Items
No. |
Item |
13. |
EMERGENCY EVACUATION PROCEDURE
The Chair will draw attention to the emergency
evacuation procedure as set out under Note 7.
Minutes:
The Democratic Services Officer
drew attention to the emergency evacuation procedure.
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14. |
ELECTION OF VICE-CHAIR
To elect a Vice-Chair (if required) for this
meeting.
Minutes:
No Vice-Chair was
appointed.
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15. |
APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE AND SUBSTITUTIONS
Minutes:
Apologies for absence
had been received from Cllr Brian Simmons.
|
16. |
DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST
At this point in the
meeting declarations of interest are received from Members in any
of the agenda items under consideration at the meeting. Members are
asked to indicate:
(a) The agenda item number in which they have an
interest to declare.
(b) The nature of their interest.
(c) Whether their interest is
a disclosable
pecuniary interest or an other
interest,
(as defined in Part 2, A and B of the Code of Conduct and Rules for
Registration of Interests)
Any Member who needs to clarify
any matters relating to the declaration of interests is recommended
to seek advice from the Council’s Monitoring Officeror a
member of his staff before the meeting to expedite dealing with the
item during the meeting.
Minutes:
There were no declarations of
interest.
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17. |
TO ANNOUNCE ANY URGENT BUSINESS AGREED BY THE CHAIR
The Chair will announce any items of urgent
business.
Minutes:
There was no urgent
business.
|
18. |
ITEMS FROM THE PUBLIC - TO RECEIVE DEPUTATIONS, STATEMENTS, PETITIONS OR QUESTIONS
Minutes:
There were no items from the
public.
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19. |
ITEMS FROM COUNCILLORS AND CO-OPTED AND ADDED MEMBERS
To deal with any petitions, statements or
questions from Councillors and, where appropriate, co-opted and
added Members.
Minutes:
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20. |
MINUTES - 19TH MAY 2022 PDF 350 KB
Minutes:
RESOLVED that
the minutes be confirmed as a correct record and signed by the
Chair.
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21. |
EXTERNAL AUDIT - ANNUAL REPORT PDF 106 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Sophie Morgan-Bower (Grant
Thornton) introduced the External Audit Annual Report and drew
attention to the following:
- The
main audit of the Council’s financial statements was due to
start on 19 September and the audit of the Avon Pension
Fund’s financial statements had already begun.
- The
initial planning work had been finalised
- The
certification of claims and returns work had been
completed.
- There
had been no significant issues highlighted as a result of the
interim audit work, but this work was ongoing.
- Walkthrough testing had been completed for Avon Pension Fund but
not for the Local Authority.
- The
Local Authority’s journal entry policies and procedures had
been reviewed and nothing had been identified that would impact on
the financial statements.
Peter Barber (Grant Thornton)
addressed the issue of the indicative fees and responded to
questions from the Committee as follows:
- The
audit plans were presented at the previous meeting and at that
stage the indicative fee was to be confirmed. This information was now available and the
increase in the baseline scale fee from Public Sector Audit
Appointments (PSAA) was £6k, making a total of
£101,351k with additional fees being forecast as
£67,313k based on the increments that had happened over
previous years and new issues for 2021/22.
- External and Internal Quality Review: the time taken to respond
to reviews would be shared across the audits and the proposed
£1.5K was a share of this cost.
The audit work on Bath and North East Somerset Council had been
subject to review in 2021 and the outcome was positive score 2 (1
being the highest).
- Extraction of IT data by IT Team: This was a proposed £4K
to bring in IT colleagues to source baseline data. This was for specialist technical IT officers
required to extract data and did not relate to journals work and
this would be clarified in the next iteration of the
document,
- Infrastructure Assets: This had arisen as a result of Finance
Reporting Council (FRC) comments in relation to another company and
was driven by accountancy and audit standards. The release of Chartered Institute of Public
Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA) guidance on the issue had been
delayed, but there was an expectation for more work to provide
evidence of the capital value of infrastructure. In relation to Council owned infrastructure such
as roads and bridges, this was challenging to quantify.
