UK鈥檚 biggest client needs to double number of QSs to cope with upgrade of 18bn estate
A shortage of quantity surveyors is seriously damaging the upgrade of the Ministry of Defence鈥檚 拢18bn estate.
A report published yesterday by the House of Commons鈥 Public Accounts Committee (PAC) said that as a result, budgets and planning were in disarray, and vital maintenance was being shelved in favour of building sports pitches and tennis courts.
The committee took aim at Defence Estates, the MoD鈥檚 property agency and the construction industry鈥檚 biggest client. It attacks the standard of accommodation for service personnel and said that the agency was employing 57% the QSs it needed to carry out its work.
This is the PAC鈥檚 second indictment of public sector clients in a week. A report published on Tuesday said the average PFI deal took almost three years to procure, and was 鈥渨orse than four years ago鈥, because of the lack of expertise in government departments.
The report says upgrading officers鈥 accommodation could take 20 years because of the shortage of QSs and health and safety staff. More than 50,000 officers鈥 rooms and 19,000 family homes are in a substandard condition, but the agency only plans to upgrade 900 family houses a year.
The report says the MoD employs only 57% of the QSs and 56% of the safety works staff it needs, with 26 QS posts and 14 safety works posts unfilled.
It says: 鈥淭he department is exposing itself and its employees to significant safety risks.鈥
The report also warns that the MoD is failing to achieve value for money from contractors.
Vice-admiral Tim Laurence, Defence Estates鈥 chief executive, told the committee in May: 鈥淚t is difficult to get these people. They are very much in demand.鈥
Double blow: what the committee had to say 鈥
鈥 on Ministry of Defence procurement
- Significant gaps in the department鈥檚 understanding of the cost of its estate and no effective way of knowing where funding is needed most
- 拢13.5m of maintenance work was deferred in 2006-7 owing to cuts
- Over 40% of accommodation is still substandard 鈥 on PFI
- Proportion of deals attracting only two bidders has doubled since 2004
- Average tendering time for 2004 to 2006 was 34 months, a month longer than for projects that closed prior to 2004
- Benchmarking and testing have increased prices by up to 14%
Postscript
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