Managing and monitoring the franchise
Introduction
501
Where a local authority’s assets are maintained under contract, it must manage the contract so as to:
- meet its own service commitment to the ratepayers; and
- ensure that the assets are managed in a suitable manner for the long term.
The authority should allocate adequate resources (either staff or contractors) and establish systems to perform this role.
502
Public concern over any change in the responsibility for operation and management of
the service is likely to persist until considerably more experience with alternative
service delivery options has been gained. In particular, allaying public concern will
depend upon objective information on the benefits or disadvantages that result from
alternative systems of delivery. In this climate, the development of (and systematic
reporting against) appropriate performance standards must be a priority for any
authority which adopts alternatives to the traditional method of service delivery.
503
When a local authority is developing options for delivery of services, it should
consider carefully what level of control it requires. This would then be reflected in the
type of agreement which the authority would set up to deliver the services. Performance measures and monitoring are an effective way of providing the necessary
level of assurance to ensure protection of the assets and the long-term public interest.
504
The more restrictive and specific the agreement is, then the greater will be the level of
assurance – but the incentives for innovation and possible cost savings will be less. The less restrictive and specific the agreement is, then the greater will be the
possibility for innovation and savings – but the risks inherent in the arrangement will
also be greater.
Chapter Summary
Expectations
505
We expected that the Council would have:
- Allocated suitable resources and established the necessary systems to manage and monitor United Water’s performance under the franchise agreement and, in particular, the company’s adherence to the customer service provisions of the customer charter.
- Ensured that it has access to sufficient information from United Water to allow it to assess, validate and audit the company’s performance.
- Put in place procedures and performance specifications to enable it to monitor maintenance and renewal of, and additions to, the assets during the franchise.
- Put in place procedures to enable it to monitor customer service and quality assurance performance during the franchise.
- Created procedures for dealing with poor performance or non-performance by the franchisee.
- Created procedures for assessing the required condition of the assets to be returned to its control at the end of the franchise.
- Put in place procedures for regular communication with the franchisee.
Findings
506
In April 1997, the Council established a Monitoring Committee to monitor all
contracts – including the water and wastewater franchise.
507
In the 1997-98 Annual Plan, objectives have been established for monitoring the
508
The Monitoring Committee has yet to establish monitoring systems to specify
information requirements from United Water.
509
The Monitoring Committee has met once since it was formed. It did not address any
issues to do with the franchise agreement. No minutes were taken and it did not report
back to a meeting of the full Council.
510
The franchise agreement allows the Council to have access to all reports and data
produced by United Water which are necessary to monitor the franchise.
Recommendations
511
We recommend that, when a local authority is determining how to manage and
monitor a franchise, it should:
- Establish the necessary systems and allocate suitable resources to manage and monitor the franchise from its commencement.
- Implement a programme of auditing the performance of the franchisee to provide the level of assurance it requires. The programme should incorporate risk-based audits, systematic inspections of work quality, and periodic reviews of the franchisee’s quality control systems. Where possible, the auditing function should be integrated with the monitoring of asset condition, and the results of audits documented to provide a record of contractor performance and a source of data for future retendering.
- Develop an Asset Management Plan which establishes clear benchmarks of
existing asset condition and service levels. This will provide a sound basis to
develop clear procedures for:
- dealing with poor performance or non-performance by the franchisee;
- assessing the required condition of the assets before they are returned to the authority’s control at the end of the franchise;
- dealing with a range of extreme events; and
- communicating with the franchisee as a basis for ongoing administration of the franchise.
Resources
Expectation
512
We expected that the Council would have allocated suitable resources and
established the necessary systems to manage and monitor United Water’s
performance under the franchise agreement and, in particular, the company’s
adherence to the customer service provisions of the customer charter.
513
When local authorities contract out services they need to have access to the resources,
skills and experience required to manage and monitor the contracts they enter into. The scale of need increases as the scope and complexity of the contract increases.
Findings
514
The Council formally established a Monitoring Committee on 14 April 1997 to
monitor all contracts – including the water and wastewater franchise.
515
The Council’s former Director of Works is currently under contract to chair the
Monitoring Committee and to supply engineering consultancy services to the Council.
516
We were told that the Monitoring Committee had met once (in August 1997), but had
yet to meet to discuss the water and wastewater franchise issues. No evidence could
be produced to us of the committee having met or reported back to a meeting of the
full Council.
