and sets out a manifesto to give new energy to local government

HIGHWAYS

Are you ready for a little scrutiny?

By Jack Shaw | 29 August 2024

As the Government wrestles with how it will deliver governance of local authorities, Jack Shaw considers the take-up of the peer review process and the futur...

HIGHWAYS

Is leisure now a liability or an opportunity to support healthier communities?

17 January 2024

The three key challenges being faced by council leisure services can be addressed positively to protect services and deliver greater benefits to communities....

Popular articles by Chris Ames