Sir Geoffrey Charles Wardale, KCB (29 November 1919 – 18 December 2017) was a British civil servant.
Born on 29 November 1919, he was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge, and the served in the Army from 1940 to 1941. He then entered HM Civil Service as a temporary official in the Ministry of War Transport, being appointed to a permanent role by 1946. He subsequently served in the Ministry of Transport and the Department of the Environment, where he was promoted to Deputy Secretary in 1972 and then Second Permanent Secretary in 1978, serving until 1980.[1] Wardale had been appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in the 1974 New Year Honours[2] and had been promoted to Knight Companion in the 1979 Birthday Honours.[3]
After retiring, Wardale was called upon to carry out two inquiries. In 1981, he published the Wardale Report on the civil service's open structure.[4] In 1983, he issued another report, this time on fraud in the Property Services Agency (PSA). This was critical of the PSA, concluding that the organisational culture was complacent around fraud. This occurred after the businessman Montague Alfred's appointment in 1982 by the minister Michael Heseltine as chief executive and second permanent secretary of the PSA (without open competition); when Alfred was asked about the report's allegations by members of parliament, he pointed out that only 0.005% of the PSA's budget was likely lost to fraud and that it would be impossible to completely stamp it out. Soon after, Alfred resigned over these statements as they were perceived to have clashed with the government's own statements in response to Wardale's findings.[5]
Wardale died on 18 December 2017.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b "Wardale, Sir Geoffrey (Charles)", Who Was Who (online ed., Oxford University Press, 2021). Retrieved 28 January 2022.
- ^ The London Gazette, 28 December 1973 (supplement, issue 46162), p. 3.
- ^ The London Gazette, 26 June 1979 (supplement, issue 47888), p. 2.
- ^ Geoffrey K. Fry, Policy and Management in the Civil Service (London: Routledge, 2014), pp. 73–74.
- ^ Richard A. Chapman, The Civil Service Commission, 1855–1991: A Bureau Biography (London: Routledge, 2004), p. 73.