NHS Wales Budget EVIDENCE in Committee 22-Oct-2009
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Cyllideb Ddrafft Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru 2010-11: Tystiolaeth gan Gyfarwyddwyr Cyllid GIG Cymru
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Welsh Assembly Government Draft Budget 2010-11: Evidence from the Welsh Local Government Association
| From: approx 13:33hrs. to 15:37hrs. SEE: Highlighted info @ C14:50hrs.   Angela Burns: I welcome the Welsh Local Government Society representatives—[Coughs.] | 
| Mr Thomas: Is there swine flu going around?  | 
| Angela Burns: It will go in a moment, trust me; I have lived with it for long enough.  | 
| Welcome, Steve. We are tight on time  today, so I am asking everyone to be fairly snappy in their questions  and answers. Thank you for the papers that you have submitted. I invite  you to introduce yourself and your colleague for the record. If you  would like to make an opening statement, you are more than welcome to do  so.  | 
| Mr Thomas: I will  keep it simple. Councillor Berman is on his way over; he has just been  in Cardiff council. To my left is Nigel Aurelius, and he is the  assistant chief executive officer of Torfaen County Borough Council and  also the director of resources. He is also the secretary to the Society  of Welsh Treasurers, so he has an overall view of the piste, if you  like, of local government finance.  | 
| We do not want to make an opening statement, so if you want to go straight to questions, that is fine.  | 
| Angela Burns: Thank you very much indeed.  | 
| I will start by saying that I am sure  that you have noticed that the budget this year has a different shape,  in how it has been laid out and structured, from budgets in previous  years, and that is part of a new planning and reporting system that aims  to ensure that the link between outcomes and the budget is visible and  transparent to all of us who are here to scrutinise it. Would you like  to comment on this new structure? Have you found it helpful, and do you  think that it is linked sufficiently to outcomes? | 
| Mr Thomas: I think  that the structure is okay. It does make it a little bit more difficult  to compare with previous years, but it seems to be a more transparent  structure. From our point of view, in all candour, we are more  interested in the detail of the budget than the structure. However, in  general, it does make it more accessible. | 
| Angela Burns: Does it link to the policy outcomes? | 
| Mr Thomas: There are  many discussions going on about outcomes, not least of which are the  discussions that we are having with the Assembly Cabinet on outcome  agreements. I do not think that we have bottomed that out as of yet;  there is quite a lot more work to be done on that.  | 
| Mohammad Asghar: You  acknowledge that the social justice and local government portfolio has  received an overall 2.2 per cent increase in comparison with 2009-10. It  is one of the few portfolios that has seen a real-terms increase in  this draft budget. However, you state that it is by far the lowest  increase for many years. Given the current economic climate and the  predicted reduction in the overall Welsh block for the coming financial  year, is this 2.2 per cent increase in revenue in line with what was  expected? | 
| Mr Thomas: To be  candid, I think that it is slightly better than we expected. In broad  terms, I suspect that if you had applied an equal-pain approach to all  of the budget headings that you deal with, our settlement would have  been slightly lower. One thing that we have done this year is to  undertake some pretty detailed discussions over our expenditure  sub-group process. We have made a strong case that, first, we have huge  pressures in local government and, secondly, we have taken a pretty  massive hit in the recession with regard to investment income and the  like. Another problem that we have had is that—and we have said it often  enough in this committee—for the past three years we have been in the 2  per cent range on average. Our press release on this stated that this  is probably as good as it gets in the current environment. I think that  the 2.2 per cent increase, as an average, shows that the Assembly  Government is looking to prioritise front-line services, and for that we  are grateful. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: It  is nice to hear that from you. Do you consider this increase adequate to  maintain the current levels of service in local government or do you  see the need for local authorities to prioritise front-line services? | 
| Mr Thomas: I think  that it is inevitable. Is it adequate? No. The Chair made the point  that, despite the fact that it is a good outcome, it is the worst  outcome since devolution on an annual basis. However, given the current  environment, we have to be very realistic about that. In terms of  prioritising services, we are currently holding financial seminars with  every council, and I will not disguise the fact that the picture out  there is grim. People will have to make some very difficult choices.  | 
| I do not know whether it is about  prioritising services. I was talking earlier with Nigel and we would be  concerned about the idea of protecting some services and cutting others,  because I do not think that you can do that. For example, 80 per cent  of our funding goes on education and social services, so you cannot just  protect those services and make all of the savings that you want from  the other 20 per cent. It does not work that way. We will have to look  at programmes and be smarter in terms of how we go forward, but the  challenges ahead are pretty significant and, in many respects,  frightening. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: Thank you for your open and frank remarks.  | 
| In your response to the draft budget,  you recognise that the Welsh Assembly Government has prioritised  front-line services. However, are there any other measures that you feel  that the Welsh Assembly Government could have taken in order to further  protect services? | 
| Mr Thomas: In terms  of the budget that we have had this year, we have seen the gap close  between our budget and, for example, the national health service budget.  We have had average uplifts of 2.1 per cent or 2.2 per cent, I think  that the NHS has had something in the order of 2.6 per cent, and  Assembly departments have had something like 2.1 per cent or 2.2 per  cent. So, there is, at least in local government—Nigel may want to  comment on this—a perception of much more fairness in the approach that  has been taken this year. From your point of view, the Assembly  Government will be facing, in the next few years, for the first time  ever in the history of devolution, significant choices that will involve  cuts to public expenditure. So, in the circumstances, which are a £200  million reduction in revenue and £216 million reduction in capital, I  think that the right choices were made. | 
| Angela Burns: I have a  quick question on that. You made the point that there was better joint  working between the Government and the local authorities, and one of the  comments that we have made as a committee in various reports is that we  have found a significant lack of joint working. What has been the step  change? Has something happened to improve this relationship? That would  be good news. | 
| 1.40 p.m. | 
| You do not need to touch the microphone; it comes on automatically. | 
| Mr Aurelius: The  starting point, from my perspective in the finance world, is the  expenditure sub-group report and the process behind that. It was much  better this year, and it did not lead to a bidding document; every side  tried to recognise the difficult times ahead and draw out the financial  issues and risks, and the service issues. It was a collaborative process  between the local government family and the Welsh Assembly Government  and its officials. That was a significant change in the process for this  year.  | 
| Angela Burns: Alun, do you want to come in? | 
| Alun Davies: I was  about to express a degree of surprise. This is a very different Steve  Thomas to the one that we have seen in previous years. It seems to me  that, although the settlement has got worse, you are saying that it is  not as bad as it could have been. I have certainly come across local  government leaders who have used more colourful language than that on  the subject. We know the economic context for this, and there is no need  to rehearse the arguments there, but is there now a recognition that we  need to reorganise, if I can use that word, or look at how we deliver  services, searching for efficiencies? As you said, the good days are  over for a while, and we will have a number of difficult settlements in  the years ahead. That has focused people’s minds.  | 
| Mr Thomas: The line  that we are running with all the councils that we speak to is to use  this year to sit down and think through what will happen in the next  three to four years. This will be a very difficult settlement to run  thorough—I will not sit here and blow sunshine at you. There will be  significant problems on the back of this. For example, we still do not  know the position regarding specific grants, so there might be cuts  there, and that might be significant for us. However, there is still a  moderate level of growth, and the result is that we know what is coming:  in future years, we will be talking not about growth, but cuts to  expenditure. The result is that we have to make the decisions about  programmes and types of changes now, in order to prepare for those  future years. Some of the discussions that we are having with councils  are difficult; inevitably, we are talking about the things that we have  to do on a statutory basis, as opposed to the things that are  discretionary, and there is lots of examination around lean thinking and  business process re-engineering. Efficiency is something that we are  examining in great depth, but the scale of the challenge is such that,  as I said to someone yesterday, efficiencies are a bit like the Ospreys  rugby team—they promise a lot but they never quite deliver what you  want. We need to think much bigger than in the past; some of the choices  that we face are pretty difficult. I think that Torfaen is talking  about a £20 million-plus gap in the next three years; the closing of  that gap will involve very difficult choices.  | 
| Angela Burns: Alun, you wanted to come back briefly on that. | 
| Alun Davies: Yes, I  am interested in that response. One of the documents that you gave us,  Mr Thomas, is the 'Eye of the Storm’ document, which was published in  July. One of the sentences in the foreword that stands out refers to | 
| 'yet another forlorn attempt to chase the elusive chimera of efficiency’. | 
| That, to me, indicates an approach  that is perhaps not exactly cynical, but it sounds tired and exhausted;  it does not sound like the approach of an organisation that is anxious  to seek out and make change.  | 
| Mr Thomas: We have  been doing lots of work looking at the experience of other countries  that have gone through the process that the UK is about to go through.  The two classic examples are Canada and Sweden. We recently went to see a  lady called Jocelyne Bourgon, who was the head of the Treasury in  Canada during the 1990s, when the Canadians reduced their public debt  massively. How did they do that? They did not examine efficiency savings  as such—they looked at programme reviews. What I mean by that is that  you can either take the view that you will slash and burn across a range  of services, or you can do it more strategically, looking at  distinctive programmes and asking what their value is and whether they  are delivering the goods, and if they are not delivering the goods, shut  them down. What the Canadians did was absolutely brutal and, by the end  of the process, some 23 per cent of the public sector workforce had  been made redundant. That is how they got through it. What we are saying  is that efficiencies will deliver only so much. In one sense, the  language of efficiencies is a plaster to paper over some of the cracks.  We need to think much more radically than efficiencies.  | 
| Alun Davies: Are you suggesting that the Assembly Government or individual local authorities should follow the Canadian approach? | 
| Mr Thomas: We must  examine all the approaches. At the moment, Rodney’s council is looking  at a range of options, including the voluntary severance of staff  contracts, such is the scale of the challenges. Work is being done with  Deloitte to chart the challenges. In the next three years, most  medium-sized authorities will face a gap of between £25 million and £35  million. How do you close that gap? You are not going to do it through  the traditional efficiency route. You will have to be more radical than  that. | 
| Joyce Watson: I am  pleased to hear that, at least, there is a better dialogue about the  reality of the situation. You spoke about the good times, and they  lasted for quite a long time—for the 10 years of this Assembly. Do you  not think that, in the good times, local government should have looked  at the way it could combine service delivery and at new ways of working  and done some of the things that you have just outlined, to see what was  really working and necessary? | 
| Mr Berman: I think  that local government has probably already been doing that to a degree. I  think that there is scope for more collaborative service approaches.  However, I think that we should be careful that we do not see this as a  panacea that will deliver quickly and suddenly make things more  efficient and cost-effective. For example, one of the issues with the  shared services project that is being looked at by the authorities in  south-east Wales is that it does not start to deliver savings for six or  seven years. So, yes, these proposals can deliver savings and provide  more efficient services, but they do not necessarily give you the level  of efficiency you need as quickly as you need it when you are dealing  with constrained budgets. I can talk from the experience of my  authority, which has been working on a change programme for the past  couple of years, knowing that finances were likely to get tighter in the  coming years. When we started the programme, we did not anticipate that  that might accelerate because of the recession coming upon us. That has  made things a bit tighter than anticipated.  | 
