HL Deb 25 July 2000 vol 616 cc47-9WA
Lord Haskel

asked Her Majesty's Government:

What progress is being made regarding the restructuring of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food's regional activities. [HL3556]

Baroness Hayman

The Government have decided to make a number of important changes to the way the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food operates in the regions in order to improve the services we offer to farmers and to strengthen the contribution we make to the wider rural economy. We will participate fully in the Government Offices for the Regions, strengthening MAFF's regional policy capability. We will set up new organisational structures to enhance the delivery of rural development polices. And we will invest up to £130 million over the next spending period to modernise the way we administer CAP schemes, taking full advantage of the benefits of electronic service delivery.

We have given careful consideration to the findings of a detailed study of methods of delivering CAP payments, submitted at the beginning of this year by PricewaterhouseCoopers. We have concluded that the interests of farmers, traders and taxpayers would best be served by the creation of a new CAP Payments Agency, merging the paying agency functions of MAFF's nine Regional Service Centres and the Intervention Board to provide top quality customer service using modern electronic systems. Farmers and traders will benefit from a reduction in "red tape" and more efficient and rapid processing of payments, with the achievement of 95 per cent electronic service delivery capability by March 2004. There will be significant benefits for taxpayers, with a 10 per cent cut by March 2004 in unit costs of administering payments and further savings in subsequent years after the new agency is fully established.

We have written to the main organisations representing farmers and traders to explain how the agency will work, and to seek their views on the best ways of ensuring a smooth transition to the new arrangements. We will work very closely with our customers to help them reap the benefits which electronic service delivery offers. However, we recognise that many farmers are apprehensive about changes in the way their claims are handled and we will maintain arrangements for face-to-face local contacts with farmers, at least until the new IT systems are fully operational and everyone has easy local access to the Internet.

The agency will be constituted as an executive agency of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, and will therefore be answerable to its Minister. It will continue to administer the schemes currently operated by the Intervention Board in all parts of the UK, and the devolved administrations will therefore be represented on its Ownership Board. It will operate from five sites, with its headquarters at Reading and other sites at Carlisle, Exeter, Newcastle and Northallerton. The work that will transfer to the new agency currently accounts for some 80 per cent of the 2,000 staff in the Regional Service Centres and nearly all the Intervention Board's 1,350 staff. By the time the new systems are fully operational (2004), we estimate that the total number of staff required will fall to around 1,950. We will make every effort to find suitable alternative employment for staff who are no longer required as a result of the modernisation programme.

We have also been reviewing other aspects of MAFF's organisation in the regions in the light of the Modernising Government initiative and the recent PIU reports Rural Economies and Reaching Out. It is now right to establish greater integration of MAFF's strategic and policy activities in the regions with Government Offices. We are therefore preparing to provide a senior member of MAFF staff, with appropriate support, to join each Government Office. This will help to strengthen the rural capability of the Government Offices and improve their links with the MAFF. And it will foster closer relationships with regional stakeholders, including the agriculture, fisheries and food industries, and their representatives, regional institutions such as the Regional Development Agencies, and representatives of rural and environmental interests.

Parallel to the integration with Government Offices, we have decided to restructure the work currently carried out in the Farming and Rural Conservation Agency (FRCA) and the non-CAP payment functions of the Regional Service Centres. We will create a single, nationally managed but largely regionally based service to carry out this work. The service will be set up so that it relates effectively to Government Offices. Its staff will be located throughout England and will continue to provide a local service on the ERDP schemes.

We will build on the considerable skills of staff in FRCA and the Regional Service Centres to create the new service as a centre of excellence for the delivery of rural development policies and programmes, particularly one of MAFF's flagship policies—the England Rural Development Programme (ERDP). It will provide continuing employment opportunities for some staff at the RCSs which are not to be CAPPA sites (Bristol, Cambridge, Crewe, Nottingham and Worcester) as well as for FRCA staff.

We would expect to review these organisational arrangements in 2003 at the end of the mid-point review of the ERDP, and to consider at that stage whether further integration with the Government Offices would be sensible.

The decision to implement this comprehensive programme of changes is a further element in MAFF's commitment to delivering efficient and responsive modern public services. The new CAP Payments Agency will ensure that service standards to farmers and traders are second to none. And agriculture and the wider rural economy will benefit through the strengthening of MAFF's regional policy presence.

We recognise that these decisions will create considerable uncertainty for staff in MAFF's Regional Service Centres and at the Intervention Board who have worked hard to provide good services to their customers. We have met the trade unions to discuss the position, and to assure them that we are committed to ensuring that everyone is treated fairly and sensitively as we take the change programme forward.

Regional Service Centre (RSC) Counties covered by RSC IACS Declarations IACS and ESA inspections (1998–99)1 Penalties & recoveries > 4,000 ecus2 Amounts recovered (£)3
England All counties 76,469 24,173 249 1,538,866
Anglia (Cambridge) Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Hertfordshire, Norfolk, Suffolk 10,140 1,318 14 105,846
East Midlands (Nottingham) Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire 9,505 2,403 39 209,416
North East (Northallerton) Cleveland, Durham, Humberside, Yorkshire 11,506 4,036 54 296,800
Northern (Carlisle) Cumbria, Lancashire, Northumberland, Tyne & Wear 8,390 3,883 32 171,005
North Mercia (Crewe) Cheshire, Merseyside, Greater Manchester, Shropshire, Staffordshire 7,344 2,438 30 130,830
South East (Reading) Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Kent, Greater London, Oxfordshire, Surrey, Sussex 7,484 1,960 99 99,058
South Mercia (Worcester) Herefordshire. Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Warwickshire, West Midlands 6,160 2,187 34 292,365
South West (Exeter) Devon, Cornwall, Isle of Scilly 9,579 3,908 23 86,577
Wessex (Bristol) Avon, Dorset, Somerset, Wiltshire 6,361 2,040 15 146,969
1 Includes inspections of area and livestock aid claims submitted under IACs, as well as inspections of claims under the Environmentally Sensitive Areas (ESA) scheme.
2 The figures include penalties and recoveries corresponding to claims for area and livestock aid under IACs and under agri-environment schemes. No figures are available for penalties and recoveries worth less than 4,000 ecus i.e. less than £2,667.82 in 1998 (1 ecu = £0.666954).
3 The amounts shown correspond to the penalties and recoveries worth more than 4,000 ecus.