HC Deb 01 April 1998 vol 309 c552W
Mr. Rapson

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement about Defence Agency status for the Defence Communications Service. [37665]

Dr. Reid

On 1 April 1998 the Defence Communication Services Agency (DCSA) will be established as a Defence Agency. The DCSA will be responsible for the provision of end to end wide area information transfer services to meet defence needs. It will enable the MOD's requirements for national and international information transfer services to be focused on one primary provider. The DCSA's Chief Executive will be Major General A. J. Raper CBE and its headquarters will be at Corsham, Wiltshire. The Agency will employ 899 military and 618 civilian staff at locations in the UK and Germany.

The creation of the Agency will improve defence communications by focusing on the delivery of customer services rather than simply communication systems. It will also offer scope for rationalisation and provide a clear line of accountability for service delivery. The DCSA's aim will be To provide its customers with the optimum end to end wide area information services to meet defence needs".

The Chief Executive has been set the following Key Targets for the first year of operation:

  1. 1.To deliver communication services which achieve 100 per cent. of the systems output performance standards specified in the Baseline Service Document.
  2. 2.To introduce a process by December 1998 for measuring the delivery of information services, assessing their effectiveness by surveying customer satisfaction and develop the criteria for establishing an output service efficiency Baseline in both areas.
  3. 3.To plan the means of meeting customers' future requirements through the preparation of a Business Development Programme by March 1999.
  4. 4.To achieve 2 per cent. cost savings through efficiency measures and seek to improve further the value for money of delivered services through the preparation of a Management and Efficiency Programme by March 1999 which plans for rationalisation, re-investment and savings following reviews of:
    • inherited responsibilities and resources;
    • business unit boundaries;
    • Agency wide business processes;
  5. and takes account of outcomes from the Strategic Defence Review.

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