On 9th May, Mahboob Hussain, a councillor with Sandwell Council (SMBC) and someone from Sandwell College (SC) called Scott Upton summoned the local media to The Public to announce Grand Theft Sandwell - SC's cynical grab for a second £70M+ trophy building. Or so we have been lead to believe. The Express and Star that day stated, 'College Chiefs (sic) say the New Street centre.......would be a "perfect fit" for a sixth form'. This, if reported correctly was a blatant lie by the mysterious "Chiefs" - now have a look below at the College minutes of 11 days LATER ie 20th May and the concerns that are expressed therein.
SMBC have always said publicly that the College approached them about this dodgy deal but is that true or was it the other way around? It seems that 11 days after the announcement of the perfect marriage the College were not even sure they could get the number of sixth-formers to make the grab viable!
Note also that one "Deputy Principal" (who he/she?) seems to have been driving the issues, against reservations in some quarters. I have also been banging on for months that if there was only "one game in town" SMBC would get "screwed-over". You will note that as far back as May the College were demanding "incentives" and such things as a shorter lease or a lease with a break clause.
Just like SMBC, SC are also apparently lavishing taxpayer's money on "professional advisors and contractors". I am sure they will hasten to tell us how much.
Here are the hitherto secret minutes (I assume NFP to mean Not For Publication):
Sandwell College
Extract from the Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Governors
held on Monday 22nd April 2013
Minute Number B13.44
This minute relates to aspects of the College Development Project at the new build, Central Campus, in West Bromwich and the disposal of the College’s Smethwick Campus. It does not relate to the Public.
Extract from the minutes of the meeting of the Board of Governors
held on Monday 20th May 2013
B13.65
The Public
B13.65
(NFP)
(NFP)
The Chairman asked that members take time to read the report relating to The Public. The report had been circulated late as the College had been awaiting information from Sandwell MBC.
The Chairman informed members that following the meeting of the Board of Governors held on Monday 22nd April 2013 there had been an exchange of emails that had raised some concerns for the College to address. The Deputy Principal informed members that one of the main points that had been raised was whether there was a need to expand the sixth form. In response to this an analysis of the ‘A’ level market in the areas around the College was presented to members. The analysis provided evidence that learners were seeking high quality sixth form provision. Members were reminded of the limits in terms of physical capacity of Central Sixth.
The development of the Public into a sixth form centre would need to attract an additional 500 learners in order to achieve a breakeven position, subject to the current funding regime remaining the same. Members were reminded that ‘A’ level learners studied at the College for two years.
The Chairman stressed the importance of understanding the risks associated with the expansion of the sixth form into the Public and also the consequences of not moving forward with the initiative.
The Principal informed members of discussions that had taken place with the Skills Funding Agency prior to the completion of the new build with regard to the achievement of learner number targets. Members were informed that Central Campus did not have the facilities to expand the sixth form provision, although other options had been considered e.g. the removal of provision with small class sizes or the use of demountables.
A member raised concerns regarding the requirement to maintain the cultural attraction of the Public, the unusual design of the building, the length and type of lease being proposed and the need for break clauses.
The Chairman reminded members that the requirement to maintain the cultural attraction was linked to the terms of funding from the European Regional Development Fund. There were also implications to consider regarding the funds received from the Arts Council. The Deputy Principal explained the initiatives the College currently undertook that would assist in maintaining the cultural attraction. The Council had indicated that it would pay the College £200,000 per year over five years to maintain this element of the Public.
A detailed discussion then took place with regard to the risks associated with the initiative, the risks to Sandwell MBC and additional incentives the Council could consider providing to the College. The importance of understanding the ability to sustain learner numbers and ensuring affordability was emphasised. The costings associated with the life cycle of the building also needed to be ascertained.
The Deputy Principal explained that the Council was re-considering the proposed 25 year lease as this might be viewed as a disposal of the building. However, a shorter lease would make the proposal more expensive to the College. It was noted that the Council would need to undertake a detailed options appraisal.
In response to a query, members were informed that a decision would need to be made in July 2013 in order for sixth form provision to be available in the Public from September 2014
The Deputy Principal explained issues relating to the procurement process in relation to professional advisors and contractors and outlined the work that had been undertaken in relation to feasibility and costings. Steps were being taken to ensure that the College’s exposure to risk was capped.
In response to a comment the Chairman acknowledged the need for a cautious approach and summarised the additional information he would expect to be presented to the Board of Governors before a decision could be made. The Principal commented that the expansion of the sixth form would be a positive move for the College however, the Executive Team was not prepared to put the College at risk in order to achieve that expansion.
Following a further discussion the Board of Governors asked that members be provided with regular up-dates on developments regarding the Public and discussions with Sandwell MBC.
RESOLVED:
a) that the Board of Governors note the negotiations that were taking place with Sandwell MBC and the current position with regard to the Public
b) that the Board of Governors be provided with regular updates regarding the Public and discussions with Sandwell MBC.
Extract from the minutes of the special meeting of the Board of Governors
held on Monday 25th June 2013
B13.83
Any Other Business
B13.83
1. ...
2. ...
(NFP)
3. The Public
(NFP)
In response to a query, the Chairman updated members on the current situation with regard to The Public. Members noted that discussions with Sandwell MBC were continuing. The Chairman would seek clarification regarding the feasibility study and costs incurred to date.
RESOLVED: that the verbal report be received.
Contact - thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
Thursday, 19 December 2013
Wednesday, 18 December 2013
The Public - Odds and Sods
Just a short round-up about The Public. Once again it is fundamental that the College is NOT part of the Council but completely independent of it.
1. The Jones Lang LaSalle reports have still not been disclosed either in respect of The Public or The Town Hall. The taxpayer paid a mere £50,500 ex vat for these.
2. SMBC have recently changed the locks on The Public.Cost?
3. Messrs UKIP put in Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to both Sandwell Council (SMBC) and Sandwell College (SC) for release of all the redacted (hidden) minutes of the SMBC "Cabinet" and the SC "Board" relating to The Public but at the time of writing I understand there has been no disclosure (indeed SMBC have requested "extra time" to release information which would take literally seconds to disclose). The College has not even published its "Board" minutes from October yet, let alone December. Such is life in the secret state of Sandwell.
4. Recently the lights have been burning late into the night in the empty building. Very "green" + cost?
5. The "leader" of SMBC made two very curious tweets in July in response to a tweet from a protected account which I am unable to read. I am sure they cannot be anything to do with The Public (or can they?) No doubt Cooper will hasten to clarify.