| However, for a couple of years, we  have been working to get to the point where we can transform the way in  which some of the services are delivered. We are looking at things such  as how we do our external spend and whether we can get much better value  for it. For example, instead of going for lots of small contracts where  you tender one construction project at a time and pay out all the costs  of tendering because the firms who tender charge you for that in the  prices they submit, we are looking at getting into longer-term contracts  with providers who can be guaranteed that they will have all of the  construction work in a certain area over a period of time. In return,  they do not have to keep bidding for the work or wasting money on  submitting tender documents, and they can therefore do the work an awful  lot cheaper and we both get a share of the savings. | 
| Those are the sorts of things that  Cardiff is looking at. However, we started on that approach two years  ago and we are only just beginning to get these sorts of partnerships in  place. You have to go through quite a long procurement process through  Official Journal of the European Union notices for example. However, the  fact that we are saying that it is difficult this year does not  necessarily mean that councils have not thought about some of the  long-term proposals that will help us get through a difficult phase. | 
| Lorraine Barrett: Nigel,  you answered my question about the expenditure sub-group and how you  work together through that. I want to ask you about the WCVA, which gave  some evidence to the committee in a previous session, and expressed  concern that the voluntary sector may lose funding as a result of  tighter public spending. | 
| 1.50 p.m. | 
| How will allocations made in the draft  budget impact on funding available to the voluntary sector, either in  terms of direct funding or through local authority partnerships? The  voluntary sector often feels that it is an easy target. Do any of you  have any comment on that?  | 
| Mr Aurelius: We have  recognised the role that the voluntary sector plays. There have  certainly been discussions in our area on this, and we are most keen to  ensure that whatever the settlement gives us in the difficult times, we  do not make arbitrary reductions in an area that provides many services  that would have to be replaced if we made reductions. So, it is going to  be about local authorities having an awareness of that and working with  their voluntary sector partners to make the best of the settlement that  we have. So, I do not sense any knee-jerk reaction to make it an easy  target, certainly from our side of the table.  | 
| Mr Berman: One of the  ways in which funding goes to the voluntary sector is through funding  that we as local authorities draw down through numerous specific grants.  One of the concerns that we have is that we do not yet have the full  picture for the specific grants that will come to us. At the  consultative forum on finance meeting, I asked Brian Gibbons and Andrew  Davies about the possibility of more specific grants being rolled into  the general revenue settlement. The response that I got was that we  might need to be careful because some of the specific grants might not  be maintained at the same level as in recent years. I appreciate that we  are all in a difficult position financially, but the key point is that  if we can be advised of the position with those specific grants in a  timely manner, we can plan and budget. I have been in the position  whereby, as a council, we have set a budget, assuming that a specific  grant will remain at a certain level, and have then found that there is  going to be a reduction. Then you have problems around whether you can  plug the gap. We do not even have the choice of deciding that we want to  plug the gap as a local authority, because we will not have allocated  anything to do that. Some of that funding is going specifically to  voluntary organisations to help them to deliver services, so it would  help them and us if we could get that information as quickly as  possible, so that we can know exactly what the position is.  | 
| Angela Burns: Paul, I think that you wanted to talk about the settlement.  | 
| Paul Davies: The  Minister with responsibility for local government stated that he  proposes to set the floor threshold at 1 per cent for 2010-11. As an  organisation, you have requested that the floor is set at that level. Do  you consider that that floor threshold is appropriate, given that  Treasury forecasts for inflation are running at 1.5 per cent? | 
| Mr Thomas: The  problem that you have is that the average level of the settlement is 2.1  per cent and, if you were to set a floor at 1.5 per cent, you would eat  into the budgets of councils that are on particularly low levels in any  case. On where we are with floor funding, there was always a ready  understanding between us and Welsh Assembly Government Ministers that  the floor would taper over a period of years. You may recall that, two  financial years ago, the first floor was set at 2 per cent. Last year,  it was set at 1.5 per cent and, this year, it was set at 1 per cent. I  would be being less than honest if I did not say that there has been  some concern that some of the authorities in receipt of floor funding  have used it to subsidise council tax, and that came out of the finance  seminar that we had recently with all 22 authorities in Builth Wells.  There is a general view that floor funding, over time, distorts the  financial settlement. Funding for the police is a classic case in point.  Floor funding across the UK really distorts the police settlement. So,  from our point of view, while it is very tough for those authorities in  receipt of floor funding, the point is that it is funded by other local  authorities. Over a period of time, when they are receiving lower  settlements, they will not want to see such huge amounts of funding  going across, onto a floor level. Rodney was of the view that 1 per cent  is about right, and we have agreed that with the Minister. | 
| Paul Davies: You go  on to state in the paper that it is important that the floor mechanism  is used to protect services rather than to provide lower council tax  rises. How can that be ensured?  | 
| Mr Berman: It is  partly down to the councils that receive the floor to ensure that they  understand why it has been given to them. It has been given to them on  the basis that they need it to provide services; otherwise, they would  not get a sufficient increase. If they use that floor funding to  subsidise a lower council tax, people in other parts of Wales could  start to think that they could have had a lower council tax rise if they  did not have to give a little bit to those councils, and they could  start to ask why those other councils should use it to help their  residents when their own residents are not benefiting? There has to be a  degree of responsibility. Brian Gibbons made clear when announcing the  floor what he expects from local authorities and, hopefully, that  message will have got across. | 
| Angela Burns: Did you want to come in on this, Alun? | 
| Alun Davies: Yes. The  Minister said that yesterday in the Chamber as well, in answer to a  question. The key issue is that this is about investing in core,  front-line services, and not about creating a soft landing for local  authorities. The Welsh Assembly Government said that, and I think that  Andrew Davies said it during a session that we had two years ago, when  you were following him. Local authorities said, 'Fine, thank you very  much’, but went away and did exactly the opposite. The following year,  we had the same debate with you and with the Minister for finance, and  local authorities went away and did something very different again. As  you know, I have argued for the floor to be held in place because of its  impact on authorities such as Powys County Council, but it makes our  life impossible if local authorities misuse the funding that is  available to them and do not provide funding for core services. Is there  a role for the WLGA as an organisation that represents local  authorities to say to its membership that there is a need for financial  responsibility and realism in the settlement? | 
| Mr Thomas: You can be  assured that the annoyance that you are expressing has been expressed  consistently within the association. One year, the Isle of Anglesey  County Council was in receipt of a 2 per cent floor and set a council  tax rise of 1.5 per cent, which was greeted with fury across the  association. People felt that it was irresponsible. I did a seminar last  week with Powys County Council, when we were asked about council tax  levels in Powys. I know that there is a huge debate about this as it is  very controversial, but, last year, there was a furore over the costs of  switching off the street lighting in Powys, which saved in the region  of £250,000. However, a 1 per cent rise in the council tax would have  resulted in an extra £400,000, and there would not have been that  furore. However, we cannot set council tax for councils. | 
| Alun Davies: I accept that. | 
| Mr Thomas: We have  been very forceful in saying that we expect authorities in receipt of a  floor to have, as a minimum, a council tax rise that equates to the  average across Wales. That would be a minimum. To be fair, a number of  authorities in receipt of a floor—and Conwy County Borough Council is a  classic case in point—have set a 5 per cent council tax rise in recent  years. They have not used it to subsidise council tax; they have used it  to protect services. That is exactly how the floor was intended to be  used, but factors such as local choice, local politics and many others  come into play. | 
| Joyce Watson: That  leads me nicely to what I am going to say, which is about local choice  and local politics. There are issues about subsidising councils so that  they can play politics at any given time by setting very low increases.  The new political leader of the WLGA has played that part extremely well  in Pembrokeshire, boasting that the council tax rise there is the  lowest in Wales. I am pleased to hear that that game is up. I hope that,  when the budget has been set, the leadership will come from the front,  as you have expressed that it will, from you, so that the services that  are needed are protected. | 
| Mr Berman: May I  respond to that? I do not think that Pembrokeshire County Council is an  authority that has been benefiting from the floor. We were talking  specifically about those authorities that have been benefiting from the  floor. They get a little from everyone else because they need it to  provide services. If you start clouding the argument by looking at what  other administrations and councils that are not given that floor funding  are doing, we will be getting into slightly dangerous territory. | 
| 2.00 p.m. | 
| Kirsty Williams: I  want to turn to the issue of capital. Your paper is quite clear about  the sizeable reduction in the capital budget, which seems to be the  result of the decision to bring forward capital in previous years, the  general reduction that we have had, and the policy of putting capital  into the strategic capital investment fund rather than individual  portfolios. Capital will reduce by some 11 per cent compared with the  previous year. What discussions have you had with the Welsh Assembly  Government about the effects of the reduction in capital on local  authorities? | 
| Mr Thomas: The real  disaster area is capital. I think that I am right in saying that, at the  consultative forum on finance, last week, the Minister for Finance and  Public Service Delivery talked about something like a 50 per cent  reduction in the Assembly Government’s capital budget over a longer  period. The implication for programmes is that we will have to phase  them in over a much longer timescale than previously. We had a long  discussion last week, for which Rodney was present, about the  twenty-first century schools programme. The trouble is that that  programme will be reduced in capital terms. The school building  improvement grant has been reduced considerably this year. I suspect  that that will mean the prioritisation of how we go forward on capital  projects and a much longer timescale to complete capital projects. We  know from Wales Audit Office figures that we have a £2.2 billion deficit  in schools capital repairs and funding. That is four times the current  Assembly Government capital budget. It raises the issue of whether you  can look for other sources of capital over that period.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: That  leads on to my next question. Your paper talks about innovative ways of  trying to address that funding gap. Local authorities can borrow, but  the opportunities for borrowing will be difficult given the falling  capital receipts that councils are getting. As revenue budgets get  tighter, the ability to service debt against prudential borrowing is  also limited. Could you give us an idea of the constraints that councils  will face on borrowing and of the other innovative methods of funding  that may be available to the Welsh Assembly Government in partnership  with local government to address that capital shortfall? | 
