The Scotsman

Chief civil servant: Don’t rock the boat

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Scotland’s most senior civil servanthas­avoidedcom­menting on whether the decision to award the contract for two ferries to Ferguson Marine may have breached legal requiremen­ts due to a lack of documentar­y evidence.

In a letter to Holyrood’s finance committee, Permanent Secretary JP Marks said there was no “overarchin­g statutory duty” to record decisions made by ministers in a certain way, but did not comment on whether the Scottish Government had met its legal obligation­s around the ferries contract.

The contract for hulls 801 and 802 was awarded to Ferguson Marine in 2015, but the vessels are now five years late and more than £150 million over budget.

Audit Scotland has criticised the Government for a lack of documentar­y evidence as to why ministers viewed the risks associated with the lack of a full builder’s guarantee as acceptable.

Such a guarantee would have protected the Government from any overspend or delay, but ministers agreed a deal that Auditor General Stephen Boyle disputed was “broadly comparable”.

During a session of the finance and public administra­tion committee, Scottish Labour MSP Daniel Johnson asked Mr Marks whether there may have been a legal requiremen­t to appropriat­ely record the decision under the Scottish Public Finance manual and the Public Finance and Accountabi­lity (Scotland) Act.

In response, the Permanent Secretary said he would be “happy to take away your last point” to ensure he was “very precise in the legal requiremen­t”.

However, in a letter to the committee following transport minister Jenny Gilruth waving a printed email which had previously been lost by the Government in Holyrood, Mr Marks refused to be drawn on the specifics of what is required.

He said: “Recording ministeria­l decisions is a vital part of the role of civil servants. I am clear that, although there is no overarchin­g statutory duty to record all decisions in a particular way, such decisions should be documented effectivel­y as part of the official record and be suitably accessible.

“As we discussed when we met – the original advice to ministers in 2015 was documented by officials, and this was pro-actively published by the Scottish Government; and since, albeit with unacceptab­le delay, further emails have been located and published too, supplement­ing the documentar­y record of the decision.”

The head of the Scottish civil service said plans were in place to “achieve the highest standards in informatio­n management”.

The response was criticised by Mr Johnson

"While I thank the Permanent Secretary for his response, I don’t feel he has answered the question,” he said.

"It is vitally important that we have clarity as to what the legal requiremen­ts are when Government makes these decisions and failure to answer the question leaves a cloud remaining over this whole issue, which I am sure he will agree is intolerabl­e.”

 ?? ?? JP Marks had said he would look at the legal requiremen­ts around the recording of large contract decisions
JP Marks had said he would look at the legal requiremen­ts around the recording of large contract decisions

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