(Secretary of State for
Work and Pensions):On 8 February 2018, the Work and
Pensions Select Committee, published a report into the Universal
Credit Project Assessment Reviews. From this publication, the House
will be aware that my Department has been involved in a request
under the Freedom of Information Act, for the release of the
Project Assessment Reviews conducted between March 2012 and October
2015 on the Universal Credit Programme.
Project Assessment Reviews are an assurance tool used to assess
major projects and programmes. The reviews are conducted by
project professionals and subject matter experts drawn from
across the public and private sector. The effectiveness of the
reviews relies on confidentiality: information within the reports
is non-attributable to encourage candour and a frank exchange of
views. The reports act as advice to the Senior Responsible Owner
on the delivery aspects of their programme – they are not advice
to Ministers. They are intended to give the Senior Responsible
Owner a project delivery perspective on their programme,
independent of the programme management function. They represent
perspectives for the Senior Responsible Owner to consider and not
absolute truths. The Senior Responsible Owner, not the review
team, is accountable to Parliament.
It should be noted that the reviews I will place in the Library
are historic, conducted between March 2012 and October 2015. Come
2018, the Universal Credit Programme is in a very different place
since those reports were written. Universal Credit is in every
Jobcentre and we are rolling it out safely and securely to all
categories of claimant. We are focussing on the continued safe
delivery of Universal Credit, so people continue to be helped to
improve their lives.
In recognition of the confidential nature of these reports, the
Work and Pensions Select Committee viewed the full set of Project
Assessment Reviews up to 2017 and published a report on 8
February 2018. The Work and Pensions Select Committee agrees that
the historic issues have now been addressed and ‘substantial
achievements’ have been delivered since 2013. In the Committee’s
report, they commended the Department for running the Universal
Credit programme ‘more professionally and efficiently with a
collective sense of purpose’.
The Universal Credit Programme does not lack scrutiny as the
ongoing Work and Pension’s Select Committee inquiries
demonstrate. Given the Select Committee has seen the reports
subject to the Freedom of Information challenge, and commented
upon them publically I can see no point in continuing to argue
that case. Accordingly my officials will be writing to the
Information Commissioner and to the First Tier Tribunal to advise
them of my decision to release copies of the requested Project
Assessment Review reports to the requestor.
With regard to future reports, I emphasise that the steps I have
decided to take today, to disclose the material subject to
proceedings, are exceptional. I remain of the view, that it is
critical to the effectiveness of the Infrastructure &
Projects Authority assurance framework for participants to be
confident that their comments will be non-attributable and that
review reports will be treated as confidential.
I accept that this House and the wider public has significant
interest in government major projects. I support the principle of
transparency and the Universal Credit Programme regularly
publishes independent research and analysis into the
effectiveness of Universal Credit. I believe that there are
better ways of addressing this concern, rather than undermining
the mechanism that provides Senior Responsible Owners with an
independent external perspective on the programmes they are
responsible to Parliament for.
Universal Credit is a flexible benefit, which has simplified the
welfare system and ensures that people are always better off in
work. We know that the legacy system trapped people in benefit
dependency. We needed a new approach to reflect the
21st Century work environment. The evidence shows
Universal Credit is working, with people getting into work faster
and staying in work longer than under the old system.
I am sure this House joins me in recognising the great progress
we have made since 2010, with 3 million more people in work and
unemployment at a near record low. Universal Credit builds on
this success, delivering welfare reform that works for everyone.