- Remote
working: There was a proposed uplift of
£10k to cover the costs of Council finance officers working
remotely. It was difficult to give a
daily cost as this depended on the experience of individual
auditors. The opinion of the External
Auditors was that a review could be carried out more efficiently in
the office with the Council’s Finance Officers present and
there would be an additional cost involved in a remote review as
well as a likely delay in completion.
This issue was the subject of further negotiations with Bath and
North East Somerset Council. Members
expressed concern about the impact of remote working on the
delivery ...
view the full minutes text for item 21.
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22. |
TREASURY MANAGEMENT OUTTURN REPORT 2021/22 PDF 611 KB
Minutes:
The Head of Financial
Management introduced the outturn report for 2021/22 and drew
attention to the following:
- The
report had been drafted in line with CIPFA’s Code of Practice
requirements and would also be presented to Cabinet and
Council.
- Some
changes had been made to reflect the recommendations of the
External Audit Value for Money report to include comparative
information on investment returns and borrowing to identify trends
and also include the overall score and trend information in the
Risk Register extract.
- Overall investments performance averaged 0.36% which was 0.3%
above the benchmark rate. This was
mainly due to the £5m long term investment balance held in
the CCLA Local Authority Property Fund, and a combined £5m
invested across two long term Environmental, Social, and Governance
(ESG) focused funds during 2021/22.
- The Council’s revenue budget for
interest & capital financing costs was
£1.078m
under budget in 2021/22, mainly due to the high levels of cash
balances resulting in a delay in the need to
borrow.
- The
external borrowing total of £219.4m was a reduction from the
previous year reflecting the repayment of shorter-term loans
with no replacement borrowing being taken due to the
Council’s high cash balances.
- In
relation to the Performance Against Treasury Management Indicators
as set out in Appendix 1, all indicators were within approved
limits.
- The
economic and market review for April to March 2022 set out in
Appendix 5 identified the main issues as the continuing economic
recovery following the Covid pandemic; the war in Ukraine; higher
inflation and higher interest rates. The Bank of England base rate
increased from 0.1% at the start of the year to 0.75% at the end of
the year in response to rising inflation.
Following questions from the
Committee, the Head of Financial Management responded as
follows:
- In
relation to the inflationary pressures leading to higher interest
rates, the impact on contracts would vary, but there would be a big
impact on energy contracts which were being retendered. There would be a big increase in the cost of the
contract and the Council had created an earmark reserve to help
with this pressure. In relation to
other contracts, the position would be monitored throughout the
year.
- The
option to borrow at current interest rates to service capital was
regularly reviewed but a balanced assessment needed to be made in
terms of cash balances held and future interest rate
expectations. CIPFA offered clear
advice to local authorities with a borrowing requirement not to
borrow to invest primarily for yield.
- In
relation to the circa £1m underspend on capital financing,
this formed part of the Council’s overall outturn underspend
which was being transferred to specific earmarked reserves to cover
contract risks including the energy contract price
increases.
- Arlingclose had extended the maximum investment duration limit for UK bank
entities on its recommended lending list from 35 days to 100 days
in September and the Council received regular updates and alerts
from its treasury advisors if there was any action on a bank or
...
view the full minutes text for item 22.
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23. |
PROPERTY COMPLIANCE INTERNAL AUDIT REPORT 2021 - UPDATE PDF 84 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Head of Audit and Assurance
introduced the report and advised the Committee:
1.
The Property Compliance April 2021 Final Audit
Report had been assigned a Level 2 ‘Limited
Assurance’
2.
There had been a further update to the December 2021
Committee which had reported progress against 3 high risk
recommendations:
a.
Lack of clarity relating to the role and
responsibility of groups providing Scrutiny of Property
Compliance.
b.
Inadequate reporting to management/groups on
Property Compliance responsibilities.
c.
Failure to formally assign responsibilities to
qualified Officers.
3.
Following the December 2021 meeting, the management
responsibility for the property compliance functions had been
transferred to the Director of Regeneration and Housing who was in
attendance to give a further update.
The Director of Regeneration
and Housing reported that:
- The
vision and aim of the new structure were to ensure that all assets
were corporately managed.