(a) From Cooper 05/07/13, "Backed for the money from other partners. Who'd say no to a £50M investment in 1 of our towns #westbrom Up the Baggies!"
(b) Again in response to the same "protected" correspondent - From Cooper 05/07/13, "Not Council project Baggie. Was a Council rescue and indeed a waste of money."
What can all this mean?
6. Of course, Cooper infamously tweeted this on 10/08/13, "The building can be converted by the college at no cost to the council with an arts and community theme. The best of both". This is what is popularly known as "bollocks".
7. The whole rationale for the pathetic deal as far as we can tell from SC is that they need extra space for the 6th form (as above, they are spoiled for choice in Sandwell but want to steal a trophy building). There is now a rumour that it is going to be too expensive to remove the theatre from The Public and so the college drama department are going to move in! I stress this is only a rumour and, naturally, no facts are forthcoming from either of the taxpayer-funded bodies involved here. Anyone who has ever been in The Public could tell that to remove the theatre would be very costly. I can't build a sandcastle but noted all this via twitter back in October. This begs the question of what will happen to the purpose-built theatre at the college in their year-old taxpayer-funded £77M building if all this is true? Why couldn't SC simply rent the theatre at The Public (bringing in income and also making it available for shows, comedy etc organised by The Public) and build their crappy "modular classrooms" in the Spon Lane theatre? All this is also indicative of the whole "back of an envelope" planning (sic) behind this attempted theft.
(As an aside here, if this nonsense proceeds and it IS true that the theatre will remain the building costs for the conversion SHOULD be considerably less than the mere £6.67M quoted to date but don't bank on it when this work has not been put out to tender. Also Messrs Arup were involved in all this via Interserve/Sandwell Futures - they were the ones who costed the London Olympics bid at £2.4B and it ended up costing more that £9B!!!!!!)
STOP PRESS 1. Kicking the corpse - not satisfied with the damage he and his cronies have done already, Cooper took to the twittersphere last night in a double-hander from someone who appears to be an employee of SMBC to allege that the visitor figures at The Public were "fiddled".
STOP PRESS 2. Anyone wishing to see The Kremlin's modus operandi should have a look at the agenda for tonight's Asset Management Committee meeting. In a heavily redacted report, apparently cash-rich SMBC intends to facilitate a private developer to build an ice rink in West Brom. Two of three reports are completely secret and the third is heavily redacted. This is the first paragraph of the "public" (sic) version:
"The Council has been approached by the company xxxxx xxxx, who wish to develop an ice rink within West Bromwich. Officers have had preliminary meetings with company representatives and a mechanism for the delivery has been agreed in principle."
And so it appears any old "developer" can gain easy access to Council officers. The plan is to demolish the Queen Square car park (which even SMBC admit will lead to loss of revenue (!)) and to grant a lease to the developer (no competition, of course). The demolition job will not go out to tender but the Council's "demolition partner" has helpfully provided a secret quote. And finally......cash-rich SMBC are going to PAY for the demolition to help the development proceed! Cuts? What cuts?
Contact - thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
1. The Jones Lang LaSalle reports have still not been disclosed either in respect of The Public or The Town Hall. The taxpayer paid a mere £50,500 ex vat for these.
2. SMBC have recently changed the locks on The Public.Cost?
3. Messrs UKIP put in Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to both Sandwell Council (SMBC) and Sandwell College (SC) for release of all the redacted (hidden) minutes of the SMBC "Cabinet" and the SC "Board" relating to The Public but at the time of writing I understand there has been no disclosure (indeed SMBC have requested "extra time" to release information which would take literally seconds to disclose). The College has not even published its "Board" minutes from October yet, let alone December. Such is life in the secret state of Sandwell.
4. Recently the lights have been burning late into the night in the empty building. Very "green" + cost?
5. The "leader" of SMBC made two very curious tweets in July in response to a tweet from a protected account which I am unable to read. I am sure they cannot be anything to do with The Public (or can they?) No doubt Cooper will hasten to clarify.
(a) From Cooper 05/07/13, "Backed for the money from other partners. Who'd say no to a £50M investment in 1 of our towns #westbrom Up the Baggies!"
(b) Again in response to the same "protected" correspondent - From Cooper 05/07/13, "Not Council project Baggie. Was a Council rescue and indeed a waste of money."
What can all this mean?
6. Of course, Cooper infamously tweeted this on 10/08/13, "The building can be converted by the college at no cost to the council with an arts and community theme. The best of both". This is what is popularly known as "bollocks".
7. The whole rationale for the pathetic deal as far as we can tell from SC is that they need extra space for the 6th form (as above, they are spoiled for choice in Sandwell but want to steal a trophy building). There is now a rumour that it is going to be too expensive to remove the theatre from The Public and so the college drama department are going to move in! I stress this is only a rumour and, naturally, no facts are forthcoming from either of the taxpayer-funded bodies involved here. Anyone who has ever been in The Public could tell that to remove the theatre would be very costly. I can't build a sandcastle but noted all this via twitter back in October. This begs the question of what will happen to the purpose-built theatre at the college in their year-old taxpayer-funded £77M building if all this is true? Why couldn't SC simply rent the theatre at The Public (bringing in income and also making it available for shows, comedy etc organised by The Public) and build their crappy "modular classrooms" in the Spon Lane theatre? All this is also indicative of the whole "back of an envelope" planning (sic) behind this attempted theft.
(As an aside here, if this nonsense proceeds and it IS true that the theatre will remain the building costs for the conversion SHOULD be considerably less than the mere £6.67M quoted to date but don't bank on it when this work has not been put out to tender. Also Messrs Arup were involved in all this via Interserve/Sandwell Futures - they were the ones who costed the London Olympics bid at £2.4B and it ended up costing more that £9B!!!!!!)
STOP PRESS 1. Kicking the corpse - not satisfied with the damage he and his cronies have done already, Cooper took to the twittersphere last night in a double-hander from someone who appears to be an employee of SMBC to allege that the visitor figures at The Public were "fiddled".
