Source · Select Committees · Public Accounts Committee
Recommendation 26
26
Accepted
Government services require resilience for demand fluctuations, supported by ODP's Surge and Rapid Response Team.
Conclusion
Government needs to know that its services can adapt to peaks and troughs in demand and still meet user expectations. It is important to have the resilience to meet expected variations in demand as well as to respond to unexpected changes in demand. If organisations do not have this capability, service users experience delays and backlogs, often with significant consequences for them.49 The ODP is responsible for the Surge and Rapid Response Team (SRRT), a flexible workforce which departments can use to help them deal with demand. In 2024, this team supported 75 deployments across government.50
Government Response Summary
The SRRT holds detailed data and collaborates with workforce planners, ranks requests for SRRT support, and works with departments to share learning to ensure effective workforce planning.
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
6. PAC conclusion: The Surge and Rapid Response Team (SRRT) is a valuable resource but should be there for genuine need and not as a containment for the lack of operational capability needed to deal with demand that should have been predicted or absorbed. 6. PAC recommendation: The ODP should conduct analysis of who is using the SRRT and why they are using it to identify where they need to work with departments to increase their operational capability to better deal with variation in demand. 6.1 The Profession agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Recommendation implemented 6.2 The Surge and Rapid Response Team (SRRT) do hold detailed data and insights on organisations across government, including their internal flexible resourcing processes. It regularly collaborates with workforce planners across government to understand organisations’ current and future demand needs and to inform SRRT workforce planning. In doing so it also helps support organisations in building their operational capability to better manage demand fluctuations to ensure they only seek SRRT support when absolutely needed and after they have exhausted internal options to deal with the demand. 6.3 The team was created in 2015 to provide operational support to departments to deal with variation in demand arising from either planned peaks or unexpected pressures that cannot be resourced internally. Over the last 10 years SRRT have undertaken more than 700 deployments into 65 different government organisations, supporting some of the highest priority resourcing requirements and crises. 6.4 The use of SRRT avoids the need for departments to use more expensive contingent labour options and the added expense of extensive re-skilling. Or alternatively having to build resourcing levels up to meet planned or unplanned peaks of activity leading to oversupply of permanent resource and additional costs. 6.5 Any request for SRRT support is ranked as high, medium or low priority to ensure resource is only targeted to the highest priority areas across government. The criteria were introduced to ensure the most appropriate use of resource and are reviewed on a regular basis. This includes a process to ensure SRRT support is targeted and time-bound, reinforcing that it is not a substitute for other resourcing solutions including permanent resource. 6.6 As part of the overall service offer, SRRT will continue to work with departments, sharing learning from others to ensure that best use is made of civil service resources through effective workforce planning and identification of best value resourcing options to deal with unexpected or peak demand.