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Wellington, New Zealand TETIARY EDUCATION SUMMIT

Wellington, New Zealand TETIARY EDUCATION SUMMIT. 28 APRIL 2009. ETHICAL LEADERSHIP AND GOOD GOVERNANCE BY EXAMPLE. DRIVING BEST PRACTICE THROUGH EDUCATION, COLLABORATION AND CONSENSUS. MAKING A SUSTAINABLE DIFFERENCE IN THE WORLD. Public Private Partnerships –

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Wellington, New Zealand TETIARY EDUCATION SUMMIT

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  1. Wellington, New Zealand TETIARY EDUCATION SUMMIT 28 APRIL 2009 ETHICAL LEADERSHIP AND GOOD GOVERNANCE BY EXAMPLE. DRIVING BEST PRACTICE THROUGH EDUCATION, COLLABORATION AND CONSENSUS. MAKING A SUSTAINABLE DIFFERENCE IN THE WORLD.

  2. Public Private Partnerships – Changing The Way We Do Business A successful PPP must start with a project of importance to the public and a commitment to the PPP delivery method. Henry A Davis: Infrastructure Finance 2008

  3. Buildings should inspire learning, nurture staff and students and be a source of pride and a practical resource for the community Les Watson, European Journal of Education Vol 42 Nov 2007

  4. Queensland Skills Plan Revitalisation of Vocational Education and Training Southbank will be • an Institute of Technology • a bridge between technical education and university • a modern, learner focused environment for local and international students • a lead institute for a range of Associate Degrees, university pathways and articulation arrangements Queensland Skills Plan 2006: Qld Government, Department of Employment and Training

  5. Revitalizing Southbank Strategic Drivers • Skills Plan • Institute Strategic and Business Plan • IT Strategic Plan • International Plan • On-Line Strategic Plan • Quality Products • University Articulation • Post Graduate Courses • Asset Management

  6. Infrastructure Analysis In 2004 • Buildings not fit for purpose • Poor utilization of space • IT incompatible • Poorly maintained facilities • Need for compliance upgrades • Inflexible spaces for changing • education needs • Poor use of energy • Inefficient use of ‘footprint’ • Inefficient energy and utilities

  7. Growth Analysis Average Annual Growth Rates 1990-91 to 2000-01 Southbank Education Precinct – Business Planning Foundations Deloitte 2002

  8. Functionality Analysis • Generic Use • Simulation • Replication • Adaptation • Incubation

  9. Functional Solutions Adaptable Flexible Buildings • Buildings for the future in keeping with modern precinct • Greater public use of facilities • Flexible learning spaces Responsive Teaching and Learning Spaces • Opportunity to reconstruct core delivery systems and services • Opportunity to introduce alternative teaching modes e.g. Mode 2 • Opportunity to introduce a greater range of learning technologies Cost Effective Operations • Efficiencies through one-campus operations • Greater efficiency of no-core services in the delivery of core services Affordability • Limited to Agency Business Case

  10. Design Brief • A modern world class precinct • Operates on one campus only • Opportunities to introduce alternative and creative teaching modes • Greater public and commercial use of facilities • Opportunity to reconstruct delivery systems and services • Greater potential for transition and articulation to higher education programmes • Must maximise IT capability and use of facilities • Provide a safe and secure educational environment

  11. Balancing Public/Private Needs in Infrastructure A successful PPP must start with a project of importance to the public and a commitment to the PPP delivery method Henry A Davis: Infrastructure Finance 2008

  12. What is a Public Private Partnership(PPP)? • PPP is a collaboration between the public and the private sectors based on a contract • Sensible division of roles and fair sharing of responsibilities, cost and risk between the public and private sectors • Optimal – as opposed to maximum – assignment of risk to the private sector to maximise value for money • Private sector to contribute not only capital but also technology, management and innovation • Expected results: availability, quality and efficiency of service and efficiency of capital utilization

