Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency chief executive Julie Lennard has told MPs that a number of shortcomings and unique circumstances fuelled the significant challenges her organisation faced in dealing with the coronavirus pandemic.
DVLA’s ability to deal with paper applications for driving licences and other documentation at its Swansea campus was massively impacted by restrictions on the number of staff who could work onsite during the Covid-19 lockdowns, the first of which commenced in March 2020.
A report from public-spending watchdog the National Audit Office earlier this month said DVLA only hit its target of processing 90% of paper driving-license applications within 10 days on eight of the 30 months between March 2020 and September this year.
Backlogs with paper-based applications continued until July this year. Overall licence applications peaked in September 2021, when there were 1.1 million applications in progress – which the NAO said was around five times more than the average number in progress in any month in 2019-20.
Appearing before members of parliament’s Public Accounts Committee to answer questions about the DVLA’s pandemic-time performance, chief exec Lennard said the organisation had been hampered by its reliance on onsite working.
Asked why the DVLA’s remote-working capability lagged behind that of other parts of government, Lennard cited concerns related to the database it uses and the fact that around 60,000 items of mail arrive at the Swansea campus every day.
“We have such a vast amount of personal data,” she said. “It’s the closest thing that we have to an ID database in this country.
“There’s a security risk because of the scale and the national security risk of a database of this nature. This isn’t just a GDPR issue. This is bigger than that, in terms of being able to keep that data secure when everything has been designed to do that by having onsite access.”
Lennard was asked why the Department for Work and Pensions had been able to rapidly adapt to remote working in a way that the DVLA had not.
“It wasn’t part of DVLA’s DNA to be able to have remote access to that level of data,” she replied.
Lennard said that although the DVLA had begun to migrate staff onto using laptops by the time the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic hit, there was no formalised remote working – although early-stage trials had commenced.
She added that no-one at the agency used the chat-based work platform Microsoft Teams, which became a mainstay for many during the pandemic.
Huge Swansea presence hit resilience
DVLA’s massive presence in Swansea – where its 6,200 staff are based – also hit the organisation’s resilience during the pandemic because it left the agency uniquely exposed to local infection rates, Lennard told MPs.
The agency opened an additional office in Swansea to provide more space for staff who needed to work onsite to do so safely, and then opened an outpost in Birmingham. However, Lennard said she now believed DVLA should have prioritised setting up the West Midlands office.
“We took the decision to have the building in Swansea, that first extra building, partly because of the ease of being in the same local area for things like training new staff and if we were having to move things between offices,” the chief exec told MPs.
“Looking back and with benefit of hindsight, if we’d’ve had Birmingham first, that might have given us greater resilience. Because… at one point in December 2020, Wales had some of the highest infection levels in the world.
“Everything that happened in the local community was very much reflected in our own infection levels because everyone was out and about as well.
“We became very susceptible to whatever the local levels of infection were.”
MPs heard this also included knock-on effects of positive test results, such as members of the same household needing to self-isolate – potentially doubling or trebling the impact of a single infection on the agency.
Strikes ‘not on DVLA radar’
In January 2021, the DVLA was accused of having presided over a mass outbreak of Covid-19 in autumn 2020 after comparatively low rates of infection in the spring.
Lennard rejected the claims. At the time, she told a Transport Select Committee hearing that infection levels among DVLA staff were a reflection of those in the local community.
Relations with PCS – the civil service’s largest union – soured and a series of health and safety-focused strikes ensued further impacting application backlogs.
Emma Ward, the Department for Transport’s director general for roads, places and environment, told last week’s PAC hearing that the 2021 strikes had come out of the blue.
“We didn’t calculate for industrial action to compound any second wave of Covid,” she told MPs. “And I think it was that interaction in the second year that made the second year so challenging in terms of driver applications.
“Industrial action is always a risk. But actually, DVLA’s relations with PCS had been pretty strong. Through 2020 there was engagement in lockstep with the union about how we safely get people back into the workplace. And those discussions in that year were incredibly constructive.”
Lennard subsequently said she believed frictions related to remote-working entitlements had a bearing on deteriorating staff relations.
“There is a really strong sense of fairness within DVLA,” she said.
“One of the things the union latched on to was that feeling that some people were able to work from home and some were not. It does create challenges in one organisation.”
PCS members staged industrial action on a total of 58 days between April and August 2021.