Picture of Whitehall
Whitehall wants to save on admin costs with shared IT
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Local government not keen on shared services

Cost-cutting scheme is too complicated and will take too long to implement, say councils

Janie Davies, Computing 10 Jan 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

Local authorities are lukewarm about central government plans to develop shared administration systems to cut costs.

Shared services are integral to plans to improve efficiency across the public sector and meet public spending commitments without raising taxes. But council IT leaders claim that time constraints and organisational complexity stand in the way of progress.

Building effective partnerships takes time, said Glyn Evans, assistant to the chief executive at Birmingham City Council.

“Local government is yet to be convinced about shared services ­ very few major projects have been set up so far,” said Evans.

“You cannot force people together who do not naturally work together, and partnerships take a while to develop.”

The reservations are also reflected in last week’s annual IT trends report from local authority user group Socitm.

Respondents rated shared services only fourth as a policy for improving efficiency, behind alternatives such as flexible working.

Central government planners have been wowed by management consultants, said Socitm report author John Serle.

“Private firms can raise capital more easily and change how they work faster,” he said.

“The speed at which partnerships are adopted by councils will be slower than anticipated and on a smaller scale.”

Local authorities claim shared services are not the only route to improved efficiency.

Westminster City Council is showing that costs can be cut in other ways, said interim head of IT Tony Glew.

“We are meeting our financial objectives, but we share with the private sector, not with other London boroughs,” he said.

See also:

Socitm president Rose CrozierTechnology investments by local government are expected to rise by nine per cent  03 Jan 2008
Picture of Big BenProspective £1.4bn savings not yet materialising, according to public sector spending watchdog  29 Nov 2007
Picture of WhitehallFirst integrated systems go live at newly-created Whitehall department  22 Nov 2007
Picture of WhitehallWhitehall departments sign up to central IT infrastructure strategy  04 Oct 2007
Picture of a firemanSouth Wales fire brigade combines with local council  27 Jul 2007
Picture of the greater london authorityAuthorities given the opportunity to use GLA web site infrastructure  19 Jul 2007
Picture of WhitehallContract extension will allow more government departments to join payroll and HR contract  06 Jul 2007
Picture of John SuffolkManaged service prices to drop as even more departments join up  21 Jun 2007

All Public Sector IT
Tags: Government

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
United Kingdom | ESRC
Web/Project Manager - £33,118 to £35,694 + Benefits Cutting-edge research is our business. You'll give us the cutting-edge web technologies to match. The Economic and Social Research Council is the UK's leading research agency for ... more >
United Kingdom | Advent Computer Training
Are you stuck in a dead end job? Do you want to take control of your salary, life and career? Advent IT and computer training offers advanced, professional training and helps you find the right ... more >
Cardiff, United Kingdom | University of Wales
Projects Officer - £26,665 - £30,912 - Cardiff The Projects Officer will work on specific projects under the direction of the Head of Information Services. It is expected that these will concentrate on the redevelopment ... more >
Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom | Tesco.com
IT Development Manager - Welwyn Garden City Who's behind the world's most successful online retailer? Just over 10 years ago we started Tesco.com (aka Dotcom). Today, we've an incredible 750,000 active customers and sales at ... more >
More job opportunities