| Mr Berman: You are  absolutely right that there will be constraints on what we can borrow.  That will partly be a matter of what we can afford to borrow and what we  can afford to pay back. As revenue is tighter all around, you do not  have the money to allocate in your revenue to pay back the borrowing.  So, the question is how we square that circle. There is not as much  capital money coming in directly and it is more difficult to borrow  money, so looking at innovative approaches to get funding is the only  way to supplement what is there. For example, the joint European support  for sustainable investment in city areas fund, or JESSICA, is another  option for borrowing money, but you are still borrowing money that has  to be paid back.  | 
| One approach that I would like the  Assembly Government to move on is tax increment financing. That will not  work for every local authority in Wales and I appreciate that, but it  is now being piloted in England, and I think that Edinburgh is also  hoping to take it forward in Scotland. If you can create the right  circumstances in which to put some money into a regeneration project,  you can bring businesses into an area and those businesses will generate  income and pay business rates to the Assembly Government so that more  money comes into the pot. If you can say that, in this scheme, you will  earmark some of those increased business rates coming in to help to pay  back the borrowing that the council has undertaken to implement the  scheme in the first place, you have a scheme that generates its own  money to pay back the borrowing. If we had not done it, the Assembly  Government would not have had the business rates coming in and the  council would not have had the funding to implement the scheme in the  first place. So, it is almost a way of creating something out of  nothing.  | 
| I saw that work successfully in  Chicago when I was there a few years ago. It had a scheme for which it  received money upfront from the Illinois state government to build a  fabulous park, Millennium Park. In effect, that built a new layer on top  of the railway lines coming into the city. So, a beautiful new park was  built on top of a rather ugly part of the city. That park brought lots  of new businesses into the area. By securing some of the money upfront,  or guaranteeing some of the money that would come in from the business  rates from those funds, it helped to pay back the borrowing. It was a  win-win solution. If that is going ahead in England through pilots and  if it goes ahead in Scotland, with Edinburgh’s waterfront development, I  hope that Wales can also look at taking that opportunity. I am not  entirely sure whether it requires legislation but, given that that power  has been brought forward in England, there will be an opportunity for  Wales to get the power at the same time. I have already raised this  matter with Andrew Davies and Brian Gibbons and I hope that it can be  taken forward. | 
| Kirsty Williams: If  the WLGA has more information on that, it may be interesting for it to  submit that to the committee for us to consider, outside this budgeting  process, as a new way of looking at financing projects in the future.  | 
| The SCIF money has been stockpiled  into Andrew’s little slush fund, which he can dole out. Can you give us  an assessment of how well local government has fared in bidding for that  money and in being successfully awarded money as a result? | 
| Angela Burns: I emphasise that no slur is meant by the term 'slush fund’. | 
| Kirsty Williams: No, none at all. | 
| Angela Burns: It is not like Ronnie Biggs’s slush fund. [Laughter.] | 
| Mr Thomas: That is a  difficult question because it is almost like being in a league table—if  you are at the top of the league table, you will be happy, but if you  are at the bottom, you will not be. If you are in receipt of SCIF, you  will be delighted, but if you are not, you will not be very happy at  all. In the last few days, I spoke to the chief executive of Blaenau  Gwent County Borough Council, who is delighted at the outcome for the  former steelworks site—and I am also delighted about that, as a resident  of Ebbw Vale. However, I also spoke to the chief executive of  Flintshire County Council, who is deeply unhappy about what he perceives  to be very little money going into north-east Wales in the second and  first rounds.  | 
| The problem is that SCIF operates in  many respects like the old capital challenge scheme that used to be in  place: bids were made from which the best were selected, resulting in  winners and losers. In many respects, you have to try to target  resources, but our members would be concerned about some of the apparent  distribution principles relating to SCIF, which they would contest. The  first round of SCIF lacked consultation, which the association made  clear to the Welsh Assembly Government. There was not a ready  understanding of how SCIF operates and, as a result, some authorities  lost out in the first round. | 
| Kirsty Williams: Therefore,  are the relative successes centred on distribution issues or do local  authorities have the capacity to put together compelling bids that find  success? | 
| Mr Aurelius: Local  authorities have differing levels of ability to make bids. It is  difficult to argue against the principle behind SCIF, but we still do  not have the full picture on our capital grants. This is about knowing  how those grants fit in with the amount of money allocated to SCIF.  Given that different authorities are at different stages, it will create  that feeling of there being winners and losers. That is probably at the  expense of some of the formula grants that those authorities would be  getting to keep some of their core infrastructure going. | 
| Alun Davies: Like  you, we were all pleased to hear about the funding going to Ebbw Vale  this week. We also understand that SCIF will not replace capital funding  to local authorities, and we all appreciate that. However, on the use  of that fund, Kirsty asked about the capacity in local authorities to  access such funding. Often, with strategic investment and capital  funding, we also look at collaborative working between authorities. To  what extent are local authorities in a position to work together on  major capital schemes to provide the Assembly Government with a  compelling case for the use of this investment? I accept that it is not  everything, but it can help local authorities to deliver re-engineered  services and a capital infrastructure that they would not be able to  deliver using their own resources.  | 
| Mr Berman: The key  issue on this is time, is it not? There was very little opportunity for  engagement in the first round and there was a lot of dissatisfaction  from local government about that. | 
| 2.10 p.m. | 
| On the second tranche, I think that we  had more opportunity, but the timing was quite tight. The kind of  proposals that you are talking about—local authorities working together  and putting in a collaborative business case for a collaborative  project—can be done, but only if there is enough time. What concerns me  is that there is a lack of transparency around the way in which SCIF  funding is allocated. Maybe that is the intention; maybe it is intended,  because it is strategic, that it should be a bit more under political  direction than other, more criteria-based approaches to allocating  capital funding. However, there is a bit of a trade off, because if you  are not quite sure exactly how the money is being allocated, and you are  not quite sure whether you are going to have enough time in order to  pull together a bid, you might start that work not knowing if there is  going to be a tranche of funding in maybe two year’s time that you might  be ready to bid for by then. What we really need is more clarity about  where the process is going and perhaps a little more transparency about  how decisions are being taken as to which projects are being funded and  which are not. | 
| Mr Thomas: In  addition to that, SCIF looks like a lot of money, but it is not  necessarily a huge amount of money. The upshot of that is that local  authorities have big projects and the result is that they will go for  projects within their own county borough areas rather than across county  borough areas. The other thing that is interesting is that we have put a  lot of work into things like the spatial plan in recent years. One  thing about spatial planning was the idea of some sort of resource  allocation based on spatial planning, but there does not seem to be much  of a link in that respect.  | 
| Alun Davies: Okay,  but there are projects such as the Da Vinci project in Bangor and the  collaboration project in Carmarthen. Angela, it might be useful if we  included in our report some of what Councillor Berman said in answer to  that question. One thing that we can do as a Finance Committee is to  help local government access these levels of funding from the Assembly  Government, to ensure that, while we understand that capital costs are  going to be reduced, people can work together to access this level of  capital funding. | 
| Joyce Watson: My  question is on the same point—it is almost going around in circles. It  is strategic investment money. I was going to throw in the point that  you have already mentioned the local development plans and strategic  elements within them. I would have accepted that there were bids that  have been worked up, because I am assuming that every local authority  would have a strategy and a vision, and would know where they wanted to  be in five or 10 years’ time. You may call it a wish list or whatever  else you like. To that end, I am a little surprised and perhaps a bit  confused. What I thought I heard was that you did not have projects  ready. Can you clear that up a bit, please? | 
| Mr Thomas: The fund  was completely oversubscribed in terms of the amount of bids that went  in. It always is. I do not necessarily think that collaborative bidding  is the way into SCIF funding. There are big local projects that need  funding and, in many respects, the best way to bid is for those big  local projects. The Flintshire project that I referred to, around the  Mostyn docks area, is a huge project. The Blaenau Gwent project that was  successful was a £35 million project on the old steelworks site, which  is a big project in its own right. What you are seeing are authorities  putting up what are, in many respects, some of their major capital  priorities and entering them into a competitive environment. Some have  been successful. I listened to one of your director-generals the other  day saying that the ones that were successful have the x factor. I am  not certain what that x factor is, but we need to get it out there to  other authorities, do we not? | 
| Alun Davies: The Carmarthen project is being funded. | 
| Mr Thomas: There is  money that has gone in on housing, which is collaborative, and stuff has  gone in in terms of civil contingencies and for a centre on a  Dyfed-Powys Police site, which is a collaborative project, so clearly  there are some collaborative projects, but I think that some of the  bigger ones were individual authority applications. | 
| Mr Berman: Some of  the collaborative projects that have received funding were not  necessarily conceived as projects with the intention of applying for  SCIF funding specifically. They will be projects that will have been  developed anyway and then, because they have got that project together,  it becomes an option to go for some SCIF funding. I think that I was  saying earlier that I do not think that you would necessarily want to  say 'Let’s try to get a project together on a collaborative basis’  specifically to try to apply for SCIF funding. As Steve said, the SCIF  has been so oversubscribed that it would be a risky strategy to adopt.  | 
| Angela Burns: Alun, you had something to ask about efficiency savings.  | 
| Alun Davies: We  started discussing efficiency gains, and I recognise your concern that,  all too often, efficiency gains are simply a euphemism, and that they  are not necessarily a financial strategy. Are you aware of authorities  that have to make efficiency gains over and above the target to balance  their budgets at present? | 
| Mr Thomas: I think  that every authority is having to do that. The piece of work that I  referred to by Deloitte looks at future budgets. One thing that has  happened in the past few years is that the low-hanging-fruit  efficiencies, as I describe them, have been made. Our settlements over  the past two years have been in the range of 2 to 3 per cent. We have  not had a year in the last three that has gone over 3 per cent average,  as is the case in health, for example. The result is that many  efficiencies have been made. Councils can quote you figures, and there  are figures in the expenditure sub-group report that have set out where  efficiencies have been made and are continuing to be made. For the  future, we are saying that efficiency is one of the menu of  opportunities available to us, but it should not be seen as the only  one. Sadly, some of the things that will occur will not be about  efficiencies; they will be about cuts. There is no getting away from  that.  | 
| The efficiency target in one sense is  meaningless. Having a target for efficiencies makes no sense whatsoever.  I suspect that my colleagues in Torfaen and Cardiff have surpassed  their efficiency target every single year.  | 
| Alun Davies: We have  had this debate before, and I remember very well our big, colourful  debate of two years ago, when you said that there were no efficiencies  to be made, none at all. You said that authorities had made all the  efficiencies years ago. Now the ESG tells us that £136 million-worth of  efficiency savings were made that were not about cutting back core  services, but were about making the delivery of services more front-line  focused and ensuring that they were provided as cost effectively as  possible. We found that we can make these savings. No-one would argue  for a moment that you can do that year on year based on an entire  financial structure—I accept that. How long will that be sustainable,  and have you discussed the medium-term sustainability of the efficiency  savings programme with the Assembly Government? | 
