Appendix D
Waivers – When do we use them and why
The
use of the waiver function is an important facility that, when used
appropriately, allows the council to achieve best value and
efficiencies from its Contract Standing Orders and therefore
supports achieving value for money through procurement
processes
Under CSOs 20.3 & 20.4, Directors have delegated powers to
waive CSOs in relation to contracts with an estimated contract
value of less than £75,000 and over £75,000 following
consultation with the chair of the relevant committee and the Head
of Procurement.
The Procurement Team continually promotes best procurement practice across the council and utilises various innovative approaches which are allowed for within CSOs and without the need for a waiver e.g. the increasing the use of consortium contracts and frameworks. The authority currently has £90M of annual spend procured through collaborative arrangements. As part of this process it is sometimes necessary to provide for short term extension to existing contracts, which allow alignment to joint procurements.
The introduction
of a Procurement pipeline in 2014/155 provided advanced insight in
to the needs of service areas throughout the authority. The aim of
this pipeline is to provide early intervention from Procurement,
Legal and Finance with the ultimate aim of significantly reducing
the need to authorise Waivers. This pipeline has had a number of
outcomes within the authority.
Primarily it has served to improve the level of compliance to
Contract Standing Orders but in addition it has created an
exponential increase in the level of procurement activity as spend
data has identified areas of non-compliance and forced services to
prioritise capacity to procure services.
Additionally it is often the case that national and local policy and financial changes require alternative action to be taken. The modernisation of Social Care, Public Health services and Family Childrens & Learning has necessitated service reviews, re-designs and re-commissioning, necessitating waivers to extend current service contracts to allow these processes, including appropriate consultation, to take place. It should be noted that H&ASC and FCL account for approximately 60% by number and value of the total requests.
Occasionally an emergency will dictate the need for a waiver . An example of the was the urgent acquisition of fuel tanks for the depot. A survey discovered that the existing 40 year old tanks were deteriorating rapidly. A prolonged tender process could have left the authority at risk of leakage and facing a significant increase in fuel costs, due to the immediate decommissioning of the existing tanks.
There are a number of Waivers raised for specialist services or staff, where the market may be extremely restricted and as such a Waiver process is deemed to be the most effective and efficient method of award..
Each Waiver is populated with reason codes which allow us to perform statistical analysis of requests. These are;-
1. Insufficient Tenders / Did not accept lowest bid
2. Award with no tender process – Consultant
3. Award with no tender process – Contractor
4. Award with no tender process – Supplier
5. Specialist
6. Urgent award – Consultant
7. Urgent award – Contractor
8. Urgent award – Supplier
9. Other
An analysis of these reason codes has been provided below.
A stringent process of approvals is required for a Waiver request to be accepted (especially in excess of £75K). The description / business case will include a confirmation that value for money has been considered, and an explanation of how the waiver provides best value. It will also explain how the waiver contract sum has been calculated, and break down contract values for each supplier covered by the waiver.
Proposed savings through using a waiver should be included, this will be on the basis that as no Procurement process is undertaken a provider should pass on any financial benefit in the contract value
The requestor will consult with the relevant Procurement Business Partner who will provide the Procurement implications.
Financial and
Legal implications will be completed by the relevant officers. Once
this is complete the Executive Director for the relevant service
will consult with the Lead Member prior to authorising. Only when
this entire process is complete will the Head of Procurement
authorise award of contract.