Campaign to abolish retentions finally lost
The government has decided that retentions will definitely not be
scrapped following last week's trade and industry select committee
evidence session.The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) and the
Department of Trade & Industry (DTI) had been called back to
the committee to give "more detail" following what the committee's
chairman Martin O'Neill described as a "disappointing" response to
its report on retentions earlier this year (CJ 12 March).During the
45-minute hearing, officials from both departments argued that
larger divisions such as Defence Estates and the Highways Agency
were abandoning the use of retentions.But, Mark Gibson, director
general of the business group at the DTI countered: "Big name
departments are making great strides considering Egan principles
were only introduced in 1999. The industry also has a key role to
play in giving client confidence in producing defect-free
work.""And many smaller departments have inexperienced procurement
teams which rely on retentions to give them confidence."O'Neill
quizzed the officials on why one of the government's largest
departments, the Home Office, was still holding retentions valued
at thousands of pounds against demolition contractor Brown and
Mason as work nears completion on the £311m Marsham Street
project."It seems ludicrous that you talk about retentions being
linked to defect free work when monies are held from a demolition
contractor until much later on in the project," said O'Neill.OGC
deputy chief executive John Oughton replied that this was an issue
and vowed that the department would get to the root of the
problem.Asked when occasional clients would no longer use
retentions as they improve on best practice, both officials were
unable to give a timescale.However, Gibson said he hoped that
retentions would no longer be an issue when the industry reaches
the OGC's Achieving Excellence 2005 target for 70% of work to be
defect free and delivered on time and budget."We hope to see a
transition away from retentions," said Gibson. "The target is a
challenging one considering the industry is currently delivering
11% of projects with defects."Both departments maintained their
position to ignore the Specialist Engineering Contractors' Group
target of 2007 to phase out retentions altogether, while Oughton
pledged that the OGC would provide evidence, currently unavailable,
of retention use by departments.The committee is expected to
announce its response to the evidence session after the summer
recess. A short report will be published in September.