- In
relation to the first identified high risk, appropriate governance
was now in place and scrutiny groups were operating with new terms
of reference.
- In
relation to the second risk, there were monthly updates to the
Health, Safety and Wellbeing Committee and monthly Property Health & Safety meetings were taking place
with key managers from Property and Health & Safety to
understand the risks and agree actions to mitigate.
- The
Team had undertaken a gap analysis and a plan was in place for
interim resources.
- In
terms of technology, an integrated asset management system,
Zetasafe would be
introduced. There was currently several
different systems in place that did not interact with each other,
for example, there was no corelation between repairs and
maintenance and asset income generation. Once the new system was implemented it would be
possible to run dashboards on compliance.
- In
relation to the third high risk, the staffing structure had been
changed and job descriptions amended to include dedicated
compliance officers. This process was
ongoing as not all officers were in post.
- In
relation to medium term risks, as well as the work on implementing
an integrated data system, a leaseholder pack would be developed to
outline compliance requirements.
The Director of Regeneration
and Housing responded to questions as follows:
- It was
hoped that the new IT system would be ready to use in the next
budget setting cycle and would inform future plans. It would allow the data to be easily accessed and
help where obligations needed to be passed on, for example, to
tenants.
- In
relation to the Curo estate, Bath and North East Somerset Council
still had landlord obligations in relation to 72 of these
properties. Compliance checks were in
place, but some works still needed to be carried out.
- The
overall aim was to improve compliance where the Council was not
currently compliant, the risk needed to be managed and
mitigated.
- In
terms of the records not being kept in a timely manner, he
undertook to report back with further detail.
In considering the
officers’ recommendations, it was agreed that a further
update should be given to the committee near the ...
view the full minutes text for item 23.
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24. |
COUNTER FRAUD UPDATE REPORT - STRATEGY & ASSOCIATED POLICIES 2022 PDF 251 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Head of Audit and Assurance
introduced the report and highlighted the
following:
1.
A presentation had been circulated to the Committee
in advance of the meeting which detailed the results of the
National Fraud Initiative exercise carried out by the Internal Audit Team.
2.
The team had carried out focussed reviews in 2021/22
in relation to Covid 19 small business grants and tenancy fraud and
was also involved in training and raising awareness for
staff.
3.
The Anti-Fraud & Corruption Strategy (Appendix
1) and associated policies had been updated to take into account the Fighting Fraud and Corruption
Locally 2020 strategy for local government.
4.
The Whistle Blowing Policy (Appendix 2) gave people
the opportunity to whistle blow whilst being protected against
repercussions using an external submission form.
5.
The Anti-Money Laundering Policy & Guidance
(Appendix 3) reflected the legislation and
2017 regulations.
6.
The Anti-Bribery & Corruption Policy (Appendix
4) covered two forms of bribery, active and passive.
In relation to questions from
the Committee, officers confirmed:
- There
would be a report back on the whistle blowing data at the end of
the year. There had been some confusion
in reporting which had been raised by the External Auditor and this
related to people reporting breaches of Covid restrictions rather
than reporting of fraudulent activities.
- Contractors/partners would need to comply with the
Council’s corporate responsibilities.
- Staff
training was directed at certain groups such as frontline staff as
well as anti-fraud induction training for all members of
staff.
- In
terms of focussed areas for review, areas were targeted where real
value could be achieved based on national data. In relation to the review of Covid Business Grant,
the amount of fraud in the Bath and North
East Somerset area had been negligible which suggested that
the controls were in place to prevent fraud.
The Committee agreed that it
would be useful for staff training to be enhanced and monitored to
ensure that the anti-fraud policies were understood.
RESOLVED that
(1)
The updated Anti-Fraud & Corruption Strategy
(Appendix 1)be approved and comments
about the need for additional staff training be noted.
(2)
The updated Whistle Blowing Policy (Appendix
2) be approved.
(3)
The updated Anti-Money Laundering Policy &
Guidance (Appendix 3) be approved.
(4)
The updated Anti-Bribery & Corruption Policy
(Appendix 4) be approved.
