The Defence Reform Act 2014 (c. 20) is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom concerned with defence procurement and the UK Reserve Forces, particularly the Territorial Army. It has 51 sections and seven schedules.

Provisions

Part 1 of the act relates to defence procurement in general. Part 2 created a statutory framework for single-source contracts, operating in accordance with the Single Source Contract Regulations. The Single Source Regulations Office (SSRO) was established under the Act. The act allowed for the streamlining of the Defence Equipment and Support Agency (DE&S).

Part 3 is concerned with reserve forces: the Army Reserve was renamed the Regular Reserve and the Territorial Army was renamed the Army Reserve. The act increased the size of the reserved forces.

The act increased provided for 3,000 additional regular soldiers.

Parliamentary history

First reading

The act had its first reading in the House of Commons on 3 July 2013. Its backers were the Prime Minister, the Deputy Prime Minister, Treasury Chief Secretary Danny Alexander, Business Secretary Vince Cable, Justice Secretary Chris Grayling, Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude, Dominic Grieve and the Bill Minister, Minister for Defence Equipment and Support, Philip Dunne.

Second reading

The second reading in the House of Commons took place on 16 July 2013.

Subsequent stages

Subsequent parliamentary stages were as follows:

HouseStageDate(s)
CommonsCommittee3 September 2013 - 22 October 2013
Report20 November 2013
3rd Reading20 November 2013
Lords1st Reading21 November 2013
2nd Reading10 December 2013
Committee3 February 2014 - 25 February 2014
Report24 March 2014 - 26 March 2014
3rd Reading2 Apr 2014

The bill returned to the House of Commons on 29 April 2014, where a programme motion was passed, and Commons Consideration of Lords' Amendments took place.

Royal assent

The bill was given royal assent (and thus became an act) on 14 May 2014.

Further reading

  • House of Commons Hansard,
  • House of Lords Hansard,

Notes

External links