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MHS Board Minutes 25 April 2007

Thursday 20 December 2007

Meeting held at at Monks Cross, York

Attendees

Chair
Chrissie Dunn

MHS Board Members
Ian Reynolds (Deputy Chair)
Celia Bennett
Maureen Edmondson
John Harwood
Deryk Mead (by videoconference)
Alick Simmons

MHS Board Adviser
Fred Landeg representing Chief Veterinary Officer, Defra
Secretariat
David Bramley, MHS

Officials participating
Steve McGrath, MHS
Mike Greaves, MHS
Kevin Goddard, MHS

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Introduction and apologies

The Chair welcomed all attendees to the meeting including Fred Landeg, Defra’s Deputy Chief Veterinary Officer, who was representing the Chief Veterinary Officer (CVO). Apologies had been received from Jane Downes, MHS Veterinary and Technical Director, and Kathryn Davies, MHS Director of Corporate Services.

The Chair reminded MHS Board members and adviser of their obligation to declare any relevant interests before agenda items were discussed.

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Draft Minutes of the 21 February 2007 Meeting (Paper 07/17) and actions arising (Paper 07/18)

MHS Board members agreed the minutes as an accurate record of the MHS Board meeting held on 21 February 2007.

Actions Arising

All actions arising from the February meeting were recorded as complete except for:

Action: MHS Chief Executive

Action: Kathryn Davies

Action: MHS Board Secretariat

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MHS Board Chair and Chief Executive's Report

The Chair reported that:

MHS Chief Executive’s Report (Paper 07/19)
The MHS Chief Executive said that he would provide some supplementary verbal briefing to his written report and would be happy to answer any questions. This was his second report to the MHS Board and future reports would continue to evolve over time and provide a focused and balanced overview of key challenges, successes and failures.

Review of Delivery of Official Controls
The MHS Chief Executive said the MHS was not waiting for the outcome of the review but was transforming now, wherever possible. This included working with industry more effectively. For example, trying to provide commercial incentives for industry to make more efficient use of MHS resources and reviewing the service provided to small abattoirs.

The MHS Chief Executive reported that he had written to MHS colleagues to, directly and frankly, express his view of the MHS and the challenges and issues that it faces. Overall, the reaction to the letter from staff and UNISON had been supportive.

Breaches
The MHS Chief Executive reported that there had been no breaches of TSE regulations despite ineligible animals being presented for slaughter. This was due to a combination of Food Business Operator (FBO) and MHS vigilance.

MHS Financial Position as at end March 2007
The MHS were currently finalising the accounts for 2006/07 for which the current MHS Chief Executive had responsibility for the last quarter. The indication was that there was an overall favourable variance of £0.1m to the net cost of operations. This was in line with forecasts and demonstrated good financial management. The MHS had absorbed the £0.6m revenue loss in the final financial quarter associated with the removal of the ‘minimum charge of 45% of throughput’ previously charged to FBOs for the delivery of official controls.

The MHS Chief Executive said that in future years he would wish to submit the MHS budget to the MHS Board for their approval. Due to timing constraints, this had not been possible this year. In response to a question from an MHS Board member, the MHS Chief Executive agreed to provide MHS Board members with a retrospective paper on the MHS budget.
Action: MHS Chief Executive

2007/08 Budget
The MHS had received a budget delegation of £35.0m from the FSA, which did not cover exceptional items bid for by the MHS, which totalled £3.0m. The MHS was identifying possible cost cutting measures, which may have serious consequences on delivery capability.

The MHS Chief Executive noted that under current charging arrangements the MHS could lose money every time it visited certain premises. The MHS was also facing a challenge to its costs and resources from poultry slaughterhouses switching from using their own directly employed poultry inspection assistants PIAs) to MHS-provided PIAs. This could often be at short notice and was due to FBO concerns about employing their own poultry inspection assistants, which could include quality of inspection, lack of flexibility and the costs of staff training as well as holiday cover/pay.

Changes in MHS Charges
The MHS Chief Executive noted that the consultation on proposed hourly chargeout rates to FBOs closed on 23 April 2007. Several responses had been received and some further responses were expected shortly. Overall, responses had been supportive and agreed with the simplification of MHS charges proposed by the MHS. The Chief Executive said the consultation had given the MHS a mandate to implement the changes, which would happen from 28 May 2007.

Avian Influenza
The MHS Chief Executive said that the MHS were contributing to Defra’s lessons learned exercise on the recent H5N1 avian influenza outbreak and would participate fully in an independent review of lessons learned from the control of the outbreak.

