🚨🚨🇪🇺🇬🇧🚚🚛🚇🇬🇧🇪🇺🚨🚨NEW. Unvarnished @NAOorguk report highlighting govt failure to prepare for post-Brexit borders - warns “widespread disruption” likely. My latest via @FT. Stay with me.../1 on.ft.com/2TXRqEl
@NAOorguk@FT You can read the 85-page public spending watchdog's whole report here, but it warns of
- insufficient customs brokers,
- unprepared border sites
- and a failure to build enough capacity in new customs software.
@NAOorguk@FT Remarkably it says that even by July 1 2021, the govt Border Delivery Groups finds "high risk" not all infrastructure will be ready...even at the end of UK's unilateral 'transition' period, which itself creates under-discussed second cliff edge. /3
@NAOorguk@FT On customs intermediaries it says the govt "has not yet facilitated the required expansion of the customs intermediary market" - and that this "could have been avoided" (a running theme of this report).../4
@NAOorguk@FT To recap HMRC estimates UK will do 270m declarations in 2021 - up from 60m today - and (see threads passim) the £84m the govt has spent just hasn't moved the market as they'd hoped, because of Covid +inertia + it takes 18 months to get a broker really trained /5
@NAOorguk@FT The Govt says that the situation is now "amber" not "red" (as it was 21.10.20 when report was done, and that it is "on track to have the right people in place with the right skills by the end of the transition period" - but I have to say industry does NO share that confidence /6
@NAOorguk@FT What about the computers needed to process all those 270m declarations?
Well, an audit in APRIL 2020 found that HMRC's new CDS customs system wasn't up to it and would need "substantial re-engineering" to copy, so we'll now plug along with a mix of CDS and the old CHIEF /7
@NAOorguk@FT As the NAO points out: "HMRC has known since it began its no-deal preparations in 2017 that CDS might need to handle a very significant increase in customs declarations." @Meg_HillierMP chair of @CommonsPAC says this is "completely unacceptable" and the cmme warned 3 years ago./8
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC The report also states that Govt now accepts that the new regulatory border in the Irish Sea - supported by the £200m will not be ready "and that the government was “exploring contingency options”. /9
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC More broadly, it warns that there is just no enough time for business to integrate with new systems like GVMS and SmartFreight (now Check an HGV) that is supposed to regulating traffic into Kent. As always, Whitehall slow to understand real-world implementation of bright ideas/10
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC So as Tim Reardon of @Port_of_Dover tells me, with the GVMS system for pre-declaring customs the problem is that "Who, precisely, needs to do what with what — and where and when do they need to do it — have still not yet been fully defined”. That makes it hard to prepare! /11
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC@Port_of_Dover As, incidentally does Covid...with the NAO warning that the govt's civil contingency planning measures (on medicines supply etc) are likely to be harder to enact. Certainly the drug industry has raised concerns. /12
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC@Port_of_Dover None of this will come as a surprise to industry, which has been warning for months and months that they needed more time, but the government - having failed to prepare adequately - then decided not to extend the transition period. /13
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC@Port_of_Dover@RHARichardB Ian Wright boss of the @Foodanddrinkfed which is super-exposed to Brexit wants compensation and more grace periods for business to adapt “[this] presents a genuine risk to the UK’s food and drink supply and the availability of products for shoppers". /15
@NAOorguk@FT@Meg_HillierMP@CommonsPAC@Port_of_Dover@RHARichardB@Foodanddrinkfed All in all, a pretty sorry picture. We'll see how well prepared the EU are for the coming frictions, as we wind the clock back to 1992 and essentially apply RoW customs processes to high-speed freight lanes of EU-UK single market trade /16
NEW - @IPPR calculates nearly *two-thirds* of the EU citizens currently employed in the UK (1.3m out of a total of 2.1m) would not have qualified for a skilled worker visa under Britain’s new points-based regime - via @ft Delphine Strauss and me /1
@IPPR@FT The IPPR suggests UK Gov drops salary threshold to living wage and extend list of occupations facing shortages to include jobs at all skills levels. /2
@IPPR@FT Warns of a staffing crisis in social care would worsen and says sectors leading recovery from the coronavirus crisis (eg. construction, manufacturing and logistics) would struggle to recruit. /3
Remember that £50m grant scheme to help create “new” customs agents? Turns out the £15k grants are often subsidising poaching agents from one company to the other... My latest via @FT on.ft.com/3ouAAeg
@FT How is this possible? Well, because under the terms of the scheme, you only have to show that you are increasing the capacity of YOUR business to do customs forms - not the industry as a whole /2
@FT So that means that if you hire someone already working in customs from a rival company (and there's a limited pool of talent) then that hire qualifies for the £15k grant - £3k for recruitment and up to £12k for salary. The result? Poaching. /3
The Sunday Times read on “how elderly paid price of protecting NHS from Covid-19” talks about a decision/triage tool used to decide who to ventilate...it sounds v similar to the @ft reported in April.../1
That story was here - NHS ‘score’ tool to decide which patients receive critical care - tho in both cases it seems as if the tools were never formally adopted/2 on.ft.com/3cRkUuS
The “tool” is here and it illustrates some of the issues that docs had to consider - tho this one was never approved in this form. /3
@FT I cannot think of a story in my 25 years as a journalist that has so foregrounded the realities of devolution - not least because #COVID19 as a *health* crisis meant that Scottish, Welsh and NI govts did have a lot of control. /2
@FT So when it came to decisions on quarantine from abroad, test and trace and locking/unlocking, time and again Westminster was confronted by the limits of its power/2
🚨🇪🇺🇬🇧🌭🍗🥩🍖🇪🇺🇬🇧🚨British sausage makers face EU freeze after Brexit - my latest via @FT with @JudithREvans ...a tale that illustrates how many odds and sods need tying up. Stay with me! 1/thread on.ft.com/37sxphk
@FT@JudithREvans So first the issue itself, and then the question: is it really a big deal? Can't it be, won't it be fixed?
The issue: on current EU 'export health certificates' there is basically no 'box' to tick that allows meat 'preparations' (sausages, mince etc) to be sent in chilled form/2
@FT@JudithREvans So here is a specimen certificate for beef products put out by @DefraGovUK recently...you'll see mince must be frozen. Which is a problem if a) your client wants it chilled b) doesn't have facilities to defrost c) wants premium product /3
As 'no deal' risk rises, why is business not getting more ready for new #Brexit borders? Well, its #COVID19, plus rubbish govt comms, plus assumption that some 11th hour fix will happen - again. My latest with @DanielThomasLDN
@DanielThomasLDN First #Covid_19 As @BCCAdam tells us, business is just too busy fighting the "five alarm fire" of coronavirus to have the time, money and general bandwidth to start damping down for a fire that isn't yet actually lapping at the door /2
@DanielThomasLDN@BCCAdam Or as Craig Beaumont, of the Federation for Small Businesses @fsb_policy puts it even more bluntly many businesses are focusing on “surviving to Christmas” rather than what happens on January 1. /3