Off-Prem

PaaS + IaaS

Ellison's exemplar SAP-to-Oracle region rules out ditching Oracle

Largest local authority in Europe expects to go live with re-implementation


Birmingham City Council – Europe's largest local authority, serving over one million customers – has agreed to re-implement an Oracle Fusion system following a failed rollout that saw costs escalate by more than £100 million ($125.6 million) and the authority unable to fulfill its statutory duties.

In 2021, Oracle founder and CTO Larry Ellison called out Birmingham City Council as one of a number of successful wins to migrate very large SAP ERP customers to Oracle Fusion.

The council is struggling to get its heavily customized current implementation, which went live in April 2022, "safe and compliant" such that it can understand its financial position and file auditable accounts.

In June last year, a report to the cabinet said it would also develop an updated delivery plan including "systems integration work that will require reverting to a more 'out of the box' Oracle solution."

However, earlier this year, the council's audit committee heard it was still deciding whether to re-implement Oracle or look for another solution.

Philip Macpherson, Oracle program lead for the council, said the team would conduct "analysis to genuinely weigh up the pros and cons around that to sort of underpin the case for re-implementation [of Oracle]."

In a report to the cabinet today, the council said that work was complete, without considering other suppliers in the market.

"An extensive business requirements collation and evaluation exercise took place as part of the original procurement which confirmed that Oracle was a good fit for the Council. This has been re-confirmed recently by the completion of the Cloud Fit Assessment which also verified that the Council's requirements could be met through out of the box Oracle processes. There is therefore no reason for the council to repeat this expensive and time-consuming market exercise or to reconsider its outcome," the report said.

As well as working to get its current customized implementation fit for purpose, the council is set to launch a procurement for a new Oracle delivery partner to "scale, deploy and work with the Council to implement the initial solution by March 2026 and run the service for a further 3-5 years."

The new delivery partner – whoever it is – will not be the only third party benefiting from the debacle. Oracle Consulting, Gartner, PwC, and KPMG have also worked on the project, as well as original partners Insight Direct (ULK) and Evosys.

The paper said it would be offered to the market through an "established public sector framework" and requests funding of £12.7 million ($15.9 million) for the first phase of re-implementation.

But the total cost of re-implementing Oracle is uncertain. In its outline business case in 2018, the council put the number at around £15 million ($18.8 million). That increased to nearly £20 million ($25 million) by the full business case in 2019.

A report in February said the council approved an additional £45 million ($56.5 million) for the 2024/25 and 2025/26 financial years, "in addition to the £86 million [$108 million] budget approved so far."

Now the council cabinet thinks it might not need all the money. "Work is ongoing to confirm the 'end to end' cost to date and projected end cost of the solution, considering the initial implementation, manual workarounds, interim fixes and re-implementation. This includes confirming the level of remaining funding from the £86 million previously approved by Cabinet, which will be utilised prior to accessing the additional funding," the report said.

However, the project's scope is set to be reduced. The previous HR and finance system – an SAP-based system first implemented in 1999 – supported finance, HR, and payroll for schools.

"Whilst the council remains very strongly committed to ensuring schools receive the best possible services to support their activities, it has concluded that it should not make provision to continue the current, Oracle-based, arrangements in the re-implementation of the Oracle system," the latest Cabinet report said.

It said "the Oracle system is not suited to providing these services to schools in the long run" because, even after re-implementation, an "Oracle-based solution for schools would be comparatively expensive and inefficient." The council said it would "identify the best options for schools to replace council traded services based on Oracle Finance and HR."

The increase in ERP project costs, together with the failure of the accounting system, contributed to the council declaring itself effectively bankrupt last year. A bill of up to £760 million ($954 million) to settle equal pay claims also contributed to the effective bankruptcy. That figure is now being disputed. ®

Send us news
23 Comments

SQL king Larry Ellison becomes sequel sultan with controlling interest in Paramount Global

Oh, great: another tech billionaire owns a media company – although his son probably runs the show

City council faces £216.5M loss over Oracle system debacle

Europe's largest local authority canceled expected savings baked into financial plans

Superclusters too big, but single servers too small? Oracle offers AI Goldilocks zone

Adds L40 bare metal option to the O-Cloud, plus A100 and H100 VMs. And teases a GH200 beast

Desktop hypervisors are not dead: Oracle preps major VirtualBox update

Solaris support persists and support for Armed Macs improves

Oracle's Java pricing brews bitter taste, subscribers spill over to OpenJDK

Following licensing changes, 86% of users head for the door. Coincidence?

Oracle coughs up $115M to make privacy case go away

Big Red agrees not to capture personal details after two-year class action

Google, Oracle, Microsoft make their case for VMware migrations – HPE on the outer?

New instance types and discounts galore, and Broadcom all smiles as its preferred licensing finds more friends

Latest MySQL release is underwhelming, say some DB experts

Oracle's priorities may lie elsewhere but it is unfair to say all innovation can go in community edition, reckons analyst

Europe's largest council could face £12M manual audit bill after Oracle project disaster

Thank goodness for pen and paper. Re-implemented system might not arrive until March 2026, four years after initial roll-out

Mega-city's Oracle system won't have effective cash management until 2025

Birmingham, Europe's largest local authority, plans to reimplement software years after it replaced SAP

Oracle Java license teams set to begin targeting Oracle users who don't think they use Oracle

IP address of downloads offers crumb trail to orgs who should be ready for Big Red, says licensing expert

Palantir, Oracle cosy up to offer Karp firm's tech across Big Red's cloud

Foundry and AI plaform available in OCI