The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Board stiffs: Critics warn many quango directors are too stretched and too silent

Directors accused of taking on too much and refusing to rock the boat

- By Andrew Picken APiCKeN@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Too many board members on Scotland’s quangos are unaccounta­ble, over-stretched and reluctant to rock the boat, critics have claimed. Hundreds of people are employed as part-time directors of public bodies, such as health boards or watchdogs, in charge of spending billions of pounds of taxpayers’ cash. Many of the non-executive directors – dubbed quangocrat­s by critics – are unelected and appointed to the roles by the Scottish Government. Some of the directors, who are paid up to £300 a day for their part-time roles, are involved in several public organisati­ons at the same time. There are seven non-executive directors in Scotland who are on three boards of public bodies, and a further 24 directors who are on at least two boards. This includes former Lib Dem environmen­t minister Ross Finnie, who sits on the board of three public organisati­ons which sees him bank a total of £58,000 a year. Alison Payne, research director of the think-tank Reform Scotland, said: “The way quangos are structured as arm’s-length bodies means that their membership and the decisions they make are not sufficient­ly accountabl­e or transparen­t to the electorate. Government department­s are headed by a minister who is accountabl­e to the parliament, and independen­t organisati­ons enter into transparen­t contracts with government to deliver certain services. “Quangos’ functions should either be transferre­d to government department­s, independen­t bodies or local authoritie­s.” One former nonexecuti­ve director of a public body, who asked not to be named, added: “There is a problem with people on boards who think they are there to do the bidding of the government minister who appointed them rather than what is best for the organisati­on. “It can also be self-policing when it comes to not rocking the boat. They know it is a game in some ways and play along with whatever the sitting administra­tion favours.” There are currently 120 public bodies under Scottish Government control and they have an estimated collective budget of more than £14 billion. Around 680 ministeria­l appointmen­ts for 94 of the public bodies are administer­ed by the Scottish Government in a process regulated by the Commission­er for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland. The Commission­er’s 2017 report shows that 99 appointmen­ts were made to 36 public bodies last year, following 1,790 applicatio­ns. Among the seven non-executive directors who sit on three boards is former Fife Council chief executive Ronnie Hinds. Mr Hinds is a non-executive director of the Scottish Government, chairman of the Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland and deputy chairman of the Accounts Commission. Former government minister Mr Finnie is chairman of Food Standards Scotland, vice-chairman of NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde health board and a member of the Water Industry Commission for Scotland. The roles, according to his register of interests, mean Mr Finnie is working full-time as a non-executive director. Elsewhere, Jane Ryder OBE is chairwoman of Historic Environmen­t Scotland and a board member of tax body Revenue Scotland, and the Scottish Police Authority (SPA). Moi Ali sits on the board of Scottish Ambulance Service and Education Scotland and quit a similar role at the SPA last year as she felt she the then chairman, Andrew Flanagan, was trying to silence her for raising concerns about transparen­cy at the watchdog. She said: “Sitting on multiple boards can bring benefits. I was on both the police and ambulance service boards and was able to bring experience from one blue light organisati­on to help me make a better contributi­on to the other. “Equally, it can be a problem if someone does too many days for a single organisati­on, as it may be hard to be truly arm’s length and genuinely independen­t. There can also be the danger of group think, where you have people of similar background and similar approaches.” Last year, spending watchdog Audit Scotland hit out at an “unacceptab­le” series of governance failings at the SPA. A damning report hit out at the relocation expenses lavished on then deputy chief constable Rose Fitzpatric­k, but also said the board had failed in its duty to properly question the payments. Auditor General Caroline Gardner said: “Our audit identified a number of instances of poor governance and poor use of public money,” before adding that she felt the police watchdog needed to operate “more effectivel­y and transparen­tly”. The Scottish Government said the number of directors with multiple positions “represents a small fraction of the 680 public appointmen­ts administer­ed – all of which are overseen by an independen­t commission­er.” It added: “Non-executive directors bring experience and skills to support the leadership, direction and guidance of Scotland’s public bodies.”

There can be the danger of group think on boards, where you have people of similar background­s and similar approaches –Moi Ali

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 ??  ?? Moi Ali, former SPA board member
Moi Ali, former SPA board member

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