STOP PRESS 2. Anyone wishing to see The Kremlin's modus operandi should have a look at the agenda for tonight's Asset Management Committee meeting. In a heavily redacted report, apparently cash-rich SMBC intends to facilitate a private developer to build an ice rink in West Brom. Two of three reports are completely secret and the third is heavily redacted. This is the first paragraph of the "public" (sic) version:
"The Council has been approached by the company xxxxx xxxx, who wish to develop an ice rink within West Bromwich. Officers have had preliminary meetings with company representatives and a mechanism for the delivery has been agreed in principle."
And so it appears any old "developer" can gain easy access to Council officers. The plan is to demolish the Queen Square car park (which even SMBC admit will lead to loss of revenue (!)) and to grant a lease to the developer (no competition, of course). The demolition job will not go out to tender but the Council's "demolition partner" has helpfully provided a secret quote. And finally......cash-rich SMBC are going to PAY for the demolition to help the development proceed! Cuts? What cuts?
Contact - thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
The Secret College Deal - What Do We Know?
Sandwell College (SC) is a further education institution financed chiefly by central government and funding is partly reliant on the number of bums on seats. It has a second-rate Ofstead grading ie it has not made the top-grade of outstanding but has a second-tier rating of "good".
In September, 2012 the new Spon Lane Central Campus came on stream - "the Ski-Slope" - at a reported cost of £77M but even then SC were griping about the amount of space they had for sixth-formers and it seems that whilst Sandwell is awash with cheap buildings/accomodation it turned its covetous eyes towards The Public - an iconic £70M tax-payer funded PUBLIC asset. It is fundamental to the point of this article to note that SC is NOT part of Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council (SMBC).
It appears that SC may have been aggrieved with the Government over the amount of space allowed at the Spon Lane site and I would appreciate any information with regard to this. Suffice to say that you need only stand outside the building to see that a huge amount of space is taken up with an empty "atrium" rather than lecture rooms etc. Councillor Cooper, "leader" of SMBC seems to have involved himself in this grievance since The Express & Star (E&S) reported on 1st October, 2013 that he (Cooper) said the change (of The Public into a college) would compensate for a "gross-underestimation" made by the Government when IT (my emphasis) decided the size of the college needed for the Borough's growing population. Thus we appear to have a political element creeping into this absurd plan.
IF SC needs extra space then it is not clear to me why it cannot find and fund this itself unless all its resources have been utilised on the ski-slope. Again I would appeal for information (see contact details below). Making a personal point here too, some people still seem to view colleges as warm, cuddly, beasts motivated by high altruistic intentions but since Blair and his successors some colleges (not necessarily SC but we shall see) are highly avaricious capitalistic mini-corporations (see the High Principals column in Private Eye).
And so back to September, 2012 when the ski-slope was accepting the first intake of students. At this precise moment SMBC say "SC approached SMBC and initiated discussions concerning the conversion of The Public into a 6th form centre. These discussions have continued" (Cabinet Agenda 16/10/13 para 6.9). Not that the taxpayers of Sandwell and beyond knew anything about this until press releases etc on 9th May, 2013 since even though two public taxpayer-funded bodies are involved it was all kept secret.
Take a look at the minutes of the SC Board of Governors - all references to this shabby plan have been redacted. SC also appear to have no sense of irony in trumpeting to the press that there will be a small amount of arts provision at The Public when they are conniving in (proposed) major vandalism of the interior. To add insult to injury SMBC are apparently going to PAY SC £200,000 per annum for 5 years (allegedly) to provide this seemingly pitiful offering (surely just a fig-leaf to try and cover the inadequacies of the "deal"?)
I don't know how close the heirachy of SC are to that of SMBC but when they "approached" the Council to grab the building from the people they must have known that they were pushing at an open-door given the distaste for The Public shown by some in the Council, who appear to have regretted taking over the building and setting-up Sandwell Arts Trust from day one. This resulted in the infamous (and still secret) obtaining of the Jones Lang LaSalle reports (see previous blogpost) in early summer 2012 and, of course, to the decision to shut The Public just when the New Square Shopping Centre was opening next-door (completely disregarding a large petition and other opposition).
Back to politics. SMBC were involved in the ludicrously expensive Private Finance Initiative, "Building Schools for the Future" programme whereby they got into bed with Interserve Plc, Barclays Equity Capital etc to build some new schools in the Borough. A special company called Sandwell Futures Limited was set up to faciliate this and two employees of SMBC are Directors. The current Education Minister, Michael Gove, then came along and scrapped this programme on the basis, inter alia, that it was not good value for the taxpayer. This was bitterly opposed by the Labour element of SMBC. Of course, a couple of schools have been built and so the business "set-up" is still in place. However, SMBC seem to be trying to ressurect the scheme by the back-door. This would be bad enough if SC was a "school" and part of SMBC but it is NOT. As above, it is a completely separate and independent body.
Unfortunately, the vast bulk of the detail surrounding the proposed college deal is being kept secret by both parties and despite the apparent fact that SMBC have not taken any steps whatsoever to find any other use for The Public. They certainly don't seem to have tried to sell it or lease it to anyone else other than SC and this in itself is a potential financial time-bomb since, as the only party involved, SC may be able to negotiate an over-generous deal (if such a deal is legal in the first place). It was 9th May 3013 when SC and SMBC rushed in front of the media to say that this deal was on the table. SMBC say that various appraisals and reports have been undertaken by "Strategic Finance" etc since May but chose to redact all this (ie keep it secret) in the agenda for the "Cabinet" meeting of 16th October when the decision was apparently approved (even though the minutes appear to acknowledge that a number of enquiries had still not been completed!)
The "deal" as it appears from the "Cabinet" documents indicates that SMBC will pay to convert the building. This, according to what SMBC told Architects' Journal will involve the interior of a building (designed by an internationally-renowned architect) being "gutted" and replaced with such delights as "modular classrooms" (we had those at my old school but they were called portakabins then!) The E&S initially reported this would cost £5.5M but by 16th October this had already risen to £6.67M. Watch this space........ The building will then be leased to the college for 25 years (or less). At the "Cabinet" meeting which lasted just 17 minutes for the full meeting (ie not just the bit about The Public) they did not even decide basic details about the lease etc which was all left to a future date. The documents say that the conversion money will be borrowed "prudently" but details are still secret. It is not clear whether the money is to be borrowed conventionally (eg like a bank loan) or via some sort of PFI-style arrangement with Interserve.. It still begs the question why SMBC are borrowing money to aid an independent taxpayer-funded body? If a PFI deal is planned have SMBC obtained details of conventional borrowing to see whether the PFI deal offers "value for money" - usually not in the history of these arrangements? The waters are further muddied by the agenda minutes which state in para 54/13/10 that the eventual agreement will state the total amount repayable by SC to SMBC "including the cost of borrowing and VAT". What does this mean - that SC cannot/will not borrow the money but will actually service the debt? Will we ever be told what the cost of the borrowing is? Will it be differentiated from rent payable under the lease? Of course, this is all being kept secret at present.
