The cheer the constructon industry got from the release of the list of the 261 schools to be included in the Priority Schools 好色先生TV Programme has been tempered by uncertainty about how the initiative will actually work
So, the wait is over - or is it? Almost two years after education secretary Michael Gove called a halt to the 拢55bn 好色先生TV Schools for the Future programme, last Thursday he released a list of 261 projects to be included in the government鈥檚 replacement initiative, the Priority Schools 好色先生TV Programme.
The long delay which preceded the announcement - originally due in December last year - is evidence of the importance attached to the initiative. Funding available for the programme is a fraction of that of BSF, and 587 applications were made by schools claiming they were in desperate need of repair or rebuilding. In the end surveyors working on behalf of the government were forced to visit every school which had made an eligible application to verify their assessment of building condition.
Announcing the funding, Gove acknowledged in stark terms the crisis facing some of England鈥檚 school buildings, saying: 鈥淭he condition need of some schools is so severe that urgent action is necessary.鈥 To meet this need, amid continuing uncertainty over the future of PFI, which was to be the sole funding route for the scheme, Gove has released 拢400m of direct capital funding, on top of the planned 拢2bn PFI funds, to enable the first wave of 42 schools (including 18 special schools) to get under way.
For those schools to be open in 2014, the Education Funding Agency needs to act really quickly
This fast-tracking, and the publication of the list itself, has been welcomed not only by the schools due to benefit from funding, but also by an industry that has experienced a long hiatus in school building work. But behind the headlines, there is concern that the programme is still light on detail, which, if it is not provided swiftly, could jeopardise the ability of the industry to deliver the 鈥渦rgent action鈥 Gove is calling for.
Nusrat Faizullah, chief executive of the British Council for School Environments, said: 鈥淲e are happy money is being released, and that there is some fast tracking of projects. But the industry now needs more transparency about how the programme will work.鈥
Philip Watson, design director and head of education at Atkins, echoed the call for clarity: 鈥淔or those schools to be open in 2014, the Education Funding Agency needs to act really quickly. They need to be clear about how they鈥檙e procuring the work, what the budgets are and where they鈥檙e batching schemes, so that the industry can understand what鈥檚 needed and be prepared to deliver.鈥
So, exactly how much is known about the new programme - and what are the issues still causing concern?
How the schools will be procured
The first wave of schools - those with capital funding - will be procured through the existing contractors鈥 framework set up by Partnerships for Schools and now managed by the Education Funding Agency. This includes the 18 special schools to receive capital funding. Procurement for these projects will begin 鈥渢his year鈥, according to the DfE, with the first schools due for completion in 2014.
The remaining 219 schools will be PFI projects, and will be procured through new arrangements. Details of these arrangements have not been finalised, and are expected to take some time to emerge: Michael Gove has said the DfE is 鈥渨orking closely with the Treasury to ensure the PSBP is aligned鈥 with the wider government review of PFI, which is still ongoing. The PFI projects will be 鈥渂atched鈥, with groups of schools being procured together under one contract. This is also likely to be the case for the initial capital-funded projects; however, officials are still considering alternative options. A DfE spokesperson said: 鈥淲e are assessing the different options for delivery of these schools. We expect that batching will drive value for money for the public purse.鈥
The decision on which schools will be batched together will take into account a number of factors 鈥渋ncluding condition, geography and commercial attractiveness,鈥 according to the DfE. However, Atkins鈥 Watson says that much of the efficiency of the programme will depend on how schools are batched. 鈥淚f you have different types of schools - secondary, primary and special educational needs - grouped together, it鈥檚 harder to see how they鈥檙e going to realise savings through standardisation without sufficient volume.鈥
Will the projects have to use standardised designs?
The Education Funding Agency is stopping short of prescribing full standardised school designs, but is preparing a 鈥渂aseline design information pack鈥 which will include suggested room layouts, area guidance and 1:200 floor plans. The document is still at draft stage; however, the DfE spokesperson said the information pack 鈥渨ould be shared with schools before procurement starts, and bidders will also be given any feedback we have received from the schools.鈥
In practice, however, the kind of cost savings envisaged by the government are likely to be driven by standardised designs. This is the logic behind procuring schools in batches, which would enable winning bidders to adopt standardised methods across schools in the group.
How much will the schemes be worth?
Up to 拢400m is available for the 42 schools that are receiving capital funding, although individual allocations have not yet been set. In total, there is 拢2.4bn earmarked for 261 projects, which if it were to be split equally would work out at just under 拢10m per school. However, Gove鈥檚 announcement said that schools would be 鈥渞ebuilt or have their condition needs met鈥, suggesting that some schools could have significantly larger projects than others.
The Education Funding Agency has yet to announce how many schools will be in each batch, but one source said firms were expecting each wave of the programme would include around five batches of schools, with around eight or nine schools in each, and packages worth in the region of 拢80m. However, officials working on the PFI contracts are opposed to telling bidders a target cost of schemes, and are understood to be planning not to publish an indication of the unitary charge firms would be able to charge clients. The move is an attempt to drive down the cost of schemes, but has been criticised for its potential to discourage consideration of the whole life value of projects when bidders are selected. Steve Beechey, head of education at Wates, says: 鈥淚t is essential that bids are still evaluated on the basis of best value; measuring on price alone would be a retrograde step and would not make best possible use of the funding.鈥
What will happen to the schools that missed out?
There were 326 schools that applied for inclusion in the Priority Schools 好色先生TV Programme that missed out. Gove has said that 鈥渟ome of these will have their needs addressed through other funding [鈥 for maintenance鈥, for which the government has allocated 拢2.8bn over the past two years. Maintenance allocations continue to be made on an annual basis.
Schools that still require improvement work will be prioritised on the basis of the results from surveys of the condition of the school estate being undertaken by consultants Capita Symonds, Davis Langdon and EC Harris on behalf of the Education Funding Agency.
However, these projects will not be taken forward until the next comprehensive spending review period, starting in 2015. Schools may be able to carry out work further by exploring alternative forms of funding, such as using local asset-backed vehicles.
No comments yet