Greater use of project bank accounts, placing retentions in trust and the creation of a construction regulator were among the proposals.
The MSPs were briefed by Alan Wilson, head of membership and communications at the Scottish electrical contractors鈥 trade association Select and national executive officer of the Specialist Engineering Contractors鈥 (SEC) Group.
Mr Wilson said: 鈥淢y presentation was made to a group of MSPs as well as interested parties from throughout the construction sector to give our organisations鈥 views on how procurement could be improved.
鈥淚 wanted to draw to the attention of our elected representatives a number of issues including the payment cycle, retentions, large packaging of contracts and lack of accountability.鈥
On payment, he suggested the more stringent enforcement of Section 15 of the Procurement Reform (Scotland) Act 2014 as well as the extension of, and reduction of limits for, project bank accounts.
He proposed placing all retentions into a trust-based deposit scheme and greater implementation of the Procurement Reform Act鈥檚 provisions, which allow public bodies to package contracts into smaller lots for which small firms can more realistically bid.
On accountability, he advocated the introduction of a yellow/red card scheme and the appointment of a construction regulator.
鈥淚n the wake of the Carillion crisis, now is the time to act,鈥 Mr Wilson said. 鈥淧eople need to be accountable, and they need to pay on time. Retentions should not be used as bargaining chips and we should try to get away from the fixation of large scale contracts.鈥
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