The choices I have made
I sometimes hope that
in my professional capacity, I have done my best to help users and customers
experience the best service and utility of information technology services and
products I design or manage, there is a sense of professional pride in what I
do.
Then, there are
choices I would make about who to work for, and where I want to work, and when it appears, that I am contributing nothing useful to the situation, I do not wait around too
long before I move on. I seek to improve systems where possible, where
unappreciated, it is unnecessary to suffer ignominy when opportunities abound
elsewhere.
I could not see
myself working for Shell, the oil company in the 1990s as it was embroiled in
activities inimical to Nigeria despite being offered lucrative contracts,
instead, I found myself pioneering activities at British Petroleum. I
can think of many other things and companies where I worked too.
In the system that concerned
Recently, I was
working for a professional services company that had me posted to help manage
Post Office infrastructure. I was aware of a long-running issue with computer
errors that left postmasters and sub-postmasters being accused, prosecuted, and
sent to jail for fraud. However, I was unaware of how serious the issue was
until I listened to the BBC podcast The Great Post
Office Trial.
Little did I know
what a travesty and injustice the whole situation was, I was sickened by it
all. To now learn that all the people charged have had their names cleared is
gratifying, but it cannot compensate for how they were treated and the
suffering they endured. [BBC
News: Convicted Post Office workers have names cleared]
Leadership in the
hock
Reverend Paula Vennells was the
CEO of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, when they pursued their staff so
aggressively using the weight of the establishment over hapless postmasters and
sub-postmasters to persecute, prosecute, and destroy literally blameless people
who were told their individual instances of fraud and false accounting were unique
and that nothing was wrong with the Post Office computer system known as
Horizon. [The
Guardian: Post Office’s aggressive pursuit of staff casts shadow over ex-boss’s
tenure]
Even as the Post
Office became aware of issues with Horizon, the establishment stood its
ground about the infallibility of the computer system and used the preponderance
of the premise to take people down. The CEO was unflinching and unquestioning of
the situation with the view to protect the image and the brand of the Post
Office admitting no liability or fault.
It took the concerted
efforts of postmasters and sub-postmasters banding together, a journalist who kept
on and the case, and finding support from members of Parliament and then the courts before the Post Office side of things began to unravel. The Post Office
only beginning to settle more broadly with them when the Reverend had moved on
to another bigger role in government and the NHS along with bagging a CBE for
services to the Post Office and charity.
Accountability must
matter
The scathing and
excoriating opinions of the courts and the MPs involved made her position
having moved on from the Post Office untenable that she has had to give up some
of the high-profile positions. I do not think this would be the end of the
story as justice has not been duly served and compensation for the loss of too much
has not been adequate. The need for a more thorough accountability is more than
essential.
Then I think about
the months I worked within a team to improve the Post Office services on the
Horizon counters, the times I visited locations to chat to postmasters about their
experiences, the usability, and the testing of improved and enhanced products, by
which time many of the issues had apparently been dealt with and I hope I did
not give cover to error-prone situations that criminalised people who should
have received more support than they were accorded. I even worked on improving the
bar scanning system.
Some lessons to learn
In our little positions, we tried to make things better, but if there is any lesson to be learnt from this,
it is that organisations should act truthfully and with integrity, that leaders
should be more questioning and interested in the systems within their
organisations where lives can be upturned, that they should not just listen to
their reports afraid of admitting mistakes in their implementations, that
computers are not infallible, that maintaining a brand at the expense of people
will eventually destroy everyone involved and that this whole debacle was a
disgusting disgrace.
I cannot have done
this matter any justice; I am just distressed that I was remotely within a
setup that impacted lives without any humanity. My sense of British fair play has
been shaken to the core. Your listening to the BBC podcast The Great Post
Office Trial will give a good idea of what went down. Prepare to be
shocked.
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