I have referred above to the E&S reporting a £200,000 per annum payment to SC (ie £1M) to run the fig-leaf arts programme but the agenda minutes also refer to an amount (yet to be calculated at 16th October) being "the annual support sum payable by SMBC to SC for a ten-year period". Is this one and the same thing but for a longer period or something totally different and, if the latter, why are SMBC supporting a totally independent college instead of spending the money on things within their statutory remit eg their own schools, social services or Sandwell's disastrous Children's Services.
Because SC appear to have played a clever game here and because SMBC have no negotiating power, since having limited themselves to "the only game in town" the Council have also agreed to pay ongoing repair costs to the tune of £300,000 per annum - SC has even got out of paying for that liability - which will be left to the taxpayers of Sandwell. Further, the agenda minutes state that something still to be decided includes "any outstanding lease payments to be repaid to SMBC IF (my emphasis) the agreement is terminated". This strongly suggests that there is a break-clause so that SC can walk away at some point in the furure but when? Once the proposed vandalism of this PUBLIC building has occured what will happen if the college want to give the building back? What will SMBC then do with a building which by then will have the aesthetic appeal of a B&Q - modular classrooms et al. Are the good folk of Sandwell going to have to pay yet more conversion costs then (or demolition costs).
Whatever one's view of The Public is, there can be no doubt that the original procurement process for the building was mis-handled. Surely this should be a warning sign that extra care should be taken with any "conversion" of the building - legal or otherwise. But no, SMBC has awarded the contract to itself - or at least to Sandwell Futures Limited - SFL - (mainly an Interserve company in which SMBC holds 500 shares and has two directors on the board). SFL was specifically set-up for the disastrous PFI Building for Schools scheme - which has been scrapped - and yet SMBC say the work will be carried out "utilising the standard form BSF Design and Build contract". It seems to have escaped their notice that the building had been designed by a world-renowned architect and, er, built!
There is nothing in the "Cabinet" meetings referring to the obvious conflict of interest in SMBC granting the contract to a Company in which it, itself, holds an interest and to make matters worse SMBC specifically state "any necessary exemptions be made to the Council's Procurement and Contract Procedure Rules". Those rules are their to protect the taxpayer but the "Cabinet" simply voted to disapply them!
.
Again, because of the secrecy, we still do not know if a PFI-type structure is to be put in place or whether there will be conventional borrowing. We do not know what a commercial rent for the building (as gutted or otherwise) is and whether SC will pay a full commercial rent. It appears that Jones Lang LaSalle were asked to report (at £39K) on possible uses of the building in its current condition and not after the proposed "gutting" - surely this "fact" would have affected their report? If SC are not paying a commercial rent the taxpayer nationally will be a winner and the loss will be picked up by the taxpayers of supposedly skint Sandwell.
Even SMBC accept an "extremely low risk" that this deal is illegal and constitutes unlawful state aid.
Three principal public sector investors paid huge sums to build The Public but have apparently washed their hands of the project and do not propose to recoup the money on behalf of the taxpayer. Of course, the proposed college will in one sense be a public building but with severely restricted access to the people who will be barred from access to most of the building.
Accordingly a major public building is being stolen from the people. Grand Theft Sandwell!
And finally - planning. If SMBC had to apply to change the use of the building the public would be able to have a say but, of course, that cannot be allowed. Thanks to work done by UKIP Sandwell it has been established that SMBC say no change of use is required as "the existing and future uses of The Public fall within Class D1". UKIP then produced documentation showing that the planning permission for the building was, so far as relevant here - 4,180 sq m Class B1; 2,465 sq m Class D1. Notwithstanding this fact, SMBC now say, "The fact that the schedule identifies a number of ANCILLARY (my emphasis) uses (B1 etc) does not alter the local planning authority's (SMBC's) view that the primary use of the building falls within D1 and the conversion to a college also falls within the same use class". Of course, The Public was never JUST a gallery and the B1 office space was fully occupied by a large number of small businesses who have now been "re-located". SMBC seem to be deliberately ignoring the facts.
PLEASE SEND INFO (letters only at first) to VERNON GRANT, BOX 374, 27 COLMORE ROW, BIRMINGHAM B3 2EW (I am also interested in ANY tales of financial waste by SMBC).
Please also see my blogpost of 19th November. If you are able to help fund the legal fees that yould be very helpful.
Email: thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
In September, 2012 the new Spon Lane Central Campus came on stream - "the Ski-Slope" - at a reported cost of £77M but even then SC were griping about the amount of space they had for sixth-formers and it seems that whilst Sandwell is awash with cheap buildings/accomodation it turned its covetous eyes towards The Public - an iconic £70M tax-payer funded PUBLIC asset. It is fundamental to the point of this article to note that SC is NOT part of Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council (SMBC).
It appears that SC may have been aggrieved with the Government over the amount of space allowed at the Spon Lane site and I would appreciate any information with regard to this. Suffice to say that you need only stand outside the building to see that a huge amount of space is taken up with an empty "atrium" rather than lecture rooms etc. Councillor Cooper, "leader" of SMBC seems to have involved himself in this grievance since The Express & Star (E&S) reported on 1st October, 2013 that he (Cooper) said the change (of The Public into a college) would compensate for a "gross-underestimation" made by the Government when IT (my emphasis) decided the size of the college needed for the Borough's growing population. Thus we appear to have a political element creeping into this absurd plan.
IF SC needs extra space then it is not clear to me why it cannot find and fund this itself unless all its resources have been utilised on the ski-slope. Again I would appeal for information (see contact details below). Making a personal point here too, some people still seem to view colleges as warm, cuddly, beasts motivated by high altruistic intentions but since Blair and his successors some colleges (not necessarily SC but we shall see) are highly avaricious capitalistic mini-corporations (see the High Principals column in Private Eye).
