The Client
A District Council in Essex responsible for managing its Housing Revenue Account (HRA) and overseeing long-term financial planning across its housing services.
Like many district authorities, the Council was operating within a challenging financial environment, balancing regulatory expectations with limited internal resource. A vacancy within the HRA finance team had begun to place increasing pressure on both the Director of Finance and the wider Housing function.
The role was business-critical. The Council required specialist expertise to maintain and progress its 30-year HRA business plan, a cornerstone of its long-term housing strategy.
The Challenge
Following the departure of a key team member, the Council had spent approximately eight weeks attempting to recruit permanently, using multiple routes including:
- External advertising
- Its procured recruitment framework
- Interim supply through approved agencies
Despite these efforts, no suitable candidate had been secured.
This reflected a wider issue across local government. The HRA accountant market is nationally constrained, with very few professionals possessing the required experience across both housing finance and corporate finance within local authorities.
For this Council, the challenge was further compounded by:
- A strict procurement framework limiting agency access
- Budget sensitivity, with funding coming from a ring-fenced HRA budget
- An outdated job specification focused purely on technical delivery
- Reduced internal confidence following repeated unsuccessful recruitment attempts
The risk was not simply a vacant role. Without specialist oversight, the Council’s HRA business planning and wider financial governance could be compromised.
Understanding the Real Requirement
Initially, the brief focused on appointing a technically capable HRA Accountant to work exclusively on the 30-year business plan.
However, through direct consultation with senior stakeholders, Oyster identified that the Council’s needs extended beyond financial modelling.
What the organisation actually required was:
- A strategic HRA business partner able to work closely with senior leadership
- Someone capable of influencing and advising, not simply producing financial outputs
- An individual with strong governance awareness and cross-directorate exposure
- The flexibility to support wider finance priorities, including capital finance if required
By moving beyond the static job description, Oyster reframed the role as a strategic interim solution rather than a narrow technical hire.
Oyster’s Approach
Operating with an advisory-led mindset, Oyster worked closely with the Council to unlock a more effective route to market.
The approach included:
- Consulting directly with senior stakeholders to redefine the brief
- Providing live market insight on the availability of specialist HRA finance professionals
- Identifying a suitable candidate through Oyster’s specialist local government finance network
- Meeting the candidate in person to assess both cultural and technical fit
- Managing the entire interview and onboarding process, minimising administrative burden on the Council
Oyster also advised that the available HRA budget could attract a more experienced professional than initially expected, improving the overall value of the appointment.
Within four days, a fully vetted interim HRA Accountant was secured. This contrasted sharply with the previous eight weeks of unsuccessful recruitment through formal routes.
The Outcome
The appointment quickly restored stability within the Council’s HRA finance function.
The impact included:
- Immediate progression of the 30-year HRA business plan
- Reduced operational pressure on both the Director of Finance and Director of Housing
- Increased confidence within a Council operating under regulatory scrutiny
- Extension of the initial six-week contract to approximately six months due to performance and ongoing value
Beyond simply filling a vacancy, the assignment demonstrated how an advisory-led recruitment approach can unlock specialist talent when traditional procurement routes fail.