| Mr Thomas: In a radio  interview the other day, I said that there is no such thing in the  Welsh public sector as a 100 per cent efficient organisation. It just  does not exist. There are always things in the system that you can go  for. One interesting thing that has been happening in recent years in  local government is the very large transformational programme that  Cardiff is running, looking at the totality of the business. Many other  councils, such as Torfaen, Neath Port Talbot, Powys and Blaenau Gwent,  have introduced something along the lines of systems theory, in which  they stripped out processes. The classic case in point, which the  Minister for finance talks a lot about, is the disabled facilities  grants process in Neath Port Talbot, which has gone down from 270  processes to 20 processes. Blaenau Gwent now turns housing benefit  applications around in about an hour, down from 30 days. So, huge  efficiency gains have been made in process-based services. The trouble  is, how do you do that in schools, in social care, or in some of the  larger services? These are not process-based services, and it is  difficult to make that level of efficiencies. | 
| I think that where we are at on this  is that we need to look at the totality of local government funding, and  the result is that, as I say, you can continue to squeeze efficiencies,  but something must eventually give, and I am afraid that cuts will  happen.  | 
| Alun Davies: To what  extent have you discussed this with regard to efficiency savings with  the Assembly Government? The Assembly Government is asking for 1 per  cent year on year. You seem to be saying, 'Fine, Minister, we can make  some savings’, and we understand that, but it is year on year. So, to  what extent do you believe that this policy is sustainable? | 
| Mr Thomas: Have we  had discussions with the Assembly Government about it? Ad nauseam. The  recent consultative forum for finance is a classic case in point,  because members state the view that they will continue to drive  efficiencies through the system, but they also feel that there is only  so much that can be driven out of the system as efficiencies, and the  result is that the scale of the challenge is such that we will look at  other things, and they will include pay, pensions, the level of the  establishment, and services themselves and the scale of those services.  We must start looking at more than efficiencies, and I would also apply  this to you in the Assembly Government. The Assembly Government will see  cuts, as will local government, and you must start looking at this.  | 
| 2.20 p.m. | 
| Alun Davies: We are not the Assembly Government; there is a difference. [Laughter.]  However, the difference is clear. To conclude this line of questioning,  the Minister repeated in amswers to questions yesterday that there is a  possibility of reorganisation or bringing public bodies together—not  only local authorities, but others as well. Will this approach release  efficiencies?  | 
| Mr Thomas: I was a  reorganisation manager in the mid 1990s for Caerphilly County Borough  Council, and I could not tell you to this day what we saved by doing  that reorganisation—I do not have a clue.  | 
| Alun Davies: Is that because of you?  | 
| Mr Thomas: I could  not give you an all-Wales figure—I have no idea. Reorganisation comes up  as the stock answer to some of the issues. If we are to reorganise  local government, it should be done at a time when public expenditure is  rising, not falling. | 
| Mr Aurelius: There  are efficiency savings to be made from collaboration as opposed to  reorganisation, and not just between local authorities, but inter-sector  collaboration between social care and health in particular. There are  efficiencies in that regard from collaboration rather than  reorganisation.  | 
| Mr Berman: The key  for us is not to look at a year-by-year approach—we must be planning in  the longer-term. If you are going to achieve genuine efficiencies, such  as what Steve is talking about, we are looking at a business process  re-engineering approach in Cardiff, and the  connecting south-east Wales  board is trying to look at that across south-east Wales. Mechanisms can  take two or three years to bear fruit, but they can deliver long-term  efficiencies. We have to think along that line; this is not just a  temporary dip in public finances—we all accept that this will be the  case for a few years, and we must get wise to that and plan ahead. That  is probably a better approach than looking at reorganisation.  Reorganisation would lead to a lot of energy being diverted into other  arguments and structures, and the eye would be taken off the ball in  service delivery. As Steve said, if that is done at a time when money is  already tight, there will potentially be more service cuts than a more  long-term collaborative approach.  | 
| Angela Burns: Thank  you. I am conscious of the time, and I want to get to Oscar’s question,  which is the last one, because it is very important. So, I ask everyone  to be succinct.  | 
| Joyce Watson: We have  already touched on the reference in your paper to not having received  details of specific grants that will be made available to you in  2010-11. You said that that information needs to be made available as  soon as possible. However, in his statement on the settlement, the  Minister stated that £600 million of specific grants will be made  available to local authorities, but that he is still working through  those details. Given the Minister’s comments that there will be £600  million in specific grants, what has led you to suggest that there may  be reductions in those grants?  | 
| Mr Aurelius: The  current level of grants is around £670 million. A number of those will  be going into the settlement, but there is still a big gap down to £600  million—I think that the Minister said 'over’ £600 million. We need  clarity and detail, because it is very difficult to put the overall  headline settlement into context unless you know the level of grants.  Many of those grants provide services and fund posts. So, we need the  detail of the grants, and there is still a big gap between a figure of  over £600 million to where it currently is, even allowing for the  figures in the settlement.  | 
| Joyce Watson: Have you had any discussions with the Minister on that?  | 
| Mr Thomas: As Rodney  mentioned, we had discussions last week. There was an example last year  of a specific grant being cut at the eleventh hour, which caused a lot  of problems for council budgeting in the sixth form education funding  formulae. The later the discussion, the more problems it causes. So,  early decisions on this matter are vital.  | 
| Chris Franks: We have  already touched on hypothecation, but I am going to come back to it, if  I may. You say that you want to move away from hypothecation, but how  can you demonstrate that the removal of dedicated funding grants will  not simply mean that they disappear into general funding, and that the  projects for which this money has been earmarked will not suffer? | 
| Mr Berman: The issue  is that we can free up cash by moving more grants into the general  settlement. At a time when finances are constrained, we have to look at  those opportunities. There was a recent case where Ynys Môn council was  allocated a grant of £5,000 from the education department for some  specific purpose—I cannot remember what it was—but it worked out that  the bureaucracy around the grant, in the forms that it had to fill in  and the officer time that it would have to allocate to fill in those  forms, would cost it more than £5,000. So, it returned the grant,  because it was not worth its while having it. That is an extreme  example, but there are lots of particularly small grants to do with  education, and questions remain as to whether they all have to be  grants, whether people have to fill in forms at the local government end  to get those grants and whether civil servants have to then assess  those forms and decide whether the boxes have been ticked and then send  the money back. All of that absorbs money that could be spent on  providing services. We have to get away from the particularly small  education grants, and that is just is one example. | 
| How to get to the point at which the  Assembly Government feels that it is getting the same outcomes from  these grants is partly a matter for the Assembly Government. We are  talking about outcome agreements. We need a little more clarity about  how those outcome agreements will sit with other agreements, such as the  improvement agreement. We do not necessarily want too many different  layers of agreements that could potentially pull us in different  directions. I do not think that, in principle, local government would  have an objection to a sensible system that allowed us to demonstrate  that we were still delivering on certain priorities. The key is finding  the right scale and the lowest level of bureaucracy. | 
| Chris Franks: You  will be pleased to know that, when it comes to education grants, this  committee thinks along the same lines as you. I do not believe that you  have illustrated how a Minister could be confident that you would not  just put the money into general services and that specific projects  would not fall by the wayside. If we as a committee have to go to the  Minister and ask, 'What are you going to do about what we asked in the  report a few weeks ago?’, it would be helpful if you could give us clear  examples of how that can be demonstrated. | 
| Mr Thomas: We are  still in discussions with the Assembly Government about the new  understanding between the Assembly Government and local government in  Wales. Part of that new understanding, as Rodney says, is a move towards  outcomes as opposed to specific grants. It wants to be able to give us  money to deliver certain outcomes. That does not have to be in the form  of a specific grant; the Government wants an outcome at the end of the  day, whether that is on the older people’s strategy or school uniforms.  Someone told me the other day that there seem to be three grants for  school uniforms at the moment. What we are saying is, 'Set the outcomes,  say what you want us to deliver, and let us deliver those outcomes, but  do not do it in the form of specific grants’. I could save you £3  million tomorrow if the Government were to stop auditing specific  grants; it is a waste of public money. | 
| There are issues around specific  grants and around their administration that need detailed examination.  When you get to the level of specific grants that we have currently, a  lot of administration is tied up in them. If you look at Scotland, you  will see that the Scottish Government and the Convention of Scottish  Local Authorities, our sister organisation, have agreed that £2 billion  of specific Scottish grants will, over time, go into the RSG. However,  set the outcomes that you want. | 
| Chris Franks: Are you making progress? | 
| Mr Thomas: Yes. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: This  question is on our armed services personnel, who are close to my heart.  The Minister recently announced plans to apply a 50 per cent discount  to second homes for armed services personnel. He stated that any loss of  income to local authorities as a result would be made up in the revenue  support grant. I have three questions for you. At this stage, have any  estimates been made on how this may impact upon local authorities in  terms of loss of income? Secondly, have you had any discussions with the  Welsh Government on how this will be reimbursed via the revenue support  grant? Finally, are you confident that any such reimbursement will be  an additional allocation, rather than a redistribution of existing  funds? | 
| 2.30 p.m. | 
| Mr Thomas: To update  you on our position, our council met the week before Brian Gibbons  announced this. We fully supported applying the discount. We simply  wanted to make sure that there was equality in the position across the  United Kingdom. | 
| Cost is a very difficult issue. We  have been working with some Assembly officials on this, and establishing  the cost is difficult. Instinct tells you that the cost will not be  huge, but I cannot give you a precise cost today because I just do not  know. The discussion that we have had with Brian Gibbons was on the  principle of full reimbursement and I think that the intention is there  to do that. My gut instinct—Nigel is more qualified than me on this—is  that this will not cost huge amounts of money. At the same time, I  cannot give you a precise figure. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: So, it means that you do not have contacts with the armed forces. | 
| Mr Thomas: We have  contact and we are working on the figures, as we speak, and are trying  to work out how we go forward. We are getting the information from the  armed forces to do that in terms of allocations. The trouble is how to  apply it. Do you, for example, apply it retrospectively, or do you just  apply it to current members of the armed forces? If you apply it  retrospectively, you are talking about a lot of money. There is a range  of issues around this. | 
| Angela Burns: Thank  you very much for coming here today. I thought that you fudged my  opening question about the clarity of the budget. I am reinforcing that  view because you must have used the words 'seek further clarity’ around  50 times in this discussion; you obviously do not think that the budget  is as clear as you would perhaps have liked it to have been in terms of  the information. | 
| Mr Thomas: You saw through us, Chair. | 
| Angela Burns: I will  let you off that slight fudge, but I just wanted to make that point.  Thank you very much for coming here today. I appreciate your time and I  am sorry that we have over-run slightly. | 
| We will now take a few minutes to grab a coffee, after which the national health service finance directors will come in to see us. | 
Gohiriwyd y cyfarfod rhwng 2.32 p.m. a 2.37 p.m.