517
The Council’s Chief Executive is in the process of establishing with United Water the
monitoring procedures required under the franchise agreement. At the time of
carrying out the audit the exact requirements had yet to be established.
518
Annual Plan objectives have been established for monitoring the franchise agreement. Monitoring procedures must be in place by 30 June 1998.
Information
Expectation
519
We expected that the Council would have ensured that it has access to sufficient
information from United Water to allow it to assess, validate and audit the
company’s performance.
520
Local authorities need to have access to information on the management and operation
of the service in order to: protect the long-term interests of ratepayers; monitor the level of customer service; and reduce the risk of a franchisee exploiting the agreement or the assets.
521
Local authorities also need to have access to information that will enable them, in due
course, to retender the service – either in the event of default during the term of a
franchise agreement or at the renewal date.
522
Local authorities should also be able to assure themselves that the performance of
franchisees is acceptable in relation to both the standards set in the franchise
agreement and relevant industry standards.
523
Information for monitoring purposes needs to be accurate and relevant, and should be
based upon the Asset Management Plan and specific service requirements specified in
the franchise agreement.
Findings
524
The franchise agreement allows the Council to have access to all of United Water’s
data and records which enable the Council to meet its monitoring requirements.
525
The franchise agreement requires United Water to produce to the Council:
- monthly water quality reports;
- as-built plans of upgrades or modifications to the assets;
- an annual report on water costs12;
- an annual report on solvency; and
- a five-yearly report on the condition of the assets.
526
At the time of the audit the Council had not specified the full range of the information
which it requires from United Water to conform to these requirements.
527
The Council has yet to develop a technical process to audit or analyse any information
it receives from United Water.
Commentary
528
The ability of the Council to meet its monitoring requirements relies largely on United
Water producing the data and reports required by the franchise agreement.
529
As procedures for the supply, collection, analysis and storage of information are
central to the ability of local authorities to manage and monitor franchise agreements,
requirements and procedures should be established for:
- timely provision of relevant information; and
- independent verification of information to assess the “true” picture at any time.
Monitoring Maintenance
Expectation
530
We expected that the Council would have put in place procedures and performance
specifications to enable it to monitor maintenance and renewal of, and additions to,
the assets during the franchise.
531
It is essential that the assets belonging to services contracted out are maintained to a
suitable standard and capacity throughout the term of the contract. In the case of
water and wastewater services, particularly, the long-term health and financial effects
on the public could be significant if the assets are allowed to deteriorate. Consequently, local authorities need to monitor and audit the quality of maintenance
to ensure that the condition of the assets is maintained.
532
Asset inspections enable a local authority to review the contractor’s work schedules
against the maintenance needs of the assets and the priorities of the authority. As
such, condition monitoring provides an empirical basis for ongoing maintenance. Monitoring changes in the condition of the assets also provides a basis for measuring
the performance of the contractor.
533
An auditing programme might consist of:
- inspection of work quality against standards and specifications;
- targeting audits to address identified risks; and periodic reviews of the contractor’s quality systems against standard specifications.
534
Where an authority has entered into a “performance”, “output” or “total maintenance
management” contract – whereby the contractor’s performance is judged by the
assessed condition of the authority’s assets – regular inspections are an indispensable
part of contract supervision.
Findings
535
Procedures and performance specifications for the Council to monitor maintenance of
the assets are set out in the franchise agreement.
536
The Council’s monitoring will take place through:
- monthly water quality reports and as-built plans (see paragraph 525);
- the 5-yearly report on asset condition; and customer complaints.
537
The Council may choose to audit United Water’s five-yearly report on the condition of
the assets.
538
The Council has yet to determine these monitoring arrangements. It plans to do so by
June 1998.
Commentary
539
The general asset management strategy as detailed by the agreement will be adequate
only if what is proposed to be done is in fact done. Ideally, the monitoring
arrangements should have been in place from 1 July 1997.
540
If the Council is to have confidence in the integrity of the maintenance procedures, it
will need to develop sound audit mechanisms to validate the accuracy of the asset
condition and performance indicators, and will need to commit continuous resources
to monitoring. Given the importance and duration of the franchise, monitoring
arrangements need to be sound enough to ensure their consistency and effectiveness
throughout the term of the franchise.
