BC Ferries a bloated, inefficient and recessionary drag on the province
A central argument for privatizing British Columbias ferry system was that a strict business model would prove far more efficient than continuing the system under provincial control. Instead, the privatized model has yielded bloated management, lack of transparency, increasingly inefficient service and rapidly rising costs that now threaten perhaps $500 million in annual provincial tax revenue and place a recessionary drag on perhaps $50 billion in provincial economic productivity.
Thirty years ago, when Premier Bill Bennetts Social Credit government ran the operation, BC Ferries serviced 23 routes with 3,800 employees and a management/administration unit of 120. Today, it services two additional routes, but has added about 1,000 employees and has a management/administration unit of more than 600, including based on 2011 reports 12 vice-presidents. This works out to one manager for every 7.6 employees. Even if you remove several hundred excluded ships officers from the equation, it still works out to about one manager for every 10 employees.
By comparison, Washington State Ferries, which operates under the state highways and transportation system and carries more passengers and vehicles (although with fewer vessels on generally shorter routes than in B.C.), runs efficiently with 43 managers about one manager for every 40 workers.
BC Ferries spends about $12 on management and administrative overhead for every $1 spent on those costs by Washington State Ferries.
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Stephen+Hume+Ferries+bloated+inefficient+recessionary+drag+province/9520800/story.html#ixzz2tpkmkcWf