I referred Leslie Evans to GROK and asked for its view of the disastrous series of calamities she presided over-Report link at the end of article and it is damming

Leslie Evans: Permanent Secretary: the most senior civil servant in Scotland and head of the civil service supporting the Scottish Government.

Also the principal policy adviser to the First Minister and Secretary to the Scottish Cabinet.

Not a lot of experience in procedural development or personnel management.

Input limited to the approval of final documentation for the signature of the First Minster, acting on the guidance of senior managers in Human Resources.

A feminist with a fascination for gender politics. Dating back to a study of Queen Elizabeth of England and her speech at Tilbury, “I know I have the body of a weak, feeble woman but I have the heart and stomach of a king”.

Work experience shaped her politics and values, and views about diversity, equality and inclusion.

Enthusiastic supporter of the now discredited aims and aspirations of the “Stonewall” organisation.

Postscript to the debacle she presided over. She retired soon after.

10 March 2022: Former Permanent Secretary Evans disrespected a parliamentary committee and ghosted into retirement with a massive lump sum gratuity and huge pension

Evans was a key figure in the Alex Salmond affair, overseeing the disastrous internal probe into sexual misconduct claims against the former First Minister.

Her decisions contributed to Alex being able to overturn the findings in a judicial review case that saw him awarded £512,000 in costs.

Despite the blunders of her watch Sturgeon stood by Evans and rewarded her financially with an unjustifiable substantial pay rise at a time when many observers and poiticians were calling for her to be sacked. Sturgeon is a law unto herself as First Minister and steamrollers any opposition into submitting to her will since witnessed by the promotion of the Crown Agent, her PPS and a pay rise to Liz Lloyd. Failure reaps wards for services rendered to Nicola. A disgraceful abuse of her office. Yet no on challenged her!!

As part of its work into the running of the Scottish Government, Holyrood’s finance and public administration committee approached Evans in October 2021 about her sharing with the committee her reflections and insights into her role.

She was repeatedly reassured that the committee did not want to re-run the Salmond affair or revisit events examined by a previous Holyrood inquiry into it. Instead, the focus would be on “how government functions, the capacity and capability of the civil service, culture, and how policies are developed and implemented”.

The Office of the Permanent Secretary wrote to the committee on Evans behalf refusing the invitation.

The letter stated: “Evans is on leave and she is effectively no longer a post-holder within the Scottish Government and is not able to speak on behalf of or represent the views of Scottish Ministers”.

In reply, SNP committee convener Kenny Gibson wrote to Evans making clear the committee’s displeasure, and releasing the correspondence to the public.

He wrote: “We are extremely disappointed at the discourtesy shown to the Parliament by your failure to engage directly with the Committee at any stage regarding our invitation, despite our best efforts.

When we finally received a response, it was not from you, but from the Office of the Permanent Secretary, stating that, as you are now on a period of leave (dating from 31 December 2021 until you retire from the UK Civil Service on 31 March 2022), you are not able to speak on behalf, or represent the views, of Scottish Ministers.

At no point have we asked you to do so. We have been absolutely clear at all times that our interest lay in your own reflections, not those of Ministers, to support the Committee in developing a clearer understanding of the workings of government in our new public administration role.

Very few people have the opportunity to gain your level of experience in government, which we considered would have been beneficial in informing our future scrutiny.

We are firmly of the view that it is in the public interest for the Committee to hear from civil servants as part of our public administration remit.

You remain in the employment of the Scottish Government and we do not accept that your period of leave exempts you from giving evidence to a parliamentary committee, in the way suggested, adding given the time that has elapsed since our original approach to you and the response of 7 March 2022, we do not however intend to waste any more of our time pursuing this matter.”

An independent political observer said: “This is the latest example of secrecy from a tired and out-of-touch government. The committee deserved to hear from the Permanent Secretary, but she has turned her back on the committee and on proper scrutiny as a result. This sets a very dangerous precedent as civil servants are obliged to appear before our parliament’s committees. This is a disappoint postscript to the former permanent secretary’s public service. It is clear that the culture of this government is to hold the parliament and the people that it represents in contempt.”

August 15, 2022 Leslie Evans – a back door exit with a “wheen” of taxpayers money – and her near £10,000 lump sum payment in lieu of untaken leave bordered on the nefarious

Civil Service Annual Leave policy

The Civil Service annual leave allocation of 30 days supports employee choice and helps them enjoy a good quality of life, work-life balance.

Employees whose employment ends during their leave year, will be entitled to a proportion of their annual leave entitlement calculated from the beginning of their leave year, (April) to the last day of service.

Where the last day of service is known well in advance, employees are required to take outstanding leave before the last day of service. Payment in lieu of untaken leave will be made, only when an employee has been specifically prevented from taking leave by management.

Employees have a responsibility to ensure they take their full annual leave entitlement each year (all employees are required to take at least 20 days’ paid leave annually, including two weeks leave during the summer months.