541
Local authorities should be aware (from very early in the planning process) that the
level of assurance which can be provided by monitoring is related to the accuracy of,
and relationship between:
- the Asset Management Plan;
- the objectives of the franchise agreement;
- the specific service delivery and technical standards expected of the franchisee; and
- the information required and provided by the franchisee.
Monitoring Customer Service
Expectation
542
We expected that the Council would have put in place procedures to enable it to
monitor customer service and quality assurance performance during the franchise.
543
Local authorities need to be able to assess the quality of customer service throughout
the contract to ensure that the level of service provided is satisfactory.
544
Authorities can also expect a contractor to have in place management systems for
tracking jobs, scheduling work and ensuring that quality assurance procedures are
followed. Being able to rely upon the quality assurance systems of the contractor is a
key feature of any long-term partnership between an authority and a contractor, and of
the effort required to supervise the contract.
Findings
545
The Council has no procedures enabling it to monitor, or to require United Water to
report on, customer service and quality assurance standards.
546
Council officers told us that they have the capacity to monitor customer service
performance through the Council’s regular customer satisfaction survey.
Commentary
547
While use of a customer satisfaction survey can assist accountability, it should not be
relied on to the exclusion of other forms of accountability.
Poor Performance and Non-performance Procedures
Expectation
548
We expected that the Council would have created procedures for dealing with poor
performance or non-performance by the franchisee.
549
Local authorities will be responsible for ensuring that the public interest is protected
in the event of poor performance or non-performance by a franchisee. Authorities should have guidelines and procedures for dealing with a variety of poor performance
or non-performance – ranging from failure to meet minor quality standards through to
total business failure.
Findings
550
The provisions of the franchise agreement for redress in the event of poor performance
or non-performance by United Water are the express obligations on the company, in
combination with the dispute resolution procedures, arbitration, and finally the
termination procedure (if necessary).
551
The Council has set out a series of definitions that it believes are broad and
comprehensive, and yet also directive and capable of reflecting standards existing
from time to time.
552
The mechanism for monitoring performance – and therefore identifying poor
performance or non-performance – had yet to be established at the time of our audit. The monitoring processes are to be agreed by July 1998.
Commentary
553
Based on appropriate provisions in the franchise agreement and (if relevant) the
customer charter, a local authority will need to develop appropriate audit systems
which will enable it to establish how the franchisee is performing against the terms
and conditions of the agreement and specific performance standards.
Asset Condition on Return
Expectation
554
We expected that the Council would have created procedures for assessing the
required condition of the assets to be returned to its control at the end of the
franchise.
555
Local authorities will need to ensure that, at the end of a period of contracting out, the
assets are returned in the required condition. They should have established how this
will be done before that time arrives.
Findings
556
The franchise agreement specifies reporting requirements covering the asset condition
in each of the final five years of the term of the franchise (that is, years 26 to 30 of the
initial term and – if the franchise is renewed – years 46-50 of the extended term).
557
The Council has yet to establish procedures to ensure that the condition of the assets is
assessed at the appropriate time. Given that the first report for this purpose is not due
from United Water for another 25 years, the main issue for the Council seems to be to
ensure that a record is kept of that fact and of exactly what the report should cover.
Commentary
558
We emphasise that the ability of local authorities to assess the final condition of the
assets on their return will be directly related to: the quality and accuracy of the Asset Management Plan; and the information received and auditing which has taken place throughout the
duration of the franchise.
Liaison with the Franchisee
Expectation
559
We expected that the Council would have put in place procedures for regular
communication with the franchisee.
560
Effective communications foster a close and productive working relationship between
an authority and the franchisee.
561
A successful communications package would include: a programme for regular communications between the authority and the
franchisee; and provision for each communication to be properly documented, as an agreed
basis for ongoing administration of the franchise agreement.
Findings
562
The Council has not established any formal procedures for regular communication
between itself and United Water. However, Council officers told us that since the
agreement began they have developed informal procedures for regular
communication, such as: exchange of letters; meetings on key issues; and day-to-day oral contact with staff and senior management on various issues.
12: To establish that the unit prices for water and wastewater charges do not exceed the Auckland Average Price, and that bulk water costs are being fairly passed on to the customers.
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