And so back to September, 2012 when the ski-slope was accepting the first intake of students. At this precise moment SMBC say "SC approached SMBC and initiated discussions concerning the conversion of The Public into a 6th form centre. These discussions have continued" (Cabinet Agenda 16/10/13 para 6.9). Not that the taxpayers of Sandwell and beyond knew anything about this until press releases etc on 9th May, 2013 since even though two public taxpayer-funded bodies are involved it was all kept secret.
Take a look at the minutes of the SC Board of Governors - all references to this shabby plan have been redacted. SC also appear to have no sense of irony in trumpeting to the press that there will be a small amount of arts provision at The Public when they are conniving in (proposed) major vandalism of the interior. To add insult to injury SMBC are apparently going to PAY SC £200,000 per annum for 5 years (allegedly) to provide this seemingly pitiful offering (surely just a fig-leaf to try and cover the inadequacies of the "deal"?)
I don't know how close the heirachy of SC are to that of SMBC but when they "approached" the Council to grab the building from the people they must have known that they were pushing at an open-door given the distaste for The Public shown by some in the Council, who appear to have regretted taking over the building and setting-up Sandwell Arts Trust from day one. This resulted in the infamous (and still secret) obtaining of the Jones Lang LaSalle reports (see previous blogpost) in early summer 2012 and, of course, to the decision to shut The Public just when the New Square Shopping Centre was opening next-door (completely disregarding a large petition and other opposition).
Back to politics. SMBC were involved in the ludicrously expensive Private Finance Initiative, "Building Schools for the Future" programme whereby they got into bed with Interserve Plc, Barclays Equity Capital etc to build some new schools in the Borough. A special company called Sandwell Futures Limited was set up to faciliate this and two employees of SMBC are Directors. The current Education Minister, Michael Gove, then came along and scrapped this programme on the basis, inter alia, that it was not good value for the taxpayer. This was bitterly opposed by the Labour element of SMBC. Of course, a couple of schools have been built and so the business "set-up" is still in place. However, SMBC seem to be trying to ressurect the scheme by the back-door. This would be bad enough if SC was a "school" and part of SMBC but it is NOT. As above, it is a completely separate and independent body.
Unfortunately, the vast bulk of the detail surrounding the proposed college deal is being kept secret by both parties and despite the apparent fact that SMBC have not taken any steps whatsoever to find any other use for The Public. They certainly don't seem to have tried to sell it or lease it to anyone else other than SC and this in itself is a potential financial time-bomb since, as the only party involved, SC may be able to negotiate an over-generous deal (if such a deal is legal in the first place). It was 9th May 3013 when SC and SMBC rushed in front of the media to say that this deal was on the table. SMBC say that various appraisals and reports have been undertaken by "Strategic Finance" etc since May but chose to redact all this (ie keep it secret) in the agenda for the "Cabinet" meeting of 16th October when the decision was apparently approved (even though the minutes appear to acknowledge that a number of enquiries had still not been completed!)
The "deal" as it appears from the "Cabinet" documents indicates that SMBC will pay to convert the building. This, according to what SMBC told Architects' Journal will involve the interior of a building (designed by an internationally-renowned architect) being "gutted" and replaced with such delights as "modular classrooms" (we had those at my old school but they were called portakabins then!) The E&S initially reported this would cost £5.5M but by 16th October this had already risen to £6.67M. Watch this space........ The building will then be leased to the college for 25 years (or less). At the "Cabinet" meeting which lasted just 17 minutes for the full meeting (ie not just the bit about The Public) they did not even decide basic details about the lease etc which was all left to a future date. The documents say that the conversion money will be borrowed "prudently" but details are still secret. It is not clear whether the money is to be borrowed conventionally (eg like a bank loan) or via some sort of PFI-style arrangement with Interserve.. It still begs the question why SMBC are borrowing money to aid an independent taxpayer-funded body? If a PFI deal is planned have SMBC obtained details of conventional borrowing to see whether the PFI deal offers "value for money" - usually not in the history of these arrangements? The waters are further muddied by the agenda minutes which state in para 54/13/10 that the eventual agreement will state the total amount repayable by SC to SMBC "including the cost of borrowing and VAT". What does this mean - that SC cannot/will not borrow the money but will actually service the debt? Will we ever be told what the cost of the borrowing is? Will it be differentiated from rent payable under the lease? Of course, this is all being kept secret at present.
I have referred above to the E&S reporting a £200,000 per annum payment to SC (ie £1M) to run the fig-leaf arts programme but the agenda minutes also refer to an amount (yet to be calculated at 16th October) being "the annual support sum payable by SMBC to SC for a ten-year period". Is this one and the same thing but for a longer period or something totally different and, if the latter, why are SMBC supporting a totally independent college instead of spending the money on things within their statutory remit eg their own schools, social services or Sandwell's disastrous Children's Services.
Because SC appear to have played a clever game here and because SMBC have no negotiating power, since having limited themselves to "the only game in town" the Council have also agreed to pay ongoing repair costs to the tune of £300,000 per annum - SC has even got out of paying for that liability - which will be left to the taxpayers of Sandwell. Further, the agenda minutes state that something still to be decided includes "any outstanding lease payments to be repaid to SMBC IF (my emphasis) the agreement is terminated". This strongly suggests that there is a break-clause so that SC can walk away at some point in the furure but when? Once the proposed vandalism of this PUBLIC building has occured what will happen if the college want to give the building back? What will SMBC then do with a building which by then will have the aesthetic appeal of a B&Q - modular classrooms et al. Are the good folk of Sandwell going to have to pay yet more conversion costs then (or demolition costs).
Whatever one's view of The Public is, there can be no doubt that the original procurement process for the building was mis-handled. Surely this should be a warning sign that extra care should be taken with any "conversion" of the building - legal or otherwise. But no, SMBC has awarded the contract to itself - or at least to Sandwell Futures Limited - SFL - (mainly an Interserve company in which SMBC holds 500 shares and has two directors on the board). SFL was specifically set-up for the disastrous PFI Building for Schools scheme - which has been scrapped - and yet SMBC say the work will be carried out "utilising the standard form BSF Design and Build contract". It seems to have escaped their notice that the building had been designed by a world-renowned architect and, er, built!
There is nothing in the "Cabinet" meetings referring to the obvious conflict of interest in SMBC granting the contract to a Company in which it, itself, holds an interest and to make matters worse SMBC specifically state "any necessary exemptions be made to the Council's Procurement and Contract Procedure Rules". Those rules are their to protect the taxpayer but the "Cabinet" simply voted to disapply them!
.