The meeting adjourned between 2.32 p.m. and 2.37 p.m.
The meeting adjourned between 2.32 p.m. and 2.37 p.m.
Cyllideb Ddrafft Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru 2010-11: Tystiolaeth gan Gyfarwyddwyr Cyllid GIG Cymru
Welsh Assembly Government Draft Budget 2010-11: Evidence from Welsh NHS Finance Directors
| Angela Burns: I welcome our witnesses this morning. Please introduce yourselves for the record. | 
| Mr Davies: I am Paul Davies, and I am the finance director for the Cardiff and Vale Local Health Board.  | 
| Mr Lewis: I am David Lewis, and I am the finance director for Cwm Taf Local Health Board.  | 
| Angela Burns: Thank  you for coming here today to discuss your responses to the Welsh  Assembly Government’s draft budget proposals. Do you have a brief  statement that you would like to make before we start the questions?  | 
| Mr Davies: It would  be useful to make a few comments. You have received our paper, but it is  worth acknowledging at the outset—we did this last year as well, but it  is much more evident in this year’s budget—that the public sector is  facing significant challenges in terms of the economic downturn. The  national health service finance directors fully recognise that and this  is about how we respond to that positively and constructively. | 
| High-quality and safe patient care is  key to the work of the NHS; we cannot compromise on that—that must be  our raison d’être and key objective. So, all of the decisions and  actions that we take are around safeguarding that basic principle. In  simple terms, it is about the right care being carried out at the right  time and in the right place by the right people. If you can do that,  then you can do a lot more with the resources than that currently  achieved.  | 
| We stressed in the paper that we are  facing unprecedented challenges as a result of the economic downturn and  the demands on the service, and it is about how we manage those  challenges with the required transformational change that we need to  make, which is around the right care at the right time for all. There  are two key issues in that—achieving much greater clinical engagement  with the front line and the shop floor of the service, and much more  constructive partnership agreements and arrangements with our local  authority and other stakeholders. I believe that the reorganised NHS  allows us to do that better. | 
| Angela Burns: David, do you want to add to that?  | 
| Mr Lewis: No, that is fine.  | 
| Angela Burns: I seek  clarification on one matter to begin with. Looking through your paper  and the Government’s report, it seems that you have a 2.6 per cent  increase in revenue at the moment, which is 0.7 per cent down on the  indicative numbers. I understand that you should not believe everything  that you read in the press, but it says here that 'NHS finance directors  say that they are facing a shortfall in funding of 5 per cent in the  Assembly Government’s draft budget’. | 
| 2.40 p.m. | 
| That is courtesy of the BBC. Could you clarify where you think you are? | 
| Mr Davies: We  recognise that the 2.6 per cent is slightly down on the budget plans  over the three years, but it is slightly more than we anticipated  because, given the economic downturn, we thought that we would face an  even more difficult challenge. Having said that, we recognise that there  are underlying costs that the NHS will always have to meet, but they  are becoming more pronounced. There is the obvious inflation cost, and  we have assessed that to be 2.7 per cent, so, effectively, the 2.6 per  cent award or uplift in funding will be taken up by inflation costs. The  question then is: what other costs will we be faced with in the coming  year? The key cost will be continuing healthcare. We have seen that over  the last two years, and, projecting into the future, we will start to  see significant increases in the cost of continuing healthcare. That is  the cost for frail, elderly patients who require ongoing support. Then  there are the high-cost drugs coming through the National Institute for  Health and Clinical Excellence, and the cost of sustaining the Access  2009 targets, which are particularly challenging, but also very  important. We also have to meet other costs associated with statutory  compliance and policy changes. Our view is that, on the assumption that  inflation is paid for, we would have to absorb around 5 per cent in  other costs. That is why 5 per cent is the calculation given in the  paper. | 
| Kirsty Williams: I  want to ask you about one of those specific cost pressures, around NICE  high-cost drugs, which is probably one of the most high-profile issues  that the National Assembly for Wales has to deal with. When new drugs  become available, there is pressure to have them funded. You say that  that amounts to 1 per cent of the 5 per cent that you are looking at,  but, at the same time, we have drugs on patent that will come off patent  soon. My understanding is that seven of the top 20 drugs that are  currently prescribed are due to come off patent within the next couple  of years, allowing cheaper, generic drugs to be prescribed in their  place. Could you give us an idea as to whether you have looked  specifically at the balance between paying for new drugs and potential  savings in prescribing that might come about because of off-patent drugs  becoming available? | 
| Mr Lewis: The  all-Wales medical strategy group looks at this in the context of public  health and takes that rounded view into account. It is looking ahead,  with a detailed database of drugs that are becoming available and that  are coming off patent, just as we do locally, within local health  boards, with regard to the high-cost drugs that are increasingly used.  We also look at which drugs they are replacing. So, our 1 per cent  assessment is a net increase as opposed to a gross increase.  | 
| Alun Davies: Thank  you for your evidence. The sentence that leapt out at me in reading the  paper that you provided for us was in paragraph 2.8: | 
| 'While it is clear that there is  always scope for further efficiencies and improvements, it is doubtful  that the service has the ability to manage such a shortfall without  serious repercussions for service delivery’. | 
| What do you mean by that? | 
| Mr Davies: When you  look at the next five years in the context of the economic downturn, we  expect that the NHS can, at best, expect a flat budget. It will not  grow, but, hopefully, it will not shrink either. We can see that, over  the next five years, there will be on average anything between a 4 and 6  per cent increase in costs, which will have to be managed. We totally  accept and recognise the need for the transformational change agenda,  which is about doing things completely differently. The question—and  this is the question that the finance directors are posing—is around  moving from the current position to that transformational agenda, which  will take a great deal of work, and organisational change. In the  interim, there will be challenges. We are facing challenges today, in  2009-10, as we described to the committee last year, when we knew that  we would be facing these challenges. We know that, going into next year,  we will continue to face those challenges. | 
| We are facing an unprecedented  challenge in terms of the resource available and the demands on it. We  are responding positively, but it is a matter of recognising that we are  having to make difficult choices now in the short term as we move to  the transformational agenda, which is about ensuring that we have the  right care, at the right time, in the right place. | 
| Alun Davies: Thank  you for that. However, that was a very abstract answer, was it not? You  used the word 'challenges’ a number of times. I want to know what the  serious repercussions for service delivery are that you referred to in  your paper. | 
| Mr Davies: Looking at  the current financial pressure that we are under, in my organisation,  we have a £10 million deficit, and we have to break even: that is our  plan. We know that, in the short term, we have to make some difficult  choices about staff and holding vacancies to a point that we would not  normally wish to do because that is what is necessary to balance the  books. Likewise, we have to prioritise investments. We have a range of  targets that we have to deliver under the annual operating framework;  there are 25 in total. Our view is that Access 2009, which is the  waiting times target, is the top priority, together with the target of a  maximum four-hour wait in relation to emergencies. However, we then  have to look at the other targets, and we have to prioritise things. Are  we going to be in a position to deliver services across the whole range  of those priorities? My view, and I think that it is also the view of  the NHS, is that we have to do our best but that there is a serious  question over whether we can deliver them all. | 
| Alun Davies: So, the serious repercussions would be the non-delivery of targets. Is that correct? | 
| Mr Davies: The non-delivery of services. | 
| Alun Davies: Services rather than targets? | 
| Mr Davies: Yes. | 
| Alun Davies: With  regard to your financial planning, we are aware of the broad thrust of  financial planning at a UK level and the impact that that will have in  Cardiff. To what extent are you planning ahead knowing that you will be  facing a flat budget? As you say, let us make the assumption that that  is what you will have for the purposes of this discussion. Knowing that,  what financial planning strategies are you putting in place to ensure  that you protect services and invest in front-line services? I am  interested in what you said about this move to a transformational  agenda, because I assumed that, through the reforms that you put in  place this autumn, you were already on that journey. This afternoon, you  make it sound as though that is a journey that is still a year ahead of  you. | 
| Mr Davies: I will  kick off on this one. The first thing, which is so important, is that  the reorganisation that we have just begun over the past three weeks and  was prepared for over the past six months will, I think, enable the NHS  to be in the best place possible now in terms of its structures. I  believe that the removal of the boundaries that we had previously will  integrate the service in a way that has never happened before. In the  context of the transformation, the Assembly Government—and this is so  important—has required each of the new local health boards to construct a  five-year plan. Those five-year plans are about putting in place  changes that will make things completely different. Over the past three  or four years, as we have been making the savings, it is fair to say  that many savings have been to do with housekeeping, avoiding the  duplication of waste and making the best use of our resources. However,  they have not been to do with making those fundamental changes that will  take place through the reorganisation. | 
| On the time frame, year 1 starts in  April 2010, and, from then, we have to start putting that  transformational agenda in place. It will take two to three years to put  in place. We are working on it now, and it will bear fruit, but we will  see that coming through much more in two to three years. | 
| Mr Lewis: As Paul  said, the new organisations are only three weeks old, but we have been  working on this for a while. Having a much smaller number of bodies—with  seven health boards and the existing trusts—gives us the opportunity to  work much more closely together, but also to work more closely with our  partners. It really does provide us with an opportunity. Looking at  some of our major cost pressures around, for example, continuing  healthcare, this gives us an opportunity to look at those in a  fundamentally different way, to look at our current capacity and the  amount of money currently going out of the health service for continuing  healthcare and ask whether we have the opportunity to put those two  things together and produce a better service model. A financial benefit  in terms of the bottom line will also fall from that. I believe that  that is what the new health boards are all about. It is about getting  the service right, and the finances flow from that.  | 
| 2.50 p.m. | 
| Kirsty Williams: Mr  Davies, you said that you felt that the new structures represented the  best place for the NHS to be in to deliver, and I think that when you  say 'deliver’, you are talking about delivering for patient care.  | 
