Select committee chairman Ian Davidson hits out over blacklisting response

Ian Davidson

Ian Davidson

Major contractors 鈥渃an鈥檛 be trusted鈥 because of their history of blacklisting and their response to the scandal, the chairman of a Commons select committee said today.

Speaking at a hearing of the Scottish Affairs Comittee - which has been investigating blacklisting in the industry since June last year 鈥 chairman Ian Davidson said it was clear from the evidence the committee has taken that the contractors involved 鈥渞egret being caught鈥 rather than genuinely regretting the practice.

More than 40 main contractors paid the now defunct firm the Consulting Association (TCA) for access to a 3,200 name blacklist up until the organisation was exposed and shut down in 2009.

The committee has taken oral evidence from witnesses including Sir Robert McAlpine director Cullum McAlpine, Balfour Beatty鈥檚 then UK Construction Services chief executive Mike Peasland and Harvey Francis, executive vice president of human resources at Skanska.

Davidson claimed the firms involved with TCA had not properly reformed their operations or made amends for blacklisting.

He said: 鈥淲e鈥檝e come to the view that contractors can鈥檛 be trusted.鈥

He later added: 鈥淭hey are all as guilty as sin as far as I can see鈥he major contractors.鈥

In its interim report in April, the committee said it was  鈥渦nconvinced鈥 that Balfour Beatty regretted its involvement with TCA.

It also said it was concerned by the failure of firms including Balfour Beatty and Skanska 鈥渢o hold any individual to account鈥 for wrongdoing and said it was not persuaded by Cullum McAlpine鈥檚 claim that he had a 鈥渉ands off鈥 role as the founding chairman of TCA.

James Wates, chairman of the UK Contractors Group said: 鈥淏ritish construction firms deserve better than this glib description. They employ British workers, deliver British jobs and build the homes, schools, hospitals and offices upon which we depend. Blacklisting is an afront but so too is this gallery playing.鈥

The committee today took evidence from EDF Energy, which has created a widely-admired industrial agreement with trade unions and contractors to oversee the 拢16bn Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant.

The agreement includes several anti-blacklisting provisions.

Nigel Cann, EDF鈥檚 site construction director for the project, said the agreement included a fully directly-employed workforce and an 鈥榚mployment affairs unit鈥 run by EDF but including union and contractor representatives to monitor compliance with the agreement.

He said: 鈥淭hat provides the governance to make sure that the agreement is deployed.鈥

Asked about blacklisting, he said contractors would face fines or removal from the project if found to be doing it.