Guest post from Philip Grant
Wembley Matters readers still following this long-running saga might be
interested to know what has happened since the last update I gave at the end of
June. LINK
The auditor, Andrew Sayers of KPMG, finally sent his ‘provisional view
and material documents’ letters to the five Brent residents, who had objected
to the Council’s June 2015 leaving payment of £157,610 to Cara Davani, on 3
August 2017. The final paragraph of his letter reminded me that the “disclosure
of information” provisions (Schedule 11) of the relevant legislation still
apply to his enquiries. I am therefore restricted as to what I can tell you, as
‘failure to comply with Schedule 11 is capable of amounting to a criminal
offence and liable to a fine upon summary conviction.’
When we read his ‘provisional view’, the same word sprang to the minds
of three objectors. It was not an expletive, but I can give you a clue without
disclosing any of the contents of the letter. The OED definition of the word
is: ‘a liquid containing quicklime or powdered chalk, used for painting walls
or ceilings etc.’
Still, we were not disheartened, as the auditor’s letter stressed that
this was only his provisional view. He had not reached any final view,
or decided our objections, and would not do so until he had considered any
additional comments or evidence that the objectors or the Council might wish to
provide.
However, when I looked at the “material documents” which the auditor had
sent with his letter, I found that these did not include any of the
documents we had been expecting to receive, since they were handed over to KPMG
by the Council last December. There was only one “material document” which did
relate to the payment to Ms Davani, and as that document is already “in the
public domain” I am allowed to tell you about it, or you can read it for
yourself. LINK
Why are the 30 June 2016 minutes of Brent’s Audit Committee a “material
document” in considering objections against the £157,610 payment to Cara
Davani? Because at item 7 (Draft Statement of Accounts 2015/16) they contain a
brief explanation of the reason the payment was made, and of the legal advice
on which it was based.
But if a Council Officer had explained everything about the payment in
June 2016 (in the first public admission of such a payment, a year after it had
been paid), why had five local electors objected in August 2016 to that payment
being included in the accounts? Surely the primary documents from May and June
2015 should also be treated as “material documents”, and shown to the objectors
so that they could provide comments, and any counter evidence, in support of
their objections!
I was not able to persuade the auditor with this argument, when I put it
to him on 4 August. Nor did his position on this change when I drew his
attention to the relevant guidance issued by the NAO, “Auditor Guidance Note 4”
(AGN 04), which he is meant to follow, later in the month. Para. 36 of AGN 04
says:
‘Sharing material information and inviting
representations on it is required in public law as the auditor is exercising
quasi-judicial powers.’
I was arguing that the primary documents (which the auditor holds) about
the £157,610 payment must be “material documents”, so should be shared
with the objectors before we made our comments. The auditor said that he
would look at our comments (which he had first asked for within three weeks,
but then agreed an extra week, with a 31 August “deadline”), and if he then
considered those documents to be “material”, he would share them with us and
give us the opportunity to comment on them. I summed this up to him as:
‘What you appear to be saying is: 'I won't share
material information with you now, but after
you have made any representations I might
share some of the material information with you (and if I do, I will give you the chance to make some further
representations).'
As the “deadline” was fast approaching, the objectors had to submit the
best ‘additional comments and evidence’ that we could in the circumstances. One
of the points I was able to make was that the summary of the May 2015 legal
advice, as given to the Audit Committee, showed that the point the QC had been
asked to look at was “unfair dismissal”, if Brent had sacked Cara Davani. At a
meeting with the objectors last December, the Chief Executive referred to a
document Ms Davani had given to the Council at the time. This strongly suggested
that the point the QC should have been asked to look at was
“constructive dismissal”, which may well have produced different advice, and
not led to any payment to her.
We have not been allowed to see Cara Davani’s “statement of loss”, and
even if we had I would not be allowed to tell you what it said, but I did refer
to it in a “guest blog” in January. LINK :-
‘We asked for more
information about the circumstances which gave rise to Cara Davani leaving
Brent. When Ms Downs provided a brief outline of the grounds on which the
former HR Director claimed she was entitled to compensation from the Council,
the objectors expressed their incredulity. I am sorry that details have to
remain confidential for now, but I can say that we asked Ms Downs whether she
was joking, and she said that she was not!’
I can assure you that the objectors have
done their best to provide the auditor with information about a pattern of
abuses of power at the top of Brent Council from 2012 onwards, which came to a
head with the, we allege unlawful, payment of £157,610 to Cara Davani in 2015.
I have also provided evidence to show why that payment was really made (and how
the Officer who provided the “official” explanation to Audit Committee was,
like the Council itself, the victim of a deception).
I have been greatly helped in piecing
together my researches over Brent Council and Cara Davani by comments, many of
them anonymous, which Wembley Matters readers have made in response to blogs by
Martin and myself since 2014. Thank you, everyone, for the parts you have
played in allowing the objectors to lay the evidence before the auditor. There
is a strong case for the auditor to make a Public Interest Report, to bring
this matter into the open, so that key figures at Brent Council, past and
present, can be asked to explain their actions, and be held to account. We
shall have to wait and see whether Mr Sayers will now make that report.
Philip
Grant.