| Mr Davies: Definitely.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: Is it going to save us any money?  | 
| Mr Davies: Yes.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: How much? | 
| Mr Davies: Let us put  it into context. When I say 'the right care, at the right time, at the  right place’, it is not meant to be a glib statement; it is so important  because we do not get it right at the moment.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: I know that.  | 
| Mr Davies: Far too  many patients end up in the wrong place—either being hospitalised when  they should not be, staying in hospital too long, or staying in primary  care when they should be in hospital. All those mistakes, or non-optimal  behaviours, are poor patient care and are extremely expensive. We  believe that there is at least 20 per cent that we are not using  appropriately within the total budget. Were we to do so, we would see  that improvement come through, and it would not detract from patient  care—in fact, patients would get a better deal.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: With  all due respect, we were having exactly the same conversations 10 years  ago, when I chaired the health committee. One wonders why, if those  conversations were taking place 10 years ago and there was a realisation  in the service then that that was the case, we have not been able to do  anything about it in those 10 years. It does not give me a great deal  of confidence that we can do anything about it in the next 10 years.  | 
| Putting the issue of getting people  into the right place aside, in terms of administration, we have gone  from having an awful lot of organisations to having relatively few.  Surely we should already be seeing a return on savings in  administration, let alone from moving patients around? How many NHS  managers have been made redundant as a result of the reorganisation?  | 
| Mr Davies: None.  | 
| Mr Lewis: We have a no-redundancy policy in the NHS in Wales.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: One  can see that there might be reasons for reorganising around  commissioning and political reasons and to get rid of the  purchaser/provider split, but have all those NHS managers and  administrators who were working under the old system just been fitted  into the new system? | 
| Mr Davies: You are  right; it is inevitable. We have gone from having 37 organisations to  having 10, because there are seven local health boards and three other— | 
| Kirsty Williams: One wonders whether there are a few chief executives hanging about the place.  | 
| Mr Davies: There is  no doubt that there will be, in the short term, a way of correcting the  organisation costs and the structures. It is important to say that,  given the challenges that the new LHBs face, particularly with the  transformational agenda, we need every pair of skilled hands available.  There is nobody in my organisation who is earning money sitting about.  They have to be fully deployed, and their skills are entirely  appropriate for some of the transformational work that we need to do.  | 
| Mr Lewis: That was the very point that I was going to make. In the last 10 years, that group of managers has provided that capacity.  | 
| Kirsty Williams: They  have not done that in the last 10 years. We are asking the same people  who have not done that in the first 10 years to do it in the next 10  years.  | 
| Mr Lewis: Yes, but we are now getting them to concentrate on that transformational change as opposed to managing 32 organisations.  | 
| Alun Davies: 'Correcting  the organisation costs and the structures’ is quite a euphemism. I am  not entirely sure what you meant by that. How are you making these cost  savings? You said that 20 per cent of your resources are not properly  allocated or delivering. You do not mean 20 per cent of the total health  budget, surely?  | 
| Mr Davies: I believe that, in total, 20 per cent of our current resource is not being optimally applied.  | 
| Alun Davies: When you say 'resource’, you mean finances and staff, is that right? | 
| Mr Davies: It is  staff, capacity, beds, and so on. It is about asking whether we are  making the best use of that £5 billion, and we are saying that we are  not.  | 
| Alun Davies: So we are talking about £1 billion. | 
| Mr Davies: It is £1 billion that we are not utilising appropriately.  | 
| Alun Davies: No doubt we will want to return to that.  | 
| How are you going to make the cost  savings that you have said are available to you in the health service?  Where will they come from?  | 
| Mr Davies: We are  making major savings, and there is still significant opportunity to do  that. The first issue relates to the workforce, which makes up 70 per  cent of our costs. We are examining our skill mix, which is not  necessarily the right one with regard to the staff on wards and in  clinics. It is about making sure that you have the right skill mix to  meet the needs of patients. We have a workforce turnover rate of around 7  per cent, so you would expect vacancies to accrue, and you would expect  changes to then be made to the workforce as staff leave, and we do  that. We employ bank and agency staff, using expensive agencies, but we  have to move to a position where we have sufficient established  substantive staff, as that would avoid having to do that. Over the last  few years we have seen additional nurses being trained and other  professionals coming in, and we no longer have problems relating to  vacancies. At one time, two or three years ago, we had a major problem  in attracting staff. In a general sense, that is not now the case.  | 
| We spend 20 to 25 per cent of our  money on non-pay items, such as drugs and consumables. We do not buy  those in the best way, but, more importantly, we do not necessarily use  them in the right way. Let me give you one example: in the case of hip  replacements, we still stock around 10 different hip joints. We need to  move, with clinicians, to a rational point where there are no more than  three. I appreciate that doctors get trained in different work, and they  get trained to deal with different joints, but they have to get  retrained to use the agreed standard hip joints. If you have to stock 10  different hip joints, you can imagine what the Aladdin’s cave looks  like, whereas if you were to only stock three and use those three, you  could buy them in a better way and there would not be the potential for  obsolescence that arises from only certain ones being taken off the  shelf. So, there are big opportunities in relation to procurement. There  are also housekeeping measures, namely the day-to-day things that all  our staff identified, such as the use of paper towels, looking at energy  costs, or reusing furniture; there are always very good examples, which  staff get on with and carry out. That always represents around 1 per  cent of the 5 per cent target that we aim to achieve.  | 
| The key, and what we have not been  good at to date, is the service change, that is, the transformational  change. We are beginning to see it now. I will give you one example of  which I am aware: in Cardiff, we invested £800,000 in the Cardiff East  Locality Team. It is a multidisciplinary team, which is consultant led  and which is made up of clinical staff: nurses, diagnostic staff,  therapy staff, and so on. That team works in the field. It is connected  to a hospital, so it has access to hospital facilities, but it links  much more with GPs. If a GP has a concern about a patient at home, the  GP would, typically, refer the patient to hospital, perhaps  inappropriately, and this could result in a lengthy stay and other  things happening. CELT visits the patient, supports the GP, and, by and  large, can make sure that the patient retains the package of care in the  home. We have evaluated CELT, and it is currently saving an amount that  is the equivalent of the cost of a ward. A ward would typically cost us  about £2 million a year; the team costs £800,000. So, it does not take a  lot of mathematical skills to work out that it is better for the  patient and that it is more cost effective. It is that type of  transformational change and redesign that we have to get into.  | 
| One thing that I wanted to challenge,  which is an area where the Assembly Government plays an important role,  is that of pump-priming, because the challenge is setting up the team  while you are still running the wards. That is why the spend-to-save  investment is an opportunity. As it happens, CELT was supported by the  Assembly Government through the £50 million continuing healthcare  allocation, which we received last year. So, creating this team is one  way in which we have tried to be innovative.  | 
| Alun Davies: You have  said two things this afternoon that I find quite extraordinary: first,  given the budgetary pressures, there will be serious repercussions for  service delivery, meaning that the NHS will be unable to deliver whole  areas of services; you then said that £1 billion is, potentially, not  being used correctly. Surely it is your role as NHS senior managers to  ensure that that £1 billion is used on patient care, on front-line  service delivery, and is not wasted, as you appear to be saying, because  of all sorts of poor management decisions and poor management  processes. Those two things seem to work out.  | 
| 3.00 p.m. | 
| Mr Davies: That is the challenge.  | 
| Mr Lewis: That £1  billion that we have been referring to should not be seen as all waste  and poor management. Although some of that £1 billion is probably  currently being used on direct patient care, we were asking whether that  care was being undertaken in the right way and in the right place.   | 
| Alun Davies: That is about management, is it not? It is about how you deploy your resources.  | 
| Mr Lewis: That comes back to the transformational change that we are keen to support the clinical leaders to undertake.  | 
| Angela Burns: Alun, I would like to bring in others on this point. We will start with Joyce, then Oscar, Chris and Kirsty.  | 
| Joyce Watson: I want  to explore a little more about the management. You gave a number of  examples and started by saying that you had faced unprecedented  challenges. I cannot imagine that the financial challenges are  unprecedented, unless you are very new to the NHS. You mentioned  specifically the example of the use of bank and agency nurses—and I warn  you that I am on my hobby horse here—and the issue is not the type of  nurse that you use, whether those nurses are paid by the bank, the  agency, or are employed by you, but the management of staff. I am only  aware of one reason for the use of bank nurses, and that is insufficient  capacity within the hospital to deliver care to the patient with the  correct staffing levels with the existing staff. You then have to call  in the recruits, because there is no slack to allow for sickness. I have  focused on this point because of the heightened awareness that you must  have when talking about a possible flu epidemic in Wales. The current  system operating in Wales has to be addressed. Are you addressing this,  because this could hit us and hurt us pretty quickly? | 
| Mr Lewis: I would  like to pick up on the point about swine flu. I am sure that everyone is  aware that the Assembly Government has been doing a tremendous amount  of work on planning for a swine flu epidemic, which is inevitable. We  are starting on that now; the second wave, as it is called. Staff will  be affected by swine flu; we will not just see an increase in the number  of patients, it will increase acuity levels on wards. There was an  announcement this morning on the special allocation to increase the  number of ventilators that we will all have available. We have already  planned for the increase in the continuing-care and high-dependency  space available in most, if not all, of the acute units that we have  available. So, all of our planning has gone ahead. We are taking  administrative staff out of their areas to help out at distribution  points for the vaccinations to ensure that we are relieving as much of  the pressure on clinical staff as possible. | 
