Western Mail

Council’s £1m consultanc­y costs

- TWM OWEN Local democracy reporter newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ACOUNCIL spent more than £1m on outside consultant­s within a financial year, a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request has revealed.

The largest single sum paid out by Torfaen council was £173,538 to a firm working on a project to use technology to improve social care.

The council has previously said how, in 2019, it was awarded £1.25m from the UK Government’s GovTech Catalyst challenge which intended to help develop technology to support the public sector.

During the 2021/22 financial year Torfaen spent more than half a million pounds as part of the project. Cardiff-based Spry Care, which received the largest single payment, and three other firms, Nquiringmi­nds, Social Kemistri and CarefulAI, shared £578,340 between them.

The spending amounted to more than half of the £1,095,043m the borough spent on external consultant­s during the most recent financial year.

Though Spry Care received the largest single payment, and a total of £215,789, the biggest single recipient of taxpayers’ cash from the council was Nquiringmi­nds which banked £340,132.

Described as a British AI (artificial intelligen­ce) firm based in Southampto­n it says it works on data sharing and analytics and across central government and the wider public sector as well as industrial manufactur­ing and agricultur­e.

In February 2021 Torfaen announced Nquiringmi­nds and Spry Care would receive up to £500,000 from the Cabinet Office GovTech scheme.

Nquiringmi­nds had proposed a system, CareAnalyt­ics, intended to help care providers make “better long term and collaborat­ive decisions” while also spotting trends “to ensure care is well planned, timely and effective”.

Spry Care was developing a home care procuremen­t tool taking account of requiremen­ts such as journey times, carer preference, needs and how likely an agency would be to accept the care visit. The intention was to give the council a better understand­ing of the local care market place.

Cardiff-based Rockhaven Healthcare, which says it provides “improvemen­t consultanc­y services” on care homes, home care and foster care to independen­t operators as well as local government and financial institutio­ns was also paid by the council’s social care and housing department for guidance and support on its strategic social care budget setting.

It collected three payments totalling £26,250 of Torfaen taxpayers’ cash.

Other notable payments included £44,925 to London-based Ignite Consulting for advice on future investment at Cwmbran’s Greenmeado­w farm. In October 2022 the council agreed a £1.7m investment in new attraction­s and facilities at the farm as it ended its subsidy, with the farm having to generate its own revenue.

Work on mapping for the Welsh Government’s 20-mph speed limit project also cost the council £7,444 spent with Gaist Solutions.

The most payments were made to internatio­nal consulting firm Capita which collected 19 payments plus a further 15 to its real estate and infrastruc­ture division, the 34 total payments amounted to £152,159.

All the payments were made by the economy and environmen­t department and related to bridge or highway inspection­s. It was the department which made the largest amount of payments to outside consultant­s.

In Monmouthsh­ire, during the 2021/22 financial year, the county council spent £33,325.91 with external consultant­s all related to highways.

It spent a total of £24,225.91 with Capita’s real estate and infrastruc­ture division, for design work related to road and bridge schemes, and £9,100 with Pace Safety Service mostly related to health and safety audits and accreditat­ion for highways, which is required for its work with the South Wales Trunk Road Agency.

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