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Collaborative Procurement Roundtable Discussion

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Title: Collaborative Procurement Roundtable Discussion


1
Collaborative ProcurementRoundtable Discussion
  • Tuesday 3 February 2009
  • 1882 Lounge
  • Durham County Cricket Club

2
Ross SmithHead of PolicyNorth East Chamber of
Commerce
3
Hilary KnoxDeputy Chief ExecutiveAssociation of
North East Councils
4
Public Sector The Opportunity
  • A business perspective

Alan Holmes Chairman Buy North East
5
Is it worth the effort?
6
  • 1.5bn
  • North East Local Authorities
  • Fire and Rescue Services

7
Total North East spend
  • 3.45bn
  • N. E. business share
  • 1.57Bn (about 45)

8
Total UK spend
  • 750bn

9
Whats needed
  • Better information
  • Earlier/better communication
  • Smart bureaucracy
  • Meaningful feedback
  • Innovative criteria
  • Measured risk

10
And
  • Willingness to learn
  • More collaboration
  • Smart systems
  • Some determination
  • Getting involved in reform activity

11
Progress
  • Central Government intentions
  • Concordats, reports etc
  • And locally
  • Standard PQQ/ITT
  • NEIEP- Collaborative procurement
  • Procurement Forum and Buy North East

12
Can things change?
  • It has started, here and elsewhere
  • Scotland a source of good practice?
  • Tough context
  • Gershon, Glover, Sustainability goals etc etc

13
Risks?
  • Dependency on Public Sector business
  • Downturn and public sector strategy attracts more
    competition
  • Public Sector spending crunch

14
What next?
  • Get involved with the procurement reform group
  • Sign up to Buy North East
  • Help us work with the health sector and others

15
(No Transcript)
16
Collaborative Procurement and Commissioning
Programme
  • Barry Rowland Programme Sponsor
  • Acting Chief Executive, Newcastle City Council
  • 3 February 2009

17
Regional Improvement Efficiency Strategy 2008-11
  • Developed around the National Improvement
    Efficiency Strategys key priorities
  • Sets out how NE Councils, Fire Rescue Services
    Partners will build on firm foundations to
    drive improvement, deliver efficient public
    services and accelerate the pace of change
  • Acknowledges significant progress to date within
    NE Region
  • Recognises that the region faces significant
    economic, social and environmental challenges
    emerging as priority areas for action in LAAs
    emerging MAAs
  • Through improved leadership, empowerment,
    engagement collaboration - along with more
    efficient service delivery - NE well placed to
    deliver innovative and transformational change

18
Delivery Programme Areas
  • Childrens Services Maggie Atkinson, Gateshead
  • Adult Services Rachel Shimmin, Durham County
  • Construction Asset Management Amanda
    Skelton, Redcar Cleveland
  • Collaborative Procurement Barry Rowland,
    Newcastle
  • Waste and Environment Paul Walker, Hartlepool
  • Organisational Development Workforce Planning
    Susan Johnson, DD Fire Dave Smith,
    Sunderland
  • Partnerships Irene Lucas, South Tyneside
  • Community Engagement Empowerment Andrew
    Kerr, North Tyneside
  • 21st Century Services Ada Burns, Darlington
    Geoff Paul, Blyth Valley
  • Regional Leadership Roger Kelly, Gateshead

19
Collaborative Procurement Programme
  • Region collectively spends 1.5 billion per
    annum on goods, works services
  • Significant potential to deliver benefits and
    efficiencies from collaborative procurement
  • Significant opportunity to work with the
    business sector to review how procurement spend
    can support local businesses as well as driving
    up efficiencies

20
Collaborative Procurement Programme
  • Working collaboratively with local authorities
    and key partners in the North East to
  • improve the way in which authorities procure
    commodities, goods and services
  • improve procurement activity for local
    authorities and suppliers through engagement with
    the business sector and voluntary community
    sector
  • make best use of procurement intelligence and
    collective buying power,strengthening the
    position of regional firms
  • ensure improved strategic planning and investment
    in electronic procurement systems