| However, that is almost a side  question with regard to whether we are planning for swine flu, which we  are doing. On your main question about the use of the bank and agency  staff because of the pressure on the wards, we know that, over the last  few years, generally, the acuity level of patients on wards has  increased. That is what we are experiencing. The proposed models of care  that we are now talking about, particularly the community primary care  model that is being proposed by Dr Jones, is about having a look at how  patients come into the hospital and are discharged from hospital,  getting the total model right and getting the balance right,  particularly at the emergency ends. Usually, when people ask us to look  at the length of stay in hospitals, we see that some of the longer stays  are generated by emergency patients and not elective patients. We have  undertaken tremendous improvements to the elective process; the  transformational change is about the emergency process.  | 
| Joyce Watson: Shall I go on to my questions? | 
| Angela Burns: No, not yet, because a couple of people have supplementary questions on these initial statements.  | 
| Mohammad Asghar: I am  very concerned about this. The Assembly Government gives over £5  billion to the NHS to cater for 3 million people. I have just heard  someone say the word 'inefficiency’ in reference to providing the public  with an NHS service, which is alarming. Do you not think that a bigger  adjustment needs to be made? As you said, £1 billion is a lot of money  in anyone’s book. So, how will you regroup and reuse it properly? | 
| Mr Davies: I wish to  avoid the headline that somehow we are wasting £1 billion. The word  'waste’, in common parlance, suggests that the money is being thrown— | 
| Mohammad Asghar: You said 'inefficiency’. | 
| Mr Davies: It is  important to state that the NHS, in my experience over the last 30  years, is a hard-working organisation; it is filled with staff who get  on and do their jobs. What is important is that they do the right job,  that they are given the right tools with which to do so and that the  right care is provided. Therefore, we are not saying that £1 billion is  being wasted, but that the £1 billion could be used in a much better  way. It would be wrong to leave this room and state that £1 billion is  being wasted by the NHS; it is wrong to record that and wrong for the  headlines to state as much. | 
| I will give you an important example  that relates to the number of follow-up attendances in our out-patient  clinics. We have a number of out-patient clinics, as you all know, which  people attend for consultations with a consultant and to have tests.  They are then given treatment or a further consultation, but how many  patients return for a routine follow-up? We have been examining our  different specialties and with regard to many of those specialties, the  number of people who return is too high. It is not that the clinic is  not doing good work, but the question is whether there is a need for  that patient to return for a follow-up consultation. In some  specialties, it is crucial for that patient to return for a check-up.  However, if the patient needs a follow-up consultation, does the  consultant need to do that or would it be better for a nurse-led clinic  to carry out a series of examinations to see if a complaint or illness  had returned? So, this could be done more cost effectively than is  currently the case. That is an example of how you can turn some of that  £1 billion resource into something different. | 
| Angela Burns: Thank  you for that. Before I bring in the others, I would like to state that  at no point was a view expressed that NHS staff were not doing their  jobs correctly. It is unfortunate that every debate on the NHS—on  whether it provides a good or bad service and on whether or not it is  efficient—always centres on the view that we must not do anything mean  because of these poor hard-working doctors and nurses. You can talk  about the NHS in fairly pragmatic language—and our job here is to  scrutinise—without casting aspersions on the work rate of those in the  NHS, because no-one is talking about that. However, that does not mean  that we should keep our hands off the NHS and not consider whether or  not the NHS is efficient. That is what the committee is trying to get  at. | 
| Mr Lewis: On the NHS  workforce, I am sure that everyone is aware of the report that came out  in England not long ago, which suggested that it should get rid of 10  per cent of its NHS staff. That is not our view of the NHS in Wales.  However, we have to look at the cost of staff and how we use them; that  is what we are saying. This is about considering whether there is any  room to reduce the cost of staff as opposed to the number of staff. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: May I continue with— | 
| Angela Burns: No,  because there are a lot of questions to get through. Do Kirsty and Chris  want to come in on this before we continue with Joyce’s questions? | 
| Chris Franks: Yes. I  am pleased to hear about the Cardiff East Locality Team project, of  which I was aware. You indicated that it saves the equivalent of the £2  million cost of a ward, which is great, because it is a better service  and is more cost effective. However, that ward does not close, does it?   It stays open. So, am I right in thinking that the cost is £800,000 for  CELT, but also £2 million for the ward? More patients are being treated  and some in better circumstances. Can you elaborate on that? | 
| 3.10 p.m. | 
| Mr Davies: Let me  elaborate on that example, because it is particularly important. Where I  work, in Cardiff, we have seen such levels of demand for beds over the  last two or three years that our occupancy rate has sometimes been over  100 per cent. We have had to open up capacity outside our normal funded  capacity to cope with the demand. What CELT and examples like it have  done is allow us to reduce our occupancy. For the first time, we now  have some empty beds, which means that patients are not trapped so that  they cannot move from one service to the other. There is a bit of  headroom and a bit of slack. That slack, according to the Office for  National Statistics, ought to be about 15 per cent. We should be running  occupancy at 85 to 90 per cent, but we have been in the high 90s and  sometimes hitting the ceiling. CELT, as well as the investment in the  continuing healthcare field, has relieved some of the pressure. It has  also meant that, in Cardiff, we have reached 93 per cent of our  four-hour accident and emergency target. While that is not good enough,  as we have to get to 95 per cent and above, it is one of the main  reasons why that headroom has benefited the service. | 
| Chris Franks: As a  follow-up question, I have heard of the call to arms for administration  staff to help with the impending problems. Why do we not use those  administration staff more frequently when it is not an emergency? | 
| Mr Davies: Are you talking about swine flu? | 
| Angela Burns: Chris, I  do not think that that is appropriate. That is a policy question and we  are not the Health, Wellbeing and Local Government Committee. I cannot  allow it unless you can tie it very firmly to the budget. | 
| Chris Franks: All right. I will watch out for other questions along those lines. | 
| Angela Burns: Thank you. Kirsty, is your question a quick one? | 
| Kirsty Williams: Yes,  it requires a 'yes’ or 'no’ answer. Is your ability to transform the  agenda to redirect the £1 billion assisted or hampered by the Minister’s  commitment to no redundancies and no hospital closures? | 
| Mr Davies: When you  look at the challenges that we will face over the next five years, you  will see that it is about making a shift from hospital care to community  care. I believe that we will see a reduction in capacity, and I see  that redefining the role of our hospitals. It is not a case of closing  them but of redefining what they do. I believe that it will mean fewer  beds because there will be equivalent beds either in patients’ homes or  in the community. I do not necessarily translate that into wholesale  changes vis-à-vis district general hospitals being closed, but I do see a  realignment of the services that they deliver in future. | 
| Mr Lewis: I am old  enough to have lived through a previous period of redundancies. I know  what the impact will be on staff morale and, during this  transformational change, we need morale to be as high as possible. | 
| Joyce Watson: I think  that we will come back to the budget now. Could you tell me, please,  what impact, if any, bringing forward capital resources has had on your  capital plans for 2010-11? | 
| Mr Davies: The  increase that we have seen in capital from the Assembly Government has  been extremely important. It features in the new way of doing things.  For example, we have now submitted our final business case to replace  Whitchurch Hospital. That will go, hopefully, as long as it is all  approved. That is so important in the context of the new ways of  working, which are about establishing community services and not the old  asylum arrangements. So, capital is a springboard for making sure that  we can carry out this transformational change. As I have said before,  things like spend to save and some of that seed corn and investment are  so important to make the change, because you cannot change the existing  service before you try to put a new service in place. | 
| Joyce Watson: So, has  bringing forward the capital budget from next year to this year made  any difference? Have projects been accelerated? Will there therefore be  no loss of investment, or is there insufficient capital resource to meet  the plans intended for next year? | 
| Mr Davies: We have  not seen any specific implications. I am not aware of any. However, it  has meant that we have had to phase projects slightly differently,  because managing the totality of the capital allocation is about  ensuring that a scheme does not suffer from huge volatility in the  expenditure from one year to the next. I would say that it is about  prioritising and managing it in a more constructive manner to live  within the resources.  | 
| Joyce Watson: Have  you put any bids in to the strategic capital investment fund, known as  SCIF, for any trusts or local health boards for the second tranche of  projects?  | 
| Mr Lewis: On the  second tranche, we are involved in the Merthyr Tydfil health park, which  is very much a joint venture with the local authority. That is the way  of the future. | 
| Joyce Watson: Great. That is fine. | 
| Angela Burns: Lorraine wants to ask about the financial pressures.  | 
| Lorraine Barrett:  Yes. You may have answered this, but do you have anything to add to your  prediction that financial pressures are likely to exceed proposed  allocations by 5 to 6 per cent? That was mentioned in some of your  answers. How have you reached that figure of 5 to 6 per cent? You say  that there is scope for efficiencies and improvements, and you have  given us an idea of some of those, but do you think that that is a  realistic and sustainable method of providing financial balance? | 
| Mr Davies: As part of  advising our boards, our job is to assess the likely demands on the  service and, therefore, the cost consequences of those demands. Over the  past couple of years, we have seen a reduction in the level of  additional resource, and we know that that will flatten to a position of  little or no additional growth. Therefore, to ensure that we continue  to meet the demands and deliver high-quality care, we have to come up  with different ways of improving our efficiency, by reducing the average  length of stay, for example, and ensuring that patients who could be  treated as day cases are treated accordingly as opposed to being treated  as in-patients, or ensuring that patients who could be treated as  out-patients are seen in a nurse-led clinic as opposed to coming in as a  day case. You are always looking for the best appropriate care, which  is good for the patient and much more cost-effective for the service  provider and deliverer, which is our case.  | 
| Angela Burns: Oscar, I think that some of your questions have already been dealt with.  | 
| Mohammad Asghar: Part  of the question has already been answered. However, you state that a  number of NHS bodies are currently experiencing deficits in spite of  efficiency measures. In your opinion, how long can that continue before  it begins to impact on front-line services and staffing levels? | 
| Mr Davies: We are  doing everything to ensure that our front-line services are maintained.  It is so important that we do that. All the attention has been on  ensuring that we are as efficient as we can be in the back-office  function, so that we do not spend money unnecessarily on those staff and  those services not on the front line. Even on the front line, we need  to ensure that we are not using money inappropriately. | 
