THE boss of Tower Hamlets council can be seen on the small screen tonight after he was filmed going undercover for a television programme. Chief Executive Kevan Collins left his cosy office at the Town Hall for two weeks and worked alongside members of h

THE boss of Tower Hamlets council can be seen on the small screen tonight after he was filmed going undercover for a television programme.

Chief Executive Kevan Collins left his cosy office at the Town Hall for two weeks and worked alongside members of his frontline staff, as part of the Channel 4 series Undercover Boss.

He was disguised with a beard and a shaved head as he worked as a trainee pest control officer, a market inspector, Meals on Wheels provider, an enforcement officer and at the reception of the Housing and Homelessness

And the programme which was filmed in February is being televised tonight from 9pm.

Dr Collins said the experience left him with a "deep abiding appreciation for the staff's dedication" as well as more determined to save the 'frontline' services as the council prepares to make millions of pounds in cuts over the next three years.

The former teacher said: "My job is to offer advice to members of the council about possible savings and I am hoping this will improve my advice as it has given me a better understanding of what we do in the borough.

"It made me see how we should link more services to improve efficiency and it made me more determined to look at it all as a way of helping rather than reducing the services to the most vulnerable as these are the services that are essential."

During the filming Dr Collins was picked up every morning in Bethnal Green Road at 6am and insists that staff believed he was a trainee called Colin and was looking for a change in career because of the credit crunch.

He added: "At the beginning I was quite sceptical. But when I got into the swing of it I really enjoyed it.

"I do spend a lot of time anyway out of the office but this time I was with an individual member of staff.

"I would not have had some of the conversations that I had, if they had known I was the chief executive.

"People talk to you about all sorts of things - about their work, their family and their community. It was really refreshing.