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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
The Deputy Convener (Nick Johnston): Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Good afternoon. This is the Audit Committee's first meeting on the costs and management of the Holyrood Parliament building project, following the publication of the Auditor General's report and his presentation to the committee last week. We will hold another meeting next Tue...
The Deputy Convener (Mr Nick Johnston): Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
Good afternoon. Welcome to this, our second meeting dealing with the costs and management of the Holyrood Parliament building project. Our witnesses today are Mr Paul Grice, the clerk to the Parliament—who, I believe, has risen Lazarus-like from his sick bed to be with us this...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
I welcome Mr Muir Russell and his colleagues to the Audit Committee. I will run through the form that the questioning will take this afternoon. We are going to ask about project management, cost reporting, managing the project risk and the state of the project at the time of t...
The Deputy Convener (Nick Johnston): Con Committee
24 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
In the words of "Watch with Mother", if we are all sitting comfortably, then I will begin. Good afternoon and welcome to the 17th meeting this year of the Audit Committee. This is our third session on the costs and management of the Holyrood Parliament building project. I welc...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
In his evidence last week, the permanent secretary told us that he had handed over a doable and robust project that could have been completed for £62 million. During the period immediately after handover in June 1999, many things took place. What was your view of the state of ...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
I am going to move on but, as convener, I want to indulge myself with a short question. You raised an interesting point about communications—that one of the reasons for choosing the project manager's successor was that he spoke Spanish. Was he the only Spanish speaker on the p...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Paragraph 3.43 talks about the lack of a cost plan. Why did the project team, the design team, the project manager and the cost consultant not agree a cost plan in March 1999 for delivering the project as first planned?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
If you have read the evidence that we took at last week's meeting, as I am sure you have, you will have seen that Muir Russell said of the project:"There was a lot about it that was pretty firm and credible. That is why I think the project was viable and in good health when it...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
We will move on to the current state of the project.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Understandably, there is much interest—from the Parliament, the public and the media—in the report of the Auditor General for Scotland. To place the report in context, I will give some background, which I hope will be helpful.The office of the Auditor General is an independent...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Thank you. I want to move on to the next stage, which is the status of the project in June 1999 at the point when responsibility for the project was transferred to the SPCB.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
We now know that the project ran into difficulties in August 1999, about three months after the SPCB became responsible. How many of the points in paragraph 1.18 on page 12 of the Auditor General's report do you think arose from the Executive's period of stewardship? In partic...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
I thank Mr Russell, Dr Gibbons and Mr Gordon. I would like to remind you what we have agreed this afternoon. You will provide: notes on the degree of practical experience of construction management projects in the project team; details of the job specification for the replacem...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
That would be very helpful. I am going to pull this section of questions to a close. I want to move on to the project management phase because I expect many issues to flow into that from the handover phase.I intend to spend half an hour on the project management questions befo...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
I take that point. Paragraph 3.50 seems to criticise the project management for not reporting the cost overruns. Did project management think that, by making you aware of those cost estimates, they were making the corporate body aware of them?
Mr Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
28 Oct 1999
Scottish University for Industry
I hope that I can finish as eloquently as Mr McNeil. Like my colleagues, I welcome the main strands of this initiative, while not being entirely sure what I am welcoming. To me, the whole project seems rather woolly and unfocused, but that could be because of my lack of skills...
Mr Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
30 Sep 1999
Public Finance and Accountability (Scotland) Bill
Perhaps we should be thankful that this is not a particularly exciting bill, as that will spare us the horticultural hyperbole to which Miss Goldie treated us yesterday. The framework that we establish with the bill will be critical to the success of the Parliament's work and ...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
What, in relation to the Holyrood project, do you regard as policy matters, and on which matters should we remain somewhat circumspect in our questioning this afternoon?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
When I said March 1998, it was a slip of the tongue. I meant March 1999, of course. However, there was almost a year between the appointment of the architect and the handover. The report seemed to suggest that that was quite a long time to come to a point at which the scheme d...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
It might be helpful if you were to find out and let us know, in writing, specific details of the experience that the team had had with construction management projects that were the rough equivalent of this project.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
One presumes that the members of the project team were there for a purpose.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Did you have any other Spanish expertise? Did you have Spanish lawyers on the project team?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
What the committee would like to know in this context is whether any attempt was made to negotiate a fee or whether it was just accepted, in the view of someone in the organisation, that it would not be acceptable to the sort of architect who would be attracted to the competit...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
If you will just pause as we move on to discuss the status of the project on handover, we might explore the subject more fully.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
I asked a question about paragraph 1.18 of the Auditor General's report. We have acknowledged that there were no MSPs to be awkward before the Parliament first assembled, but what about the other elements in paragraph 1.18? Which ones were in your control and affected the proj...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
Paragraph 1.18 of the Auditor General's report refers to the identification in August 1999 of"serious difficulties with the project".There are a number of bullet points in that paragraph. Is it possible to identify, in relation to each point, the extent to which they were eith...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
Paragraph 3.50 on page 41 of the report says:"Later, during the second half of 1999, project management did not report various estimates from the cost consultant to the Corporate Body as the client."It appears that you were aware of the anomalies in the costing. What hat were ...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
03 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
Mr Grice, Mr Mustard, thank you for your evidence to the committee.It might be helpful to run through the written notes that we have agreed you will provide to the committee. First, you will provide a breakdown of the rising costs from £62 million to £109 million and specifica...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