Again, because of the secrecy, we still do not know if a PFI-type structure is to be put in place or whether there will be conventional borrowing. We do not know what a commercial rent for the building (as gutted or otherwise) is and whether SC will pay a full commercial rent. It appears that Jones Lang LaSalle were asked to report (at £39K) on possible uses of the building in its current condition and not after the proposed "gutting" - surely this "fact" would have affected their report? If SC are not paying a commercial rent the taxpayer nationally will be a winner and the loss will be picked up by the taxpayers of supposedly skint Sandwell.
Even SMBC accept an "extremely low risk" that this deal is illegal and constitutes unlawful state aid.
Three principal public sector investors paid huge sums to build The Public but have apparently washed their hands of the project and do not propose to recoup the money on behalf of the taxpayer. Of course, the proposed college will in one sense be a public building but with severely restricted access to the people who will be barred from access to most of the building.
Accordingly a major public building is being stolen from the people. Grand Theft Sandwell!
And finally - planning. If SMBC had to apply to change the use of the building the public would be able to have a say but, of course, that cannot be allowed. Thanks to work done by UKIP Sandwell it has been established that SMBC say no change of use is required as "the existing and future uses of The Public fall within Class D1". UKIP then produced documentation showing that the planning permission for the building was, so far as relevant here - 4,180 sq m Class B1; 2,465 sq m Class D1. Notwithstanding this fact, SMBC now say, "The fact that the schedule identifies a number of ANCILLARY (my emphasis) uses (B1 etc) does not alter the local planning authority's (SMBC's) view that the primary use of the building falls within D1 and the conversion to a college also falls within the same use class". Of course, The Public was never JUST a gallery and the B1 office space was fully occupied by a large number of small businesses who have now been "re-located". SMBC seem to be deliberately ignoring the facts.
PLEASE SEND INFO (letters only at first) to VERNON GRANT, BOX 374, 27 COLMORE ROW, BIRMINGHAM B3 2EW (I am also interested in ANY tales of financial waste by SMBC).
Please also see my blogpost of 19th November. If you are able to help fund the legal fees that yould be very helpful.
Email: thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
Saturday, 23 November 2013
Nice Work If You Can Get It! JLL & The Public.
The politicians at Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council (SMBC) have been blaming the Government for the cuts in services inflicted on the people but even a cursory glance at the payments list shows huge pay-outs to the professional classes (and in very many cases to firms who are not located in Sandwell). Whether this is good value for money is difficult to decide particularly when the services provided are shrouded in secrecy - this article deals with a classic example concerning The Public.
In or around Spring 2012 the "Cabinet" of SMBC decided to hire expensive consultants to provide a report on the future "viability" of The Public. (When the truth finally emerges it will be interesting to know if Sandwell College were already sniffing around the building but that will have to wait until another day).
SMBC say that there was "an invitation to quote" but it is not clear how many firms were approached and what figures were provided. That is still a secret. Messrs Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), who have an office in Birmingham but who claim to be the second largest property agents in the world and who are listed on the New York Stock Exchange "won" the contract but we don't know how much they quoted. That is still a secret. We do know they were paid £20,000 (ex VAT ) on 10th May, 2012 which is interesting. Did JLL get the job because they quoted £20,000 only? The significance of this being that they then received two further payments ie £6,000 (ex VAT) on 20th August, 2012 and £10,000 (ex VAT) on 13th September, 2012 making a VERY GRAND total of £39,000 (ex VAT) which is almost DOUBLE the first part of the fee. Did they quote £39,000 payable by instalments (if so,why?) or did they quote £20,000 and SMBC let the project run out of hand so that it cost nearly double the original quote? If the latter was there was any sort of re-tendering process? All this is,of course, still a secret.
And what did the folk of Sandwell get for THEIR £39,000? You guessed it - that is still a secret. Thanks to a Freedom of Information Act (FOI) enquiry by UKIP Sandwell we now know that JLL prepared reports (plural) but despite the passage of some 18 months and the FOI enquiry SMBC are refusing to disclose them. Up until two-months ago they had not even been disclosed to non-Labour COUNCILLORS ie elected representatives. SMBC acknowledge the reports are not concerned with the (secret) "deal" with The College (why not if it is such a brilliant wheeze?) but say that disclosure would cause prejudice to SMBC's commercial interests. Yet in paragraph 6.8 of the agenda for the 17 minute-long "Cabinet" meeting of 16th October (which set the ball rolling for the proposed destruction of The Public) it is said that "a full options appraisal in May 2012 concluded that a reduction in subsidy of between £250K and £400K was feasible? Was this the JLL report view or something else? It looks round about the right time but we don't know - it is all being kept secret.
The Freedom of Information provisions and lists of payments made by councils were obviously intended to provide a limited amount of public scrutiny of procurement processes but SMBC seem to want to drive a coach and horses through these pitifully limited provisions since in the FOI reply to UKIP Sandwell they have laughably alleged that disclosure of the tendering process, fees etc would also prejudice JLL! They claim the information may be used by JLL's competitors and also discourage them from entering future competitive tendering processes. Now £39,000 is a lot of money in the poverty ghetto of Sandwell but it is a spit in a bucket to the world's second largest property agency!
The mainstream media do not seem interested in the reasons why these reports are being kept secret? Maybe the secrecy is because they are of no use and the money has been wasted? Maybe they recommend a course of action that would require SMBC to apply for planning permission when the public would have the opportunity to be heard. Did they recommend any commercial use for the building? Did they deal with the now notorious suggestion that the arts centre should be shut so as to accomodate a wedding venue (this being an iconic £70m publicly-funded building). We don't know - it is all secret.
On Twitter Cllr Cooper, the "leader" of SMBC (@sandwellleader), tweeted on 13th October, 2013, "The so-called JLL report (sic). I want it out there it adds further evidence to my case. It will be in the public domain next week." but then said disclosure will not be made and that this is not a matter for politicians (!) but a decision for Council officials (although the latter are seemingly determined to prevent disclosure even in the face of the UKIP FOI request).
Coda:
This year SMBC commissioned further work from the inexpensive JLL (the world's second largest property agency) for an unknown matter but which may or may not be something to do with the small suite of old offices at the back of West Bromwich Town Hall where some of the tenants from The Public are being "re-located" by SMBC. The fees were two payments of £9,500 (ex VAT) on 1st May, 2013 and £2,000 on 3rd June, 2013 totalling a mere £11,500 (ex VAT).We have no details yet of what these fees are for and whether there was "an invitation to tender" and once again it has been UKIP Sandwell who have taken up the cudgels and put in another FOI request to force disclosure of the facts.
