LSC admits none of the 144 schemes on hold will be kickstarted by April programme review

All of the 144 stalled projects on the government鈥檚 拢2.3产苍 colleges programme will be on hold until at least September.


Mark Haysom
鈥楽ir Andrew Foster鈥檚 review will, i鈥檓 sure, confirm what i now know 鈥 that there have been failures in the way that the lsc has managed the programme鈥

Mark Haysom, departed LSC chief executive


Officials from the Learning and Skills Council (LSC) have told industry figures that even if the government puts more funds into the initiative, no schemes will receive them for another six months. About 40,000 jobs are now at risk, as many firms will be forced to stand down their supply chains.

The news emerged after the resignation of Mark Haysom, chief executive of the LSC, on Monday. He has been replaced temporarily by former KPMG consultant Geoff Russell.

It is believed that Haysom left the post after a draft of an independent review of the colleges programme was circulated. It is due to be officially published on 22 April. Sources close to the review, which is being carried out by Sir Andrew Foster, a former chief executive of the Audit Commission for England and Wales, say it is 鈥渢horoughly damning鈥 of the LSC. It is believed to reveal that its staff overstepped their authority in relation to funding requests. The body had received bids for 拢5.7bn worth of work 鈥 in addition to schemes already under way, upon which it had already spent a significant amount of its allocation.


John Denham
鈥業t is clear that even at current record levels of funding, not all schemes can be implemented on the timescales originally envisaged鈥

John Denham, skills secretary


Contractors hoped that some projects would resume after Foster鈥檚 report was published, but at a briefing of its supply chain this week, the LSC鈥檚 head of capital projects is understood to have said that, of the 152 schemes affected, only the eight projects given the go-ahead by John Denham, the skills secretary, earlier this month would continue.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a complete and utter shambles,鈥 said Stephen Ratcliffe, director of the UK Contractors Group. 鈥淚t could kill the industry.鈥

He said he was planning to write to cabinet ministers to argue that spending more money on the programme was the best hope of boosting the industry.

Ratcliffe said one major contractor had told him 3,000 jobs were at risk on schemes it was involved in.

Atkins, which is working on 13 design contracts for the programme, said it had expected to appoint about 250 people to the projects.

Paul Dollin, a managing director at Atkins, said: 鈥淲e鈥檒l be looking to redeploy staff, but there is a risk of redundancy. We will be looking to make those decisions between April and June.鈥 He added: 鈥淚t could be worse for smaller firms that don鈥檛 have the opportunity to move people around.鈥

The LSC debacle in numbers

  • 拢2产苍 Amount spent on further education colleges between 1997 and 2007
  • 拢2.3产苍 Funding allocated between 2007- and 2011. It is thought virtually all of this has been spent
  • 拢2.7产苍 Funding needed for the 79 colleges that have received approval in principle
  • 拢3产苍 Funding needed for a further 65 colleges that have submitted applications
  • 拢207,838 Outgoing LSC chief executive Mark Haysom鈥檚 annual salary
  • 拢100尘 The minimum that colleges will lose as a result of the delays, according to the Association of Colleges
  • 拢2尘&苍产蝉辫; The estimated cost of delay per project per month