24 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
Mr Russell, one of the purposes of the Audit Committee hearings is to try to draw out information; they are not meant to be a tribunal. However, I said at the previous meeting that I looked forward to our receiving a note outlining the lessons that the Executive had learned fr...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
24 Oct 2000
Holyrood Project
What evidence can you produce that the Executive has taken note of the points raised by the project and the Auditor General's report? What steps have been taken to ensure that those points are covered in future?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
20 Mar 2001
“The New Scottish Parliament Building”
The project was not the Executive's responsibility.The only thing that I picked up on conclusion 8 was that"the SPCB proceeded with the project on the basis of Parliament's instructions."That brings us back to Margo MacDonald's point about what the Parliament's instructions we...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
20 Mar 2001
“The New Scottish Parliament Building”
Members will be aware of my background in building. I would not have approached the project in this way, but we must accept that this is the way in which it has been done, and that both the Auditor General and the Audit Committee have reported on that approach.With my tongue s...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
20 Mar 2001
“The New Scottish Parliament Building”
If we are writing this letter anyway, there will be no problem in asking for that information for the historical record.Conclusion 9 concerns the last paragraph on page 2 of Paul Grice's letter. It is fairly clear what we are doing. I know that Scott Barrie believes that the p...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
20 Mar 2001
“The New Scottish Parliament Building”
In my eyes, the arrangements that the Parliament has put in place to scrutinise this particular project are not robust enough and I think that many would share that view. However, I sense that the committee does not wish this matter to go to the conveners group. I do not see a...
Mr Johnston: Con Committee
14 Sep 1999
Public Finance and Accountability (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Paragraph 8(j) says:"The Budget Acts will set the Parliamentary controls at Departmental level".That would stop the transfer of funds between health and education. I would be happier if that were more tightly controlled.The Finance Committee is considering the format of the ac...
Mr Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
27 Oct 1999
Telecommunications
Today sees another first in the Parliament, but not one as grand as the two that we heard about before. I am pleased to have been asked to take part in debating my second members' business motion, and I understand that I am the first member to have been granted two members' bu...
Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
15 Dec 1999
Fife Rail Service
I thank Tricia Marwick for initiating the motion and Helen Eadie for following her lead in exposing the horrendous service from ScotRail and Railtrack. I take Iain Smith's point, surprisingly enough. There was a lack of investment in railways before privatisation but, since pr...
Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
11 May 2000
Telecommunications
I will try to keep to my time.I stand here this morning as a warning to every young researcher or putative candidate to Parliament—never lodge a members' business motion on any subject, because anyone who does so becomes their party's expert on that subject. I stand here leadi...
Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
29 Jun 2000
Emergency Calls
I thank Linda Fabiani for securing this interesting debate. It is apposite that, at this time, when we are just coming up to the first anniversary of the Scottish Parliament, we are able to concentrate on some issues that might not be immediately apparent. I heard Linda on the...
Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
06 Jul 2000
National Health Service
It would be very easy for the debate to degenerate into a rant against the Executive, but we in the Conservative party wish to move the debate forward.The Labour party has succeeded in doing certain things. Over the past three years, it has managed to convince the people of Sc...
Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Chamber
16 Nov 2000
Pre-Budget Statement
Members will forgive me if I rise with less than unbridled enthusiasm for the Executive's paean—an unashamed hymn of praise to a pre-budget statement that was reactive rather than measured and political rather than principled.There were some measures that we welcomed, particul...
Mr Johnston: Con Committee
23 Jun 1999
Remit
How many VFM reports must we consider at the moment? Do some of them need to be considered now? Will we get a background briefing on the VFM reports that are listed? Will the Audit Committee have any input into the recruitment of the Auditor General for Scotland? Do we have an...
Mr Nick Johnston (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con): Con Committee
26 Oct 1999
A74(M)/M74
The NAO report notes the fact that the Executive required bidders to include an option to upgrade to motorway standard the adjacent section of the A74 over the border between Gretna and Carlisle. That was to be done at a predetermined price until January 1999. Apparently, the ...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Mr Wilson, that is not a point of order. Points of order can be made only on questions of the application of standing orders. Much of the press speculation is just that—speculation. It is not in the remit of the Audit Committee to take that up. If you have specific allegations...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
I will look into that, but I rather feel that it is not. As you know, we received the report not more than 20 or 25 minutes ago. Thank you for bringing up the matter. I now ask the Auditor General to introduce his report.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Thank you. I also thank all members of Audit Scotland for the work that they have done. I realise that we set you all a challenge and asked you to work to a tight time scale. I am appreciative of the way in which you brought the report before us.At this stage, it might be help...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Because every member wants to ask a question, in the interests of fairness I will call members in the reverse alphabetical order of their parties.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Do you wish to answer that question, Mr Black, as it was slightly wide of your statement?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Could we have a question from the Liberal party, please?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Are there no questions from Labour members? I am sorry, Cathie—I did not see you.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
In deference to our visitors, I invite Ms MacDonald to ask a question.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
As a point of clarification, I remind members that we are not to get into the body of the report in great detail at this stage.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Is this a brief follow-up question?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
I remind members that there will be an opportunity to examine the Auditor General further on the detailed content of the report in the future. With that in mind, I close this meeting of the Audit Committee. The next meeting of the committee will be in committee room 4 at 5.35 ...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Is this within the scope of your report?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
A very brief question, as our time is tight.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Thank you. We will adjourn for a couple of minute to allow the next witnesses to take their places.
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Thank you, Mr Russell. We are not the Public Accounts Committee at Westminster and I hope that in Scotland we will find new ways of working. We might not follow the old and hallowed paths of tradition, but I hope that our approach will lead to a certain amount of elucidation, ...
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Could we have a question, Ms MacDonald?
The Deputy Convener: Con Committee
26 Sep 2000
Holyrood Project
Their previous experience would be important.
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Committee

