Opinion: Carillion legacy must be pay and procurement reform

Grant Prior 7 years ago
Share

Whenever construction hits the national headlines it’s seldom good news.

Enough analysis has been written about the demise of Carillion so now it’s time to take things forward with a few fundamental changes needed in our industry.

The first is fair payment for firms who actually carry out construction work.

Subcontractors are the backbone of the industry yet they are regularly shafted by the major players.

Everyone knows who the bad payers are – and they can’t be allowed to get away with it any more.

Carillion were infamous for years and look how that ended up.

Construction has failed to regulate itself despite lots of good intentions and discussions which ended up as just that – all talk.

The end result is always the same – main contractors and clients stop short of guaranteeing to pay on time.

So specialists are faced with a regular fight for cash as bills still go unpaid for months.

In effect the trade contractors are financing their employers who hold onto cash owed by them.

It’s a rotten system and totally dysfunctional.

The government needs to act immediately to bring in legal limits on payment terms.

The hated retentions system must also be reformed and eventually removed.

While they still hang around retentions must be put into a ring-fenced account to protect suppliers from another Carillion where their money goes down the plughole with the main contractor.

Opening up public contracts to a wider pool of firms is also an obvious move.

Using the same old faces creates complacency rather than the increased competition required to drive innovation.

Civil servants are also culpable for lazily handing out work to familiar names while whole tiers of suppliers are chomping at the bit to win government work and show what they can do.

None of this is ground-breaking. It’s basic stuff which should have been done years ago.

If it takes the collapse of Carillion to finally see a payment and procurement revolution then that will be a positive legacy from a very sad situation.

Latest news

Over £600m awarded for decarbonisation projects – full lists

Over 240 public building energy upgrade projects secure cash
12 hours ago

Ridge buys rival consultant Jubb

Acquisition will see 100 new staff join Ridge
22 hours ago

Enabling works to start on £130m Huyton town centre regen

Phase one includes a new council HQ, hotel and 72 flats
22 hours ago

Grainger build to rent pipeline rises to £1.4bn

Rental specialist buys sites in Sheffield and Cardiff to build 600 rental homes
22 hours ago

Kier wins Cambridgeshire County council estate upkeep

Firm will provide building and M&E services to 106 buildings across the county
21 hours ago

Louvres and solar shading specialist files for administration

Hampshire based ALPS lodges court notice after 25 years in business
22 hours ago

Speedy Hire posts a loss in latest results

Hire giant confident of better performance in next six months
22 hours ago

Esh to lead next phase of Riverside Sunderland regeneration

Infrastructure work will allow further development of Sheepfolds area
21 hours ago

Green light for £1.3bn Edinburgh coastal town revamp

First phase of Granton Waterfront scheme will see Cruden Homes create a new community
2 days ago

Vistry chief operating officer steps down

Earl Sibley exits as his COO role axed for more direct reporting to CEO
2 days ago

House builder Camstead goes into administration

Work stopped on three current sites
3 days ago

Death of piling legend Roger Bullivant

Industry innovator dies after long illness aged 85
2 days ago

ESS Modular went down owing suppliers £7m

Modular specialist owned by ISG owner Cathexis
2 days ago

Builders back farmers in inheritance tax protest

"A rethink is desperately needed" say National Federation of Builders
2 days ago

Willmott Dixon wins £36m leisure centre upgrade

Work to start on historic Westminster 1930s Grade II listed Seymour Centre
2 days ago

Graham wins £100m Cardiff Crossrail phase 1

Work on route to Cardiff Bay to start before end of next year
3 days ago

Laing O’Rourke appoints new European MD

Peter Lyons to take-up new role in February
4 days ago

Profits dip at Stepnell ahead of demerger

Turnover and secured workloads up ahead of restructure
4 days ago

HS2 green bridge deck takes shape

100m-wide wildlife bridge to carry hedgerows and country lane over HS2
3 days ago

1,000-home Wolverhampton city centre scheme in for planning

ECF and council advance City Centre West build to rent scheme
4 days ago

Sisk clinches £54m North London council HQ revamp

Haringey's iconic Grade II listed civic centre to be brought back into use
4 days ago

Ofgem approves £2.5bn Eastern Green Link 1

Work to start next Spring on cable project from Scotland to the north of England
4 days ago

Anglian Water hunts for £1bn delivery partner

Programme delivery partner wil integrate with client team over 15-year plan
4 days ago

Hadden collapse costs supply chain £6.7m

"Highly unlikely" subcontractors will receive anything for their unpaid invoices
4 days ago

Management buyout at M&E specialist

£25m turnover Kimpton in second MBO in its 60-year history
4 days ago

BAM finalises £71m deal to replace first major RAAC school

Work to start on new St Leonards Catholic School in Durham
4 days ago

Scaffolder hit by two tonne weight at nuclear plant

Court hands out £633,000 in fines after Dungeness B decommissioning incident
4 days ago

Go-ahead for 860,000 sq ft East London medical campus

Whitechapel Road scheme of six new and repurposed buildings
4 days ago

Site labour rates hit record high as cost inflation returns

Industry's biggest payroll firm says rates rose nearly 5% last month in London
7 days ago

Morris & Spottiswood acquires part of ISG fit-out division

ISG Cathedral acquisition saves 111 jobs and expands presence across England
1 week ago

Contractor services