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£642,000: the annual cost of government’s four Commissioners

The government might have decided to send in Commissioners, but it will be Croydon’s Council Tax-payers who will be picking up the bill. Yet again. EXCLUSIVE by STEVEN DOWNES

Croydon’s long-suffering residents will be expected to pay the generous daily fees for the four Commissioners who the government yesterday appointed to take charge of the management of the cash-strapped council.

And that means that Council Tax-payers will be paying at least

£642,000

per year for the expertise and experience of Ged Curran, Jackie Belton, Debbie Warren and Abi Brown.

The figures were contained within the quartet’s appointment letters from James Blythe, the deputy director for local government stewardship and interventions at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, which were released yesterday when the ministerial announcement came through.

On his way out: Tony McArdle is estimated to have been paid almost £200,000 for his time on Croydon’s ‘improvement’ panel

It means that the four Commissioners are likely to be even more expensive for Croydon residents per year than the improvement and assurance panel, which was installed in 2021.

As a long-term investigation by this website discovered, Tony McArdle, the panel’s chair, and his colleagues will have cost Croydon close to £1million by the time they have their final day working in Croydon next week, after delivering not much improvement and probably less assurance.

And if Croydon CEO Katherine Kerswell is staging a farewell party for the panel, she has not yet sent an invitation to Inside Croydon.

But while McArdle was on £1,000 per day, lead Commissioner Ged Curran is to be paid £1,200 per day (starting yesterday), and his three colleagues are each on £1.100.

Significantly, the Commissioners have a cap on how many days they can spend working on the Croydon conundrum: 150 per year, or 120 in the case of Brown. They can only do more with prior permission from Angela Rayner herself.

Equally significantly, what is not capped by the MHCLG direction is “reasonable expenses”. McArdle, in his penultimate year in Croydon, claimed more than £5,000 in expenses.

These expenses is expected to be mostly on travel and accommodation expenses, and is likely to apply in similar fashion with the Commissioners.

Well-paid: lead Commissioner Ged Curran is on £1,200 per day

With Brown being based in the Midlands, the front desk staff at the Holiday Inn Express next to the pie and mash shop on Frith Road might expect to be seeing a lot of the former leader of Stoke council in the coming weeks.

Debbie Warren is, for now at least, the chief exec at Greenwich Council, and it has been reported that her fees will be “reimbursed” to her employers. So, effectively, cash-strapped Croydon will be subsidising the wage bill of another south London council.

Senior Whitehall official Blythe’s letter of appointment to Curran read: “You will be entitled to a fee for each day you act as lead Commissioner. You will also be entitled to reasonable expenses.

“Under the terms of the Directions, it is the council’s responsibility to meet these costs, and the Secretary of State has set these fees for you at £1,200 per day up to a maximum of 150 days per annum. These should not be exceeded without prior approval of the Secretary of State.

“As to reasonable expenses, we would expect these to be in accordance with the rules for senior officers set out in the council’s staff handbook.”

So a night on the piss at The Ritz might be pushing their luck, then.

Read more: Meet the Commissioners: council experts sent to save Croydon
Read more: Croydon residents pick up the £1m tab for ‘improvement’ panel
Read more: £603,000: the soaring costs of Croydon’s ‘improvement’ panel
Read more: Agency spend scandal: Perry blasted for ‘ridiculous shambles’


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