Finally there is yet another further mystery payment to JLL from the Strategic Finance Budget on 26th September, 2013 of £1,677.80. Could this be anything to do with The Public? Again we await a FOI reply via UKIP Sandwell.
And so in a short period of time SMBC has paid £52,177.80 (ex VAT) to JLL. The results have not, so far, been placed in the public domain.
Indeed, nice work if you can get it!
Contact - thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
In or around Spring 2012 the "Cabinet" of SMBC decided to hire expensive consultants to provide a report on the future "viability" of The Public. (When the truth finally emerges it will be interesting to know if Sandwell College were already sniffing around the building but that will have to wait until another day).
SMBC say that there was "an invitation to quote" but it is not clear how many firms were approached and what figures were provided. That is still a secret. Messrs Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), who have an office in Birmingham but who claim to be the second largest property agents in the world and who are listed on the New York Stock Exchange "won" the contract but we don't know how much they quoted. That is still a secret. We do know they were paid £20,000 (ex VAT ) on 10th May, 2012 which is interesting. Did JLL get the job because they quoted £20,000 only? The significance of this being that they then received two further payments ie £6,000 (ex VAT) on 20th August, 2012 and £10,000 (ex VAT) on 13th September, 2012 making a VERY GRAND total of £39,000 (ex VAT) which is almost DOUBLE the first part of the fee. Did they quote £39,000 payable by instalments (if so,why?) or did they quote £20,000 and SMBC let the project run out of hand so that it cost nearly double the original quote? If the latter was there was any sort of re-tendering process? All this is,of course, still a secret.
And what did the folk of Sandwell get for THEIR £39,000? You guessed it - that is still a secret. Thanks to a Freedom of Information Act (FOI) enquiry by UKIP Sandwell we now know that JLL prepared reports (plural) but despite the passage of some 18 months and the FOI enquiry SMBC are refusing to disclose them. Up until two-months ago they had not even been disclosed to non-Labour COUNCILLORS ie elected representatives. SMBC acknowledge the reports are not concerned with the (secret) "deal" with The College (why not if it is such a brilliant wheeze?) but say that disclosure would cause prejudice to SMBC's commercial interests. Yet in paragraph 6.8 of the agenda for the 17 minute-long "Cabinet" meeting of 16th October (which set the ball rolling for the proposed destruction of The Public) it is said that "a full options appraisal in May 2012 concluded that a reduction in subsidy of between £250K and £400K was feasible? Was this the JLL report view or something else? It looks round about the right time but we don't know - it is all being kept secret.
The Freedom of Information provisions and lists of payments made by councils were obviously intended to provide a limited amount of public scrutiny of procurement processes but SMBC seem to want to drive a coach and horses through these pitifully limited provisions since in the FOI reply to UKIP Sandwell they have laughably alleged that disclosure of the tendering process, fees etc would also prejudice JLL! They claim the information may be used by JLL's competitors and also discourage them from entering future competitive tendering processes. Now £39,000 is a lot of money in the poverty ghetto of Sandwell but it is a spit in a bucket to the world's second largest property agency!
The mainstream media do not seem interested in the reasons why these reports are being kept secret? Maybe the secrecy is because they are of no use and the money has been wasted? Maybe they recommend a course of action that would require SMBC to apply for planning permission when the public would have the opportunity to be heard. Did they recommend any commercial use for the building? Did they deal with the now notorious suggestion that the arts centre should be shut so as to accomodate a wedding venue (this being an iconic £70m publicly-funded building). We don't know - it is all secret.
On Twitter Cllr Cooper, the "leader" of SMBC (@sandwellleader), tweeted on 13th October, 2013, "The so-called JLL report (sic). I want it out there it adds further evidence to my case. It will be in the public domain next week." but then said disclosure will not be made and that this is not a matter for politicians (!) but a decision for Council officials (although the latter are seemingly determined to prevent disclosure even in the face of the UKIP FOI request).
Coda:
This year SMBC commissioned further work from the inexpensive JLL (the world's second largest property agency) for an unknown matter but which may or may not be something to do with the small suite of old offices at the back of West Bromwich Town Hall where some of the tenants from The Public are being "re-located" by SMBC. The fees were two payments of £9,500 (ex VAT) on 1st May, 2013 and £2,000 on 3rd June, 2013 totalling a mere £11,500 (ex VAT).We have no details yet of what these fees are for and whether there was "an invitation to tender" and once again it has been UKIP Sandwell who have taken up the cudgels and put in another FOI request to force disclosure of the facts.
Finally there is yet another further mystery payment to JLL from the Strategic Finance Budget on 26th September, 2013 of £1,677.80. Could this be anything to do with The Public? Again we await a FOI reply via UKIP Sandwell.
And so in a short period of time SMBC has paid £52,177.80 (ex VAT) to JLL. The results have not, so far, been placed in the public domain.
Indeed, nice work if you can get it!
Contact - thesandwellskidder@gmail.com
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
College "Deal" - possible Judicial Review
As many readers will know, some of us campaigners have been questioning the legality of Sandwell MBC subsidising Sandwell College and also the level of cost involved in vandalising a beautiful tax-payer-funded iconic building, The Public. Both SMBC and SC have chosen to keep all but the barest details secret but suffice to say here, that SC is not part of SMBC but a completely independent party funded by central government and it would appear that SMBC has chosen to deal with SC to the exclusion of all others. Further, SMBC has disapplied its own procurement rules to award the contract for the destruction to Sandwell Futures Limited, a Company in which it has a shareholding - again to the exclusion of all others.
Like many others, I consider The Public to be a work of art in itself and a tremendous asset to West Bromwich. Despite press releases to the effect that there will be some general arts provision in the building and some public access, all the indications are that this is "spin" - it is apparently already planned to rip out the bottom part of the ramp, the theatre etc and the public (who paid handsomely for this building) will be excluded from most of the building bar the reception and cafe.Quite frankly, when the building has been wrecked as apparently planned it will have lost its aesthetic integrity in any event.
Many who have read my twitter feed @bcrover will now that some of us have consulted lawyers regarding all this (and in respect of the fact that SMBC claim they do not need planning permission to rip the heart out of this major public building).