  13. Financiers Providers State Budget Infrastructure Tax Payers Users Growth AffordabilityWho pays for PPP investments? PPP is not free infrastructure! Ultimately there are only two funding sources for infrastructure investment : • Consumers (via user charges) • Taxpayers (via subsidies) Financiers can change the requisite time and payment profile Eventually financier contributions have to be repaid Connecting East Asia: A new Framework for Infrastructure ADB-JBIC-WB, 2005

  14. Why PPPs are Attractive to Government • To attract private sector capital and fill the shortage of public funds for building new infrastructure, and maintaining new and existing facilities, in order to sustain growth • To relieve pressure on the tax base and free up public resources for use in basic services (e.g. education and health care) • To introduce private sector management and know-how • To improve quality and efficiency of service delivery • To maximise value for money on the part of the government Connecting East Asia: A new Framework for Infrastructure ADB-JBIC-WB, 2005

  15. Institute Design Philosophy Non Core Core Delivery Corporate Operating Philosophy Mode ll Teaching Practice FM Contract Academic Corporate Support Educational Functionality Functional Facilities Functional Precinct Southbank Business Review

  16. Core Services • Program delivery, content and teaching delivery • Administration of corporate services • Commercial learning opportunities • ICT services except the ICT backbone infrastructure • Library • Commercial activities • Timetabling, examination administration and tutor support

  17. Non-Core Services • Infrastructure and equipment • Buildings • ICT backbone • Energy systems • Plant • Facilities management • Maintenance of the facilities • Maintenance of the plant and equipment • Operations • Cleaning, pest control, grounds maintenance and security • Provision and maintenance of building systems • Other services e.g. cafeteria and out-of-hours use of facilities

  18. Operations and Maintenance Cycle 30 year operations contract • Replacement of all plant and equipment • Replacement of all Operator provided FF&E • Regular maintenance cycle for all buildings and grounds

  19. Risks with Social Infrastructure PPPs The governing principle of a project’s risk allocation dictates that risk should be allocated to the party best able to manage it Qld State Govt, State Development: Public Private Partnerships Guidance Material August 2002 With appropriate risk transfer, public sector is not exposed to cost overruns…as risk is transferred to the sector best able to manage them The right project – The right process KPMG 2008

  20. Beware Bureaucratic Deviance Skye Bridge Example When the PPP procured toll bridge from the Isle of Skye opened in 1995, the islanders found themselves forced to pay the highest toll fees in Europe By the end of 2004, crossing the Skye Bridge cost £5.70 for a one-way ticket which precipitated civil action On 21 December 2004 the Scottish Executive bought the bridge back and abolished the tolls www.corporatewatch.org

  21. Beware of Doing Nothing • The inflexible and inappropriate built environment remains inflexible and inappropriate • Maintenance backlogs increase and become more costly over time • The perception of contracted and irrelevant business develops • The ability to remain competitive becomes limited • Morale suffers and confidence in public sector management diminishes

  22. Beware of Biased Optimism • The view that private sector involvement is the only way to deliver the project • The view that the innovation of a PPP will provide for more than similar traditional expenditure – and for free • The view that acceptance of the PPP is acceptance of all change

  23. Beware of Business Inertia • Inaccurate projections - increased demand for facilities • Encouraging staff to use alternative teaching methods – inconsistent use of facility • Managing changeover in delivery structures and service arrangements – resistance to commercial entity • Preparing teams for the future – alignment of delivery with market demand

  24. Risk Profiling KPMG 2008

  25. Risk Profiling continued Shared risks KPMG 2008

  26. Risks retained by the public sector KPMG 2008

  27. Southbank Institute of Technology Risk Analysis Qld Treasury Corporation : SETP Risk Report June 2006

  28. The key risks faced by Axiom during the operating phase are summarised as follows: • Pricing • Operator • KPI deduction • Operator default and replacement • Lifecycle • Refinance Insurance – premature and unavailability • Malicious damage • Damage • Change in Law • Termination • Consequential Loss • Defects