Audit Committee, 26 Sep 2000

26 Sep 2000 · S1 · Audit Committee
Item of business
Holyrood Project
Johnston, Nick Con Mid Scotland and Fife Watch on SPTV
Good afternoon. This is the Audit Committee's first meeting on the costs and management of the Holyrood Parliament building project, following the publication of the Auditor General's report and his presentation to the committee last week. We will hold another meeting next Tuesday.

Our two main witnesses are the accountable officers from the Scottish Executive and the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body, who were responsible for the project at different times.

I welcome also the Auditor General, the permanent secretary of the Scottish Executive and the other MSPs who join our meeting today. Linda Fabiani asked me to say that she is here as an observer and member of the Holyrood progress group. She does not expect to ask questions.

Mr Muir Russell is the permanent secretary and accountable officer at the Scottish Executive. Prior to the change of client on 1 June 1999, the Scottish Office, which became the Scottish Executive, was responsible for project management and reported to the Secretary of State for Scotland, who was the client. We shall hear evidence from the permanent secretary this afternoon.

We will also consider the period since 1 June 1999. Mr Paul Grice is the clerk to the Parliament and principal accountable officer of the Scottish Parliament. He is the current project owner—that is, the most senior official who is responsible for the successful delivery of the project to the client, which has been the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body since 1 June 1999. We will hear from the clerk to the Parliament at our next meeting.

We will ask questions on five principal areas. We will ask about the project management and how well it met the challenges of the project. We will explore the arrangements for the cost reporting of the project. We will ask related questions about managing the project risk. We will finish today's meeting by asking for evidence about the state of the project at different times. In particular, we will ask about the state of the project just before the transfer to the SPCB last June. In our meeting next week with the clerk to the Parliament, we will consider the current state of the project and look ahead to consider the risks over its remaining life, as well as the issues that I have just mentioned. We have a lot of ground to cover.