We have had discussions with leading public law lawyers, Leigh Day & Co who are based in London about seeking a Judicial Review of the decisions being made by SMBC AND the College who are also tax-payer funded. Leigh Day have an excellent reputation. Regretably it is now very difficult to get Legal Aid for this type of thing and so Leigh Day wish to instruct a barrister to advise on the prospects of bringing a case. Of course, if the decision in unfavourable that is the end of the matter from the legal point of view and our group will just have to continue to expose the true costs involved as they become known. In effect the £1,800 will have been wasted. If the barrister advises favourably, Leigh Day will then consider a conditional fee agreement - what is popularly known as a "no win, no fee agreement - to bring a case which will provide protection against any adverse costs orders in any court action.
We have a quote from Leigh Day of £1,500 plus Vat ie £1,800 to get the barrister's opinion and our group is asking here if you can help fund this through one of the options set out below. This has now all become very urgent as SMBC grab back the building on 29th November. We are having final discussions with Leigh Day on Friday but need to start getting the funding in place as a matter of urgency (we have had a number of pledges of support). We propose the following:
(1) If you want to get involved please send a cheque for £5 or multiples thereof (whatever you can afford) made payable to "Leigh Day & Co" to the address below. Please write your name and address on the back of the cheque and also supply an e-mail address. Watch @bcrover on twitter and this blog for further info. If you require a receipt please supply a sae.
(2) If you wish to remain anonymous please just send a cheque payable to "Leigh Day & Co" (minimum £5) without an address on the back.
IT IS VITAL that you understand that there is a VERY SUBSTANTIAL risk that you will not recover your payment even if the case is ultimately successful. We are only funding a Counsel's Opinion here and not the legal action which will either be no win, no fee or not at all unless one of us wins the EuroMillions. There is a distant possibility of these costs being included in the legal costs IF the case is ultimately won and in that case, you will be re-paid pro-rata depending on the figure recovered. Anonymous donations will be repaid pro-rata to a local arts based-charity to be decided in due course.
We intend to call this campaign "In The Public Domain" and any twitter from me about this will start ITPD. As this matter is very urgent a couple of benefactors have offered to lend sums to the campaign to pay the legal fees on the basis they will be repaid as payments come in (although they also propose to make donations to the cause as well).
If you send a cheque and, for any reason, the decision on Friday is not to go ahead I will shred all cheques and advise via twitter and this blog. It will have just cost you a stamp. Sorry to do this via old fashioned methods but there are technical difficulties in setting up accounts etc to deal with this and we are just talking about a one-off fee anyway. If you have any queries, please follow on twitter and send DM or comment on this blog. Thanks for taking the time to read this.
To start the ball rolling I am chipping in £300.
MAKE CHEQUES PAYABLE TO "LEIGH DAY & CO"
POST TO: VERNON GRANT, BOX 374, 27 COLMORE ROW, BIRMINGHAM B3 2EW
Like many others, I consider The Public to be a work of art in itself and a tremendous asset to West Bromwich. Despite press releases to the effect that there will be some general arts provision in the building and some public access, all the indications are that this is "spin" - it is apparently already planned to rip out the bottom part of the ramp, the theatre etc and the public (who paid handsomely for this building) will be excluded from most of the building bar the reception and cafe.Quite frankly, when the building has been wrecked as apparently planned it will have lost its aesthetic integrity in any event.
Many who have read my twitter feed @bcrover will now that some of us have consulted lawyers regarding all this (and in respect of the fact that SMBC claim they do not need planning permission to rip the heart out of this major public building).
We have had discussions with leading public law lawyers, Leigh Day & Co who are based in London about seeking a Judicial Review of the decisions being made by SMBC AND the College who are also tax-payer funded. Leigh Day have an excellent reputation. Regretably it is now very difficult to get Legal Aid for this type of thing and so Leigh Day wish to instruct a barrister to advise on the prospects of bringing a case. Of course, if the decision in unfavourable that is the end of the matter from the legal point of view and our group will just have to continue to expose the true costs involved as they become known. In effect the £1,800 will have been wasted. If the barrister advises favourably, Leigh Day will then consider a conditional fee agreement - what is popularly known as a "no win, no fee agreement - to bring a case which will provide protection against any adverse costs orders in any court action.
We have a quote from Leigh Day of £1,500 plus Vat ie £1,800 to get the barrister's opinion and our group is asking here if you can help fund this through one of the options set out below. This has now all become very urgent as SMBC grab back the building on 29th November. We are having final discussions with Leigh Day on Friday but need to start getting the funding in place as a matter of urgency (we have had a number of pledges of support). We propose the following:
(1) If you want to get involved please send a cheque for £5 or multiples thereof (whatever you can afford) made payable to "Leigh Day & Co" to the address below. Please write your name and address on the back of the cheque and also supply an e-mail address. Watch @bcrover on twitter and this blog for further info. If you require a receipt please supply a sae.
(2) If you wish to remain anonymous please just send a cheque payable to "Leigh Day & Co" (minimum £5) without an address on the back.
IT IS VITAL that you understand that there is a VERY SUBSTANTIAL risk that you will not recover your payment even if the case is ultimately successful. We are only funding a Counsel's Opinion here and not the legal action which will either be no win, no fee or not at all unless one of us wins the EuroMillions. There is a distant possibility of these costs being included in the legal costs IF the case is ultimately won and in that case, you will be re-paid pro-rata depending on the figure recovered. Anonymous donations will be repaid pro-rata to a local arts based-charity to be decided in due course.
We intend to call this campaign "In The Public Domain" and any twitter from me about this will start ITPD. As this matter is very urgent a couple of benefactors have offered to lend sums to the campaign to pay the legal fees on the basis they will be repaid as payments come in (although they also propose to make donations to the cause as well).
If you send a cheque and, for any reason, the decision on Friday is not to go ahead I will shred all cheques and advise via twitter and this blog. It will have just cost you a stamp. Sorry to do this via old fashioned methods but there are technical difficulties in setting up accounts etc to deal with this and we are just talking about a one-off fee anyway. If you have any queries, please follow on twitter and send DM or comment on this blog. Thanks for taking the time to read this.
To start the ball rolling I am chipping in £300.
MAKE CHEQUES PAYABLE TO "LEIGH DAY & CO"
POST TO: VERNON GRANT, BOX 374, 27 COLMORE ROW, BIRMINGHAM B3 2EW