The UK Parliament's Public Accounts Committee has today produced its report on the FiReControl Project. The project, intended to replace 46 local control centres with 9 regional centres and improve the efficiency and resilience of fire and rescue services, was a complete waste of at least £469 million ($ 736 million or euro 539 million). There is absolutely nothing to show for this expenditure except 8 deserted buildings with limited alternative uses for which the taxpayer will have to continue paying for the next 30 (?) years under PPP (PFI) arrangements. Only 5 of these buildings might be used in the future for Fire and Rescue Services.
Perhaps the most that can be salvaged from the wreckage is some lessons. Here are some key phrases from the press release:
'The project was flawed from the outset, as the Department attempted, without sufficient mandatory powers, to impose a single, national approach on locally accountable Fire and Rescue Services... rather than engaging with the Services to persuade them of the project’s merits, the Department excluded them from decisions about the design ...even though these decisions would leave local services with potential long-term costs and residual liabilities to which they had not agreed...
'The Department launched the project too quickly...it acted without applying basic project approval checks and balances – taking decisions before a business case, project plan or procurement strategy had been developed and tested... The result was hugely unrealistic forecast costs and savings, naïve over-optimism on the deliverability of the IT solution and under- appreciation or mitigation of the risks. The Department demonstrated poor judgement in approving the project and failed to provide appropriate checks and challenge...
'The fundamentals of project management continued to be absent as the project proceeded...The project had convoluted governance arrangements, with a lack of clarity over roles and responsibilities...no individuals have been held accountable for the failure and waste associated with this project.
'The Department awarded the IT contract to a company with no direct experience of supplying the emergency services and who mostly relied on sub-contractors over which the Department had no visibility or control. The contract was poorly designed, lacking early milestones which would have enabled the Department to hold the contractor accountable for project delays...made worse by the Department's weak contract management and its failure to ensure the contractor followed the contracted approach.'
Now that the project has been cancelled, a further £84.8 million has been earmarked to meet the original objectives by a different means, but the Committee expressed concern '...that the Department could not tell us how it will ensure certainty of response in the event of a large scale incident, or whether the £84.8 million will provide value for money.'
I guess the only positive aspect of this is that it demonstrates that external scrutiny works reasonably well in the UK, although whether lessons will have been learnt is another question - the Committee's comments on the follow-up project suggest not.