Before turning to the permanent secretary for his evidence, I have agreed with the Auditor General that it would be good to start the meeting with questions from members seeking clarification or advice on the Auditor General's report. I remind the committee—and, especially, our visitors—that the Audit Committee inquires into the report of the Auditor General, so it is important that we do not stray into policy matters.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Convener (Nick Johnston): Con
Good afternoon. This is the Audit Committee's first meeting on the costs and management of the Holyrood Parliament building project, following the publicatio...
Mr Robert Black (Auditor General for Scotland):
I am happy to answer members' questions.
The Deputy Convener: Con
What, in relation to the Holyrood project, do you regard as policy matters, and on which matters should we remain somewhat circumspect in our questioning thi...
Mr Black:
As members know, it is not in my remit to question Executive policy. I suggest, however, that five major issues arise from my report to Parliament. The first...
Euan Robson (Roxburgh and Berwickshire) (LD): LD
You pose a question in your report about the mix of skills—you also referred to that a moment ago. In paragraph 3.13, you refer to the absence of constructio...
Mr Black:
I deliberately put my comment as a question rather than as an assertion. When I considered the material, it occurred to me that there was perhaps a weakness ...
Euan Robson: LD
Would a construction professional have been able to flag up risks that materialised subsequently?
Mr Black:
Yes. That is speculation on my part, but it is reasonable to take the view that somebody who had experience of running such a complex project might have pick...
Cathie Craigie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (Lab): Lab
Mr Black, you say that the type of construction management contract left considerable risks with the project. Will you expand on the risks that you believe t...
Mr Black:
In the report there is an exhibit that outlines different types of contract. I will not go through the process in detail, but in a traditional contract an ar...
Cathie Craigie: Lab
I have a follow-up question. Throughout the report, you mention the uniqueness of the Holyrood project and the fact that it is difficult to compare it with o...
Mr Black:
We were not able to find a comparable project on a similar scale. If I recall correctly, I used the word "unique" in answering a question at the previous mee...
Margaret Jamieson (Kilmarnock and Loudoun) (Lab): Lab
On page 43, you indicate that"Accounting for risk was insufficient".Will you expand on why that was important?
Mr Black:
I am afraid that the history of large public projects is one of cost overruns. That is not too sweeping a generalisation. A poor track record over decades ul...
Margaret Jamieson: Lab
You indicated that Treasury guidance was issued in 1997. Are you satisfied that it was adhered to?
Mr Black:
No.
Andrew Wilson (Central Scotland) (SNP): SNP
Despite that, there is a separate question. In paragraph 3.58, you mention that the risks that were mentioned by the permanent secretary did not materialise ...
Mr Black:
The memorandum from the permanent secretary to which you refer gives the impression that the need for the separate risk assessment was not entirely accepted ...
Brian Adam (North-East Scotland) (SNP): SNP
When you spoke to us last week, you suggested that project management might have encountered major challenges in managing the complex environment, not least ...
Mr Black:
I acknowledge that there was a view within the Executive that the building could have been built for the budget that was available at the time of handover. H...
Brian Adam: SNP
Can you give the committee an idea of what proportion of that list of difficulties came about as a consequence of decisions that were made prior to June 1999...
Mr Black:
It is difficult to say what proportion of the difficulties were the result of those decisions. Last summer, we were still at a very early stage of developmen...
Euan Robson: LD
Was the Auditor General able to identify the status of the project at the point of handover? In other words, did the then Scottish Office hand to the corpora...
Mr Black:
From the evidence that was available to me, it seems that the handover was relatively informal. There was an exchange between the antecedent client and the n...
Euan Robson: LD
Despite the fact that the team had no construction expertise?
Mr Black:
As I said, I have put the reference to construction expertise in the form of a question, as the observation is certainly made with the benefit of hindsight. ...
Karen Whitefield (Airdrie and Shotts) (Lab): Lab
The last two paragraphs of the report refer to the establishment of the progress group. You have highlighted a number of concerns with the project up to that...
Mr Black:
You are right to say that my report stops at the point at which the progress group comes into being. We have not actively examined how things have gone subse...
Karen Whitefield: Lab
What one piece of advice would you, as an auditor, give to the progress group on how it should monitor the project to limit any future difficulties?
The Deputy Convener: Con
Is this within the scope of your report?