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Struggling Tory council paid acting boss more than £1,000 a day

The local government secretary, Sajid Javid
The local government secretary, Sajid Javid, is considering the report’s recommendation that the county be run by a team of Whitehall-appointed commissioners for a temporary period. Photograph: A Davidson/SHM/REX/Shutterstock

Tory-controlled Northamptonshire county council, which declared itself effectively bankrupt last month, paid its acting chief executive more than £1,000 a day, it has emerged.

Damon Lawrenson had been interim chief executive at the council since November, having previously acted as temporary finance director at the council since October 2016. Lawrenson left the council this week “by mutual consent”.

Northamptonshire was heavily criticised in a recent government inspector’s report, which identified deep-rooted management and governance failures over the past four years as the prime cause of its financial problems.

The report highlighted what it called the council’s “sloppy” approach to financial management and lack of realism in business planning. It called for a clear-out of the existing leadership in order to restore stability to the council.

A freedom of information (FOI) request by the GMB union revealed that the council paid out £371,000 to DDL Consultancy, owned by Lawrenson, during 2016-17 and 2017-18. His company had earlier been paid a further £540,000 between 2008 and 2011, when he had stints as assistant chief executive and commercial director.

The local government secretary, Sajid Javid, is considering the report’s recommendation that the county be run by a team of Whitehall-appointed commissioners until it can be scrapped, along with seven local district councils, and replaced by two new smaller unitary authorities.

The council, which recently warned that its overstretched adults social care services were “on the verge of being unsafe” issued a section 114 notice in February, signalling that its finances were unsustainable. It banned non-urgent spending, and pushed through £40m of cuts plans, including the closure of 21 out of 36 libraries.

A GMB official, Rachelle Wilkins, said: “For Northamptonshire county council to splurge almost £1m on consultancy while people are losing their jobs and services are being cut is a real kick in the teeth.”

A spokesman for Northamptonshire county council said: “Salaries reflect responsibilities associated with the posts, many of which require highly-qualified, professional staff, while being mindful of the necessity of providing value for money.

“It must be noted that about £560k was incurred in the three years between 2008/09 and 2010/11. Additionally, as a contractor Damon is not eligible for sick pay, holiday pay or pension contributions.”

Lawrenson criticised the inspector’s report in an interview with the Local Government Chronicle this week, saying there were several “factual inaccuracies” in it. He predicted that more authorities would face “challenging times” and “may follow Northamptonshire’s plight in 2019-20”.

Lawrenson’s predecessor, Paul Blantern, who was regarded as the architect of its disastrous Next Generation restructuring programme left in October with a £95,000 pay off after 10 years in the role. The council leader, Heather Smith, resigned earlier this month.

The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, and Theresa May clashed over the Northamptonshire crisis at prime minister’s question time this week. Corbyn said the council had gone bust due to Tory “incompetence”. May denied the council had been brought down by government under-funding.

A National Audit Office report earlier this month suggested that up to 15 local authorities could go bust in the next three years as they exhaust financial reserves to cope with an increase in demand for social care. It said councils in England had been put under pressure by a 50% cut in government funding between 2010-11 and 2017-18.