  29. Why Some PPPs Work and Some Don’t The key is the integration of these different objectives into a well designed solution – not balancing these different objectives with competing solutions Michael Cooney, Policy Director: percapita.org.au October 2008 Attempts by previous government to create a training market may have not been fully successful because they neglected to design an adequate market structure Julia Gillard: ACPET 2008 National Conference

  30. ….our track record in shaping and implementing new investments is questionable • We design and implement solutions without any clear understanding of the business need (‘solutions looking for problems’) • We don’t articulate the benefits that investments are expected to deliver…and we never track benefits • We are prolific at undertaking feasibility studies and developing business cases for things that can never happen …..pointless process has replaced intelligent discussion Dept of Treasury and Finance, Victoria 2008

  31. Tangible Benefits for Southbank • Reconstruction of delivery systems and services • Mode ll learning areas • Use of latest technologies • Fully IT networked campus • Flexible learning spaces • Accredited standards for fitouts to operate commercially • A modern single campus operation • Managed risk • Value for Money – early access • Energy efficient ‘green’ facilities – equivalent to five star rating • Areas for public use • Ground floor studios • Auditoria • Meeting spaces • Retail

  32. Lessons from the SETP • Partners need to fully understand each other • early face-to-face engagement is highly desirable • Be clear about expectations regarding levels of innovation • engage with the service provider during bid development to ensure design innovation serves 30 year operations • Engage the residual expertise of stakeholders • but Avoid the Trojan Horse

  33. Lessons from the SETP continued • Undertake honest and objective business reviews • Immature projection will undermine the integrity of a project • Risk analysis needs early activation • Don’t wait until it is too late • Maintain clear leadership messages • Change is inevitable over the life of a PPP project • Be clear about scope upfront • Avoid shifting the goal posts

  34. Lessons for the Training Market COAG has indicated the significant reform is required in three key interlinked areas: • Market design - reforms in this area will need to focus on the supply and demand side of the market and include competition and contestability, regulation and quality assurance, and information • Sector capacity – reforms in this area will need to focus on the capacity of the VET sector including training products, the VET workforce, and infrastructure • Investment – reforms in this area will need to focus on developing an investment strategy directed to growing the pool of skilled Australians, and which results in a fair sharing of costs and benefits VET Training Products for the 21st Century : COAG Consultation Paper Feb 2009

  35. Towards a Reliable Market Framework The longer-term policy • Is this really a market design approach? • What have we learnt from recent public policy experience? The Supply-Side • Will the policy outcomes genuinely expand student choice? • Will investment in training capacity be adequate over time? • Will new infrastructure satisfy new expectations?

  36. Sources • Les Watson: European Journal of Education Vol 42 Nov 2007 • Queensland Skills Plan 2006 • Southbank Education Precinct – Business Planning Foundations: Deloitte 2002 • Qld State Govt, State Development: Public Private Partnerships Guidance Material August 2002 • Connecting East Asia: A new Framework for Infrastructure ADB-JBIC-WB, 2005 • Michael Cooney, Policy Director: percapita.org.au October 2008 • Julia Gillard: ACPET 2008 National Conference • Dept of Treasury and Finance Victoria: Investment Management http://www.dtf.vic.gov.au/CA25713E0002EF43/WebObj/Workshop1-VPS-0807/$File/Workshop1-VPS-0807.PPT • COAG: VET Training Products for the 21st Century, Consultation Paper Feb 2009

  37. NORM JAGGER 63 Bent St Toowong 4066 m: 0409 473 524 e-mail: norm@normjagger.com.au www.normjagger.com ETHICAL LEADERSHIP AND GOOD GOVERNANCE BY EXAMPLE. DRIVING BEST PRACTICE THROUGH EDUCATION, COLLABORATION AND CONSENSUS. MAKING A SUSTAINABLE DIFFERENCE IN THE WORLD.

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