Employees should take annual leave within their leave year. Managers have a duty of care to ensure they do. Employees may apply to carry over some of their annual leave entitlement from one leave year and are required to take it during the next leave year.

For full-time employees, managers may approve carrying forward leave of up to ten days for employees who are entitled to 30 days leave. These limits also apply to employees who have been prevented from taking leave on the specific request of management.

Leslie Evans Terms of Exit From the Civil Service Shrouded in Mystery

Evans last day in St Andrews House was on 31 December 2022 but she remained in employment until the end of March, taking three months of “paid accrued leave annual leave”.

Comment: An impossible calculation given the rules applicable to leave entitlement and attaching conditions. In effect she benefitted financially from 3 months paid “gardening leave”.

A FOI request later revealed that Evans had received an additional payment for 19.5 days of annual leave that she had not taken. On her £175,000 a year salary, that would be worth around £13,000.

Comment: Another impossible calculation given the rules state that employees are required to take at least 20 days leave in the year including 2 weeks in the summer. In any event the 19.5 days if genuine, should have been subsumed into the “gardening leave

The Controversial Compensation Payment

Business appointment rules governing the conduct of ministers, special advisers and senior civil servants as they leave government, state that Permanent Secretaries are “subject to a minimum waiting period of three months between leaving paid Civil Service employment and taking up an outside appointment or employment” because “of their role at the highest level of Government, and their access to a wide range of sensitive information.”

The rules add that it “may be appropriate to continue to pay former civil servants, including special advisers, who are required to observe a waiting period before taking up an external role.”

It is not known how much compensation Ms Evans was paid, but it was agreed “subject to consultation” with the UK Government’s Cabinet Office. However, details of payments, released under Freedom of Information, reveal that Ms Evans was then “compensated” to cover a separate “three-month unpaid waiting period.”

The Seven Controversial Years of Evans

Evans was a key figure in the Alec Salmond affair, overseeing the disastrous internal probe into sexual misconduct claims against the former First Minister.

Alec successfully challenged the process in a judicial review, showing that it had been “tainted by apparent bias” as the Investigating Officer had prior contact with one of the women who had complained about him. That resulted in the Court of Session ordering the Government to pay him £512,000 in costs.

An investigation by a Holyrood committee into the unlawful probe singled out Ms Evans for criticism, saying that she was one of only a “few people who had been aware of the prior contact of the Investigating Officer”. And despite that, she had prolonged the court case by not telling the Government’s lawyers.

MSPs on the committee said this “individual failing” was “as significant as the general corporate failing.” Despite the blunders on her watch, First Minister Sturgeon stood by Evans throughout and refused to sack her.

Evans’s three months “gardening leave” were only discovered when she was invited by Holyrood’s Finance Committee to share reflections and insights into her role working for the government.

She was repeatedly reassured that the committee did not want to re-run the Salmond affair or revisit events examined by a previous Holyrood inquiry into it.

However, in March, the Office of the Permanent Secretary wrote to the committee refusing on her behalf, letting the MSPs know that as Ms Evans was on leave she was “effectively no longer a post-holder within the Scottish Government and is not able to speak on behalf of or represent the views of Scottish Ministers”.

The SNP committee convener Kenny Gibson accused Ms Evans of “discourtesy.”

A spokesman for Alex Salmond told The Herald on Sunday:

“The Parliamentary Committee unanimously found that Leslie Evans as Permanent Secretary was not just corporately but personally responsible for the ‘prolonged, expensive and unsuccessful defence’ of the Judicial Review of her procedure which the Court of Session found to be ‘unlawful’, ‘unfair’ and ‘tainted by apparent bias’.

The Committee said that those responsible should be held ‘accountable’. However, instead of asking for her resignation, the Scottish Government seems to have afforded her every possible financial advantage on her retirement. The question is why?”

Evans left the Civil Service with a lump sum of £245,000. An annual pension of £85,000. A reputed £45,000 compensation payment and £9,500 pay in lieu of leave.

Evan’s civil service career has been clouded by controversy and misjudgement yet she made it to the top. No justice for many of those that crossed her path

The GROK report:

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/tLsFzMbqzqKDE0o2aZjOo13MA

2 thoughts on “I referred Leslie Evans to GROK and asked for its view of the disastrous series of calamities she presided over-Report link at the end of article and it is damming”

  1. This person and other employees involved in the horrible, vicious mess, appear to have been “put out to grass” to keep them silent. Crude silencing by those in charge of demoralising the independence campaign by destroying leaders. These are British State tactics, the long-established, colonial control: divide and rule, discredit leaders. Other colonies’ histories show same story.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. and Sturgeon did not have to justify the reward she gifted failure to the two main conspirators Around £40K annually plus a 2.5K pension increase worth around 30k in total dependent on age at death

      Liked by 2 people

Leave a reply to caltonjock Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.