21
Collaborative Procurement Aims, Objectives
Outcomes
Transformational Procurement to support the
delivery of Public Services of the highest
standard delivering efficiency, quality,
innovation and excellence to service users,
contributing to the economic, social and
environmental prosperity of the North East
  • Procurement at the heart of Public Service
    outcomes, strengthening the link between policy
    procurement
  • Clear Objectives across the region, so that
    procurers and commissioners have a clear focus on
    delivering value for money on a whole life
    costing basis from an efficient procurement
    process
  • Appropriate contractual arrangements in place,
    within a Single Coherent Framework to assess how
    best to undertake particular types of procurement
  • Effective management of Contracts in operation,
    where the right objectives, incentives, people
    and support to be in place for contract manager
    to deliver public service outcomes
  • Commitment to collaboration and use of innovative
    solutions, to deliver 21st century services,
    efficiency savings and sustainable benefits
  • Encourage regional economic growth through public
    procurement stimulating, through competition, a
    mixed economy trading community, business growth
    and innovation
  • Development of Demand and Supply Side Market
    Intelligence, to support the planning, monitoring
    and measurement of performance outcome delivery
  • Development and Mobilisation of capacity and
    skills, into a Coherent Framework for procurement
    and commissioning delivery, building capacity and
    skills to attract and retain high quality
    professionals
  • Improve the interface between Procurers
    Suppliers, to further improve competition and
    diversity within the supply markets
  • Strong cross sector partnerships, shaping
    procurement policy and practice ensuring that
    collaboration and continuous improvement are
    characteristics of the North East in the years to
    come

More Customer Orientated Delivery
Better outcomes for citizens and communities
Improving Value for Money Services
Increasing Innovative Capacity
Community Empowerment
Better partnerships for Better Places
Economic Prosperity
Motivated Professional Workforce
22
Key Strands of Work
Category Spend Planning
Demand Supply Intelligence
Capacity Management Mobilisation
Policy Practice Harmonisation
Commerce Interface
23
Policy and Practice Harmonisation
  • Developing a collaborative approach to
    procurement through standardisation of local
    authority policy frameworks
  • Health Safety
  • Equalities Diversity
  • Financial (Standing Orders Contract Procedure
    Rules)
  • Improved tender submissions - time and money
    savings for both las suppliers

24
Category Spend Planning
  • Established baseline who, what, where, when
    how much
  • To date, collaboration has lacked strategic
    direction
  • Collaborative sourcing will ensure the most
    efficient effective use of resources
  • Procurement intelligence will inform a regional
    collaborative market category sourcing programme
    better use of resources
  • Providing a clear vision and focus to deliver
    efficiency and cashable savings

25
Capacity Management Mobilisation
  • Work to establish a future Governance Model for
    Regional Collaborative Procurement and
    Commissioning
  • Create a delivery model that is fit for purpose
  • Address the challenges facing all North East
    authorities
  • Contribute towards delivering the targets set out
    in the NE RIEP Delivery Plan
  • Develop a Capability Review Model and Standards
    Framework to assess procurement performance
  • Provide strategic leadership, capacity
    capability
  • Collectively consider the impact on the regional
    marketplace
  • Drive the collaborative agenda forward

26
Commerce Interface
  • Agree specific activities and outcomes to support
    the Business Sector
  • Identify what the issues are from all
    perspectives
  • Improve engagement with the supplier community
  • Simplify standardise procurement processes
  • Improve engagement communication
  • Operate more strategically
  • Encourage innovation grow procurement
    capability
  • Encouraging regional economic growth
  • Remove Barriers Procurement Reform
  • Improve Supplier Engagement
  • Improve outcomes for Economic Regeneration

27
Demand Supply Side Intelligence
  • Develop a repository of procurement intelligence
  • Integrated from multiple supply and demand
    sources
  • Packaged for specific user requirements
  • Deployed across the web to every decision maker
  • Scalable to meet the needs of a growing community
    of users.
  • Will provide rich intelligence to a regional
    community of stakeholders
  • Realise the greater potential for regional
    collaborative procurement using a category based
    planning approach
  • Sustainable repository of procurement management
    information, providing rich procurement
    intelligence across the region

28
Key Stakeholder Overview
  • Business Sector
  • CBI
  • NECC
  • FSB
  • Other Regional
  • Public Sector
  • SHA
  • HE
  • FE
  • SHA
  • PCT
  • LSC
  • Government
  • OTS
  • DCLG
  • OGC
  • NOMS
  • ANEC
  • GONE
  • RDA
  • RIEP
  • VONNE
  • NESEP
  • CVS
  • Third Sector
  • NEPO
  • LAs
  • LSP
  • Fire Rescue
  • Police
  • (Schools)
  • Local Government

29
Summary
Local Authority FRS Improvement
Supplier Engagement Performance
Interaction with other NE IEP Programmes
Collaborative Procurement Programme
Savings Efficiencies
30
Thank youQuestions Answersfor further
information, contact Barry Rowland (Programme
Sponsor)Tel 0191 277661email
barry.rowland_at_newcastle.gov.ukDiane Nielsen
(Programme Manager)Tel 0191 261 3912email
diane.nielsen_at_northeastcouncils.gov.uk
31
Ruth ConnortonPartnerEversheds LLP
32
Collaborative ProcurementRoundtable Discussion
  • Tuesday 3 February 2009
  • 1882 Lounge
  • Durham County Cricket Club
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