| We are in an unprecedented situation  at this time, in the context of the difficult challenge of balancing the  money that we have against the demands made on it, and we have to make  difficult choices. We have to restrict the appointment of staff—there is  no doubt about that. We have to review areas such as study leave. We  will have to take some exceptional decisions that are not sustainable  going forward, but they are necessary while we work through this  transformational agenda. | 
| 3.20 p.m. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: What measures do you want us to take to address this matter?  | 
| Mr Davies: It is  about acknowledging that, while we are going through this adjustment  process, issues will emerge. Certain changes might be regarded as being  too painful, and so people will not accept them. It is about  acknowledging that a degree of noise will come out of this, which is  inevitable as we move through this transformational change process.  | 
| Angela Burns: You say  the words 'transformational change’ in such a quick way, but I am with  Kirsty on the impact that these tightened times will have on front-line  services. I find it a bit hard to get my head around the illogic of  preserving and protecting every single job in the NHS, despite the  massive consolidation into seven health boards. There must be a huge  number of back-office staff. I understand the game only too well from  personal experience of making people redundant and of being made  redundant. You are saying that no-one will lose their job and that you  will not spend an extra penny on back-office functions, but if you are  consolidating three payrolls into one, three human resource departments  into one, three accounts departments into one, and so on—and forget all  the people on the front line; these are the people at the rear—how will  you maintain all that and still preserve front-line services so that  there is no detrimental impact on them? I simply do not follow the logic  of the financial argument here. | 
| Mr Lewis: There are  examples of where we have done it. On the question of redundancies, the  other side of that is that there is a 7 per cent turnover of staff in  the NHS. We must use that 7 per cent turnover to look very carefully at  every vacancy that crops up to see whether it needs to be replaced. When  we talk about the back-office functions, it is not just the staff  costs. By bringing three payrolls together, you save on the non-pay  transactional part of that process as well. So, we are not just talking  about saving on the staff costs of back-office functions; it is also  about the non-staff cost, and that is where you make that saving. If we  have a no-redundancy policy, everyone must accept that we have to be  scrupulous in looking at the 7 per cent turnover of staff, as that must  provide us with an opportunity.  | 
| Angela Burns: On the 7  per cent turnover of staff, I understand that that is not equal. Is  that 7 per cent turnover mainly in front-line staff or back-office  staff?  | 
| Mr Lewis: It is  across the board. It is a combination, and it is different in different  areas. However, as I said earlier, it is 10 per cent of the cost of  staff as opposed to 10 per cent of staff. That is what we need to look  at, and there is a lot of work going on in every hospital on how we  roster off-duty periods. Every nurse director would say that there is  still a lot of scope to look at the efficiency with which we use staff.  That will bring pay costs down without getting rid of staff. | 
| Mohammad Asghar: I  understand that 75 to 80 per cent of your budget goes towards salaries.  We discussed earlier, and you were a bit embarrassed about it, the 20  per cent of inefficiencies. Is that the remaining 20 per cent, rather  than partly in the salaries? I need to clarify that side. | 
| Mr Lewis: The 20 per cent is across the board.  | 
| Mohammad Asghar: 'Inefficiency’ was your word.  | 
| Mr Lewis: As I said  before, we employ staff who work diligently. The question is whether  they are doing the right job. It is about making sure that we apply that  differently. So, the 20 per cent that we are talking about is the  total, not the non-pay aspect.  | 
| Alun Davies: I am not  sure that I understand your answers to some of these questions either,  because, in streamlining the management, for which we have been arguing  for quite some time, by cutting out some of the management frameworks  and some of the management tiers and structures, you are making huge  savings. We must ensure that we increase the services that are available  to the public, so that we increase hospital, clinical and community  services. However, the people whom you are releasing by streamlining the  management are not the same people whom we need to deliver clinical  services. | 
| Kirsty Williams: If you were a private business and had too much of one thing and not enough of another, you would have to make changes. | 
| Alun Davies: I do not  understand how, if you are saying, 'We need extra nurses to provide  this new service’, you can then say, 'We’ve got a couple of accountants  going spare; let them do it’. That is not the way that it works.  | 
| Mr Lewis: We did not say that. | 
| Alun Davies: It is what you seem to be saying. | 
| Mr Lewis: No, that was in answer to a specific question in relation to swine flu, and we are preparing— | 
| Alun Davies: I am not  talking about swine flu; I am talking about the reforms that you say  are releasing additional resources for front-line services. That is the  point that I am making. My priority is to ensure that all the resources  that are available—that is, every penny of the £5 billion—is spent on  providing health services to the people who need them. I am not  suggesting for a moment that you are saying something different to that,  but my question is how are you making all the savings and to what  extent can those savings be realised in the provision of front-line  services? | 
| Mr Davies: To take  the example of CELT, when we appointed that multidisciplinary team, it  cost £800,000. The staff were not new; they were drawn from our  experienced pool of staff. It is about looking at different skills and  applying people differently. People are up for development and change,  because they can see the wisdom of doing that. It is about taking some  of the staff who are working on wards and moving them into a different  environment. It is about training and skill. Ultimately, it is a  question of whether to close that ward. When you shift enough resource  and services to the community and you have bought your occupancy levels  down to a level where you have enough headroom, you have to start to  reduce costs in your hospital. You want to ensure that your patients get  the right care in the right place. Hospitals currently tend to be the  place where the majority of care is provided, in cost terms, not  contacts, and it is about how you make a shift whereby you start to  release some of those costs. You are right that that 7 per cent turnover  does not always fall neatly in the right places, but you have to work  on that, and that is also about retraining staff. | 
| Kirsty Williams: Mr  Davies, you know as well as I do that we have been trying to do this  over the last 10 years, but every time that there is any discussion  about a trust closing beds because, quite rightly, it has transferred a  service into the community, which is a much more appropriate place for  the vast majority of people who are being treated, there is public  uproar. In the minds of the public, beds are the NHS; that is what it is  about. So, there is uproar at any suggestion of doing that, because, if  you keep doing so with a variety of services, you will have a building  full of empty wards. You will then have to ask about the future of that  particular institution. However, you know as well as I do that, in  response to public uproar, the Minister has understandably said that  there will be no closures, because of the political difficulty that that  creates for her. It is perfectly understandable why she has done that.  However, your ability to create change is hampered, because, in moving  those resources, inevitably, some things that have been done in the past  and that are held dear by the public will be redundant. | 
| Mr Davies: We have  had a number of discussions with the public and the representatives of  the community health councils, and you are right to say that there has  always traditionally been a focus on the beds; that is what is seen as  being important. At the same time, people are aware that, if the care  that was previously provided in that facility is provided much better  elsewhere, there is a recognition and understanding that that makes  sense. The question when we close a ward is whether we can now invest in  a second CELT team. I think that people support that, because they can  see the wisdom of actually making better use of the resource rather than  keeping the current facilities in a way that is totally inappropriate. | 
| 3.30 p.m. | 
| Kirsty Williams: Good luck. | 
| Angela Burns: Thank  you for that. I will now draw this to a close. There are a few questions  that we have not asked, but I will write to you on those. My general  concern, having read your paper, is that front-line services will be  squeezed because we are getting a bigger and bigger back end, despite  the fact that the 7 per cent works across the board. You have mentioned  that you will be doing a huge transformational agenda. I totally  appreciate that you have new ways of working, but all of the things that  you have talked about, such as this CELT ward and so on, is all about  front-line services. You still have not explained to me very clearly how  the NHS is able to redeploy money—not just save money—from the back end  of the organisation to the front end. The front end needs good  equipment, good staff and good training. We have this consolidation, for  which I can see the logic, to the seven boards, but I would still like  to understand where the extra managerial staff are going. They cannot be  retrained to be doctors and nurses. Where are they going? Your human  resources departments could, in three organisations, have been 100  people three times over, but as a result of the consoldiation, are you  now saying that there is one human resources department that is 300  people minus 7 per cent? That is just illogical. In all my years in  business—and I know that other people around this table have been in  exactly the same situation with organisations that have  amalgamated—there has always been a fallout. I just cannot understand  what you are doing with the excess personnel. | 
| Mr Davies: To respond  very briefly, I think that there are two issues for me. We mentioned  shared services in the paper. It is a very important agenda within the  NHS. In south-east Wales, where David and I work, we currently have a  very active programme whereby we will bring together plans to amalgamate  our back-office functions, in terms of providing a better service and  reducing cost much more in terms of economies of scale. We have seen the  experience in north Wales, where it has worked very successfully, and  we believe that there are many benefits in doing that. | 
| In the context, as you say, of staff  falling out of the reorganisation, I believe that, in the next year or  two, the agenda that we are currently faced with will mean that we need  every one of those managers. The planning and the change that we will  enable the front-line services to make, will need the right tools and  the right skills and resources. I believe that many of those managers  will be very active in doing that. Over the next two years, that will be  a key kick-start for us in terms of making that programme work. | 
| Alun Davies: It would be good to revisit this in subsequent years. | 
| Angela Burns: Yes.  Thank you for that, Mr Davies. I am interested in your answer and I  appreciate your time. Are there any final, brief questions? I see that  there are no more questions. In that case, I thank you for coming to see  us today. I appreciate your time. | 
| We will now take a very quick break and we will then press on with a very welcome guest, the public service ombudsman. | 
Gohiriwyd y cyfarfod rhwng 3.33 p.m. a 3.37 p.m.
The meeting adjourned between 3.33 p.m. and 3.37 p.m.
The meeting adjourned between 3.33 p.m. and 3.37 p.m.
To view the original committee transcript CLICK HERE         
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