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Buy Welsh - action not words.

As discussed below, public procurement has finally become a key government priority.

For those who are interested in reading up on this, then this blog has a number of entries on this subject over the last couple of years:
I have also written extensively on this pre-blogging (for example, in the Daily Post in 2004 and 2002).

It would be easy to to say "I told you so" but clearly government in Wales moves at its own pace and listens to those closest to it.

The important thing is that the First Minister has finally recognised the problem, although despite the warm words towards finally doing something positive on this issue, it would seem that public sector bodies continue to ignore local suppliers.

As an article in the Daily Post points out today, pupils on Anglesey are being served up foreign meat by private contractors brought in to provide the school dinner service. If this is going on in one local authority, what about the other 21 councils, the NHS, universities, local colleges and the Welsh Assembly Government itself.

Over the last week, we have heard yet more political rhetoric over public procurement in Wales but now is the time for action not words.

The first thing the Assembly should do is to ask every local body to give a list of all the contracts they manage so they can get a handle on the situation. After that, they should find imaginative ways of ensuring that local firms are given priority for the supply of goods and services. Utilising a 'food miles'or local sustainability clause in the marking criteria for contracts would be one way to do this.

Finally, they should call a meeting of all the procurement managers within the public sector and get them on board as there is a suspicion amongst local firms that the people who actually make the decision on awarding contracts simply don't understand the scale of the problem and the need for flexibility in supporting local businesses.

Comments

Anonymous said…
There is a distinct whiff of hypocrisy in the air. On the one hand we have the CBI, who have kissing the politicians' backsides for the last decade and whose director is desperate for a job in the Assembly. On the other side you have the TUC whose new general secretary was advising WAG on the economy until May 2007 and did not implement any of the things he is now suggesting. As usual this is more about personal self-advancement and the old boys' network rather than the economy of Wales. A disaster waiting to happen and it has.
Anonymous said…
Dylan said.....

"After that, they should find imaginative ways of ensuring that local firms are given priority for the supply of goods and services."

Mr. Bone the Butcher says....

As a Meat Purveyor of many years standing, I would simply state that the most 'imaginitive' way of ensuring priority for the use of local firms is a lower cost price.

As a businessman I have found that locally supplied meat is frequently over-priced with an over-emphasis on its 'local' origins. As a matter of interest, what exactly is local?

I have frequently purchased large quantities of meat from Southern Ireland which, in terms of mileage, is produced closer to my premises than so-called 'local' produce.

The final arbiter of this debate is the customer and consumer. The vast majority of my customers are more concerned with the product's price and quality rather than it's 'local' origin.

Of course, there are some customers who insist on 'locally' produced meat but they are in a vast minority and are prepared to pay a premium for this service. Most of my customers are not.
Anonymous said…
Dylan - be careful. I don't think that this guy is genuine. Surely, Mr Bone would be in his shop on a busy Saturday afternoon and not surfing the net. Also, when's the last time you heard a good to honest butcher talk about consumers. This seems like an effort to undemine your valid arguments about local produce. Watch your back - Labour trolls are at work again.
Anonymous said…
the watcher "I don't think that this guy is genuine."

No shit sherlock!
Anonymous said…
Ok so how am I better off then, they are looking into procurement. Thats a laugh, work goes to the honoured few , no matter how much procurement shit they talk.
What about some one independant handling the procurement
Welshwalker said…
To me this whole issue is exemplified by the actions of Ceredigion County Council giving the contract for their 2008 calendar to a firm in Lancashire when I know for a fact that there are at least four, more than competent, local printing companies within a 25 mile radius of Cardigan (eg.Gwasg Gomer). To add insult to injury this calendar , which was issued to every household in Ceredigion (why do they need to do that anyway?) omitted the only Saints Day of importance to Wales - St.David's Day but included every other Saints Day including the most obscure.
This may be a small job but it just typifies the entrenched attitudes and incompetence within most local authorities. This has to change.
Anonymous said…
can't find those original articles in the Daily Post - any examples?

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