MG Rover investigators run up £100,000 hotel bill

DBERR has set no budget for the Rover investigation, saying it could 'constrain the depth and thoroughness of the enquiry'

Written by Penny Sukhraj

Investigators into the collapse of MG Rover have spent almost £100,000 on hotel bills and a further £30,000 on food and drink, as the cost of the enquiry by BDO Stoy Hayward soars.

The new details of the costs of the probe, commissioned by the Department for Trade & Industry in 2005, come from a Freedom of Information Act request by Accountancy Age. BDO investigators have spent £95,094 on hotel costs, with a further £29,279 on subsistence, the response says. The investigation has so far cost £11,155,790.

Sources familiar with the Rover collapse said the figures related to the use of ‘dozens’ of investigators who spent up to a year living in and around Longbridge following the Rover’s collapse.

Questions were also raised over whether DBERR had 'drove a hard enough bargain' with BDO or whether it had simply 'issued a blank cheque'.

DBERR defended the costs, saying the costs did not only relate to the two investigators - Guy Newey QC, of Maitland Chambers and Gervase MacGregor of BDO - but to a team of between 10 and 16 people.

'They worked on-site between June 2005 and February 2006. It was not an easy task and complicated to unravel... required a group to access and log several thousands of accounting records,' a DBERR spokesman said.

DBERR has also revealed that no budget had been set for the exercise.

'That could constrain the depth and thoroughness of the enquiry,' the spokesman said.

Lorely Burt, Lib Dem shadow minister for business, said the hotel bill was shocking.‘The company investigating seems to have been living in the lap of luxury.

'It's lacking government control. The government has given this company a blank cheque to spend as much taxpayers' money as it likes. The money could have been used very productively to benefit the Rover workers,’ she said.

David Heathcoat Amory, the Tory MP for Wells, said: ‘There has to be a suspicion that DBERR is not pressing for a quick conclusion because of politi cal embarrassment.’

DBERR said it had not set a deadline by which the inspection must be completed by the investigators.

Rover probe costs hit £10m with no end in sight

MPs want end to BDO's inquiry into Rover collapse

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Richard Atkinson, FD of All England Tennis Court

Profile: Richard Atkinson, FD of All England Tennis Club

As Wimbledon reaches a heady climax, the FD of All...

PwC 10-year anniversary special report

Relive how the controversial mega-merger of Price Waterhouse and Coopers...

Make partner fast with YP

The latest edition of Young Professional features our definitive guide...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Has the credit crunch made you fear for your job?
Yes, my company says jobs will go
Maybe, if things get worse, I could be hit
No, business is quite stable

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job