Fred Landeg noted that it was routine for a review to follow a disease outbreak to assess successes and weaknesses and ensure lessons were learned. The exercise would examine the roles, responsibilities and communication between Defra and FSA and MHS.

IT Update
The MHS Chief Executive said that IT development was focused on delivering short-term benefits. The MHS were preparing a formal business case for longer-term development of IT and this would be submitted to the MHS Board for consideration in due course.
Action: MHS Chief Executive

In discussion:

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Assessment of MHS Performance against Corporate Objectives – 2006/07 (Paper 07/20)

The Chair of the MHS Board welcomed Kevin Goddard, Head of the MHS Business Development Unit, to present this paper. In discussion:

Objective 1 – To deliver customer requirements, as set out in out Service Level Agreements
The MHS met all the performance indicators for this objective except the indicator for BSE controls. This was due to six breaches of the TSE regulations. The MHS considered that the MHS Board’s intended outcome for this objective was partly met. In response, the MHS Board considered that the MHS assessment of their performance was unduly harsh. The MHS had achieved a 99.999% success rate and there was no risk to public health from the six breaches.

The MHS Board agreed that the intended outcome for objective 1 had been met.

Objective 2 – To improve consumer, government and industry knowledge and understanding of our work, and satisfaction with our service delivery
The MHS met three out of five of the performance indicators for this objective, which were the indicators on Defra customer satisfaction, sustainable development and consumer awareness. The indicators that were not met were to achieve 5% increases in (i) industry and (ii) FSA overall satisfaction. There had been a small decrease in satisfaction for both indicators. The MHS considered that the MHS Board’s intended outcome for this objective was partly met.

In discussion:

The MHS Board agreed that the intended outcome for objective 2 had been partly met.

Objective 3 – To embed legislative changes, in particular the EU Food Hygiene Regulations
The MHS Board agreed that the intended outcome for objective 3 had been met.

Objective 4 – To equip all our staff with the necessary skills, knowledge and information to enable them to deliver our services effectively
The MHS Board agreed that the intended outcome for Objective 4 had been met.

Objective 5 – To operate within delegated resource budget and delegated cash budget for 2006/07
The MHS Board agreed that the intended outcome for objective 5 had been met.

Objective 6 – To improve efficiency
Four out of five performance indicators for this objective were met. The cost per livestock unit (CPLU) indicator was missed by 1.8% due to the impact of acquiring extra MHS staff to meet the industry estimate for OTM processing, which was not realised. Corrective action to steadily reduce the number of contract staff for OTM inspection had been taken throughout the year to meet the actual level of OTM processing.

The CPLU may be adversely affected if the MHS agrees to carry out additional work for government customers. Whilst this work is covered by additional income it is not included in the original budget for the year and the number of livestock units processed may not increase.

Consideration should be given to separating out business as usual and exceptional costs from the CPLU.

To ensure MHS efficiency is understood by industry it is important to adopt a commercial approach and have a more robust indicator for efficiency

The MHS Board agreed that the intended outcome for Objective 6 had been met.

The Chair of the MHS Board summarised that the MHS had achieved five of the six objectives for 2006/07 and partly met the remaining objective. The Chair commended the MHS on its performance and asked Kevin Goddard to update the assessment of MHS performance for 2006/07 in line with comments expressed by the MHS Board and circulate this to MHS Board members for final agreement.
Action: Kevin Goddard

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Update on the Over-Thirty Month (OTM) Implementation Review Group (IRG)

The Chair invited Celia Bennett to provide an update on the IRG’s work. In discussion:

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Report from the Chair of the MHS Audit Committee

22. Chrissie Dunn invited Deryk Mead, Chair of the new MHS Audit Committee, to report on the work of the Audit Committee, which had held its first meeting on 22 May 2007. Deryk reported that:

The meeting had also considered:

The Chair of the MHS Board noted that it could be helpful for Deryk to produce a brief paper setting out the key headlines from Audit Committee meeting to the next MHS Board meeting.
Action: Deryk Mead

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Any Other Business

In response to a question from an MHS Board member, clarification of the risk of foodborne disease originating from catering butchers premises and particularly those dealing with raw and cooked meat would be provided outside the meeting.
Action: Jane Downes

The MHS Board agreed that it would be useful to hold an extraordinary MHS Board meeting following the FSA Board decision on the options for the delivery of official controls in approved premises.
Action: MHS Board Secretariat

The next MHS Board meeting will be held on 25/26 September 2007

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