(5)
The work carried out by the Internal Audit Team
related to counter fraud & corruption be noted.
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25. |
ANNUAL GOVERNANCE STATEMENT 2021/22 - UPDATE REPORT PDF 112 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Head of Audit and Assurance
introduced the report and drew attention to the following three
significant governance issues:
- The
increase in energy supply costs and the forecast 143% increase in
costs in the next financial year.
- The
sale of Virgin Care to Health Care Resourcing Group (HCRG) in
November 2021 and the impact on the Adult Health and Social Care
contract. Cabinet agreed not to
extend the contract beyond March 2024 and to assess options for the
future delivery of the service.
- The
overspend of the Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) by £8m
(combined with a £5.4m carry forward from the previous year)
as a result of the increase and
complexity of Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND)
assessments. Bath and
North East Somerset Council had produced
a recovery plan in accordance with Department for Education (DfE)
guidance and it was hoped that the Council would enter the DfE
safety valve programme in September 2022.
In response to questioning, it
was confirmed that:
- The
DSG overspend and increase in SEND assessments was a national issue
and a number of Councils were facing
financial challenges in this area.
- A
proportion of the underspend in 2021/22 had been earmarked as a
reserve for increasing energy costs and this sum was in addition to
the contingency budget.
In considering the
officers’ recommendations, the Committee noted that this was
a draft statement for consideration by the External Auditor and the
final statement would be brought back to Committee later in the
year.
RESOLVED that
the work carried out on the draft Annual Governance Statement (AGS)
2021/22 be noted.
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26. |
INTERNAL AUDIT - PUBLIC SECTOR INTERNAL AUDIT STANDARDS - QUALITY ASSURANCE & IMPROVEMENT PLAN PDF 110 KB
Minutes:
The Head of Audit and
Assurance introduced the report and drew
attention to the following
- There
was a need to verify compliance with public sector internal audit
standards and the Code of Ethics and to have a plan to assess the
current position.
- The
last external review of compliance was in 2018 and the next review
needed to take place by March 2023 to comply with the 5-year
timescale.
- The
assessment would take place in November/December 2022 and would be
predominately a desktop review. The
Assessor would speak to the Chair and possibly other members of the
Corporate Audit Committee as part of the review.
In considering the
officers’ recommendations, it was;
RESOLVED that
(1)
the form of the planned external assessment of the Internal Audit
Service Quality Assurance and Improvement Programme be noted.
(2)
the intention to appoint the Devon Audit Partnership to carry out
the external assessment be noted.
(3)
the Council’s S151 Officer role as the formal sponsor for the
external assessment be noted.
(4)
a report be submitted to the Committee in early 2023 to communicate
the results of the external assessment and any resulting action
plans.
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27. |
ANNUAL REPORT - CORPORATE AUDIT COMMITTEE PDF 108 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Head of Audit and Assurance
introduced the report and drew attention
to the revised Terms of Reference (Appendix 2) which had been
amended to provide examples of other matters relating to corporate
governance. He asked the Committee to
consider the Annual Report and revised Terms of Reference for
submission to full Council.
John Barker referred to recent
guidance from CIPFA which recommended that there should be at least
two co-opted independent members on Local Authority Audit
Committees and asked if this needed consideration. It was agreed that this could be considered in
planning for the future year.
In considering the Annual
Report, it was agreed that there should be an amendment in relation
to paragraph vii relating to the summary of the External
Auditor’s report to include reference to recommendations
relating to key performance indicators and lack of benchmarking and
strengthening contract management arrangements.
It was agreed that the report
would be amended and recirculated to the committee for approval
prior to submission to Council.
RESOLVED that
(1)
The Annual Report (Appendix 1) and request that the Chair of the
Committee present it to Council (15th September 2022) be agreed,
subject to an amendment to paragraph vii of the report to relating
to the summary of the External Auditor’s report to include
reference to recommendations relating to key performance indicators
and lack of benchmarking and strengthening contract management
arrangements.
(2)
Council (15th September 2022) be requested to approve the revised
Committee Terms of Reference (Appendix 2).
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