Venue: Council Chamber, Town Hall, Saturday Market Place, King's Lynn PE30 5DQ. View directions
Contact: Wendy Vincent, Democratic Services Officer, 01553 616377, Email: wendy.vincent@west-norfolk.gov.uk
Link: View Live Stream
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Apologies Minutes: There were no apologies for absence.
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To approve the minutes from the Audit Committee held on 27 November 2023.
Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
The minutes of the Audit Committee held on 27 November 2023 were agreed as a correct record and signed by the Chair.
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Declarations of Interest PDF 131 KB Please indicate if there are any interests which should be declared. A declaration of an interest should indicate the nature of the interest (if not already declared on the Register of Interests) and the agenda item to which it relates. If a disclosable pecuniary interest is declared, the Member should withdraw from the room whilst the matter is discussed.
These declarations apply to all Members present, whether the Member is part of the meeting, attending to speak as a local Member on any item or simply observing the meeting from the public seating area. Minutes: There were no declarations of interest.
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Urgent Business Under Standing Order 7 To consider any business which, by reason of special circumstances, the Chairman proposed to accept as urgent under Section 100(b)(4)(b) of the Local Government Act 1972. Minutes: There was no urgent business.
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Members Present Pursuant to Standing Order 34
Members wishing to speak pursuant to Standing Order 34 should inform the Chair of their intention to do so and on what items they wish to be heard before a decision on that item is taken. Minutes: Councillor R Coates was present under Standing Order 34 (Zoom).
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Chair's Correspondence (if any) Minutes: There was no Chair’s correspondence.
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2019/2020 Audit Results Report - ISA 260 PDF 5 MB Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
Vicky Chong, Audit Manager, Ernst and Young presented the report and drew attention to the key findings and outlined the reasons for the delay in the 2019/2020 audit, the number of hours required to undertake the audit and fee implications.
A summary of the key findings are set out below:
• Page 5: Materiality – Council as a single entity £1.845m final and Council Group £1.923 m final. • Page 6: Closing procedures and signing off of 2019/2020 Statement of Accounts scheduled for 22 January 2024 and issue a certificate. • Pages 7 to 9: Unadjusted differences, Adjusted differences, Disclosure differences. • Page 12: Control observations, recommendations set out on pages 44 and 45.
The Committee was advised of the proposal from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communications to resolve the backlog of previous years Statement of Accounts. Vicky Chong explained that this would potentially lead to a technical disclaimer opinion on the intervening years audit between 2019/2020 accounts and 2023/2024 accounts to move the whole system forward. The Committee was informed that did not apply to the VFM (value for money) arrangement and would still need to be completed across all the financial years and which Ernst Young were in the process of undertaking with a view to reporting around Easter 2024. It was noted that subject to legislation, it was anticipated that the disclaimer form of audit opinion would include the three year period – i.e. 2020/2021, 2021/2022, 2022/2023. It was explained that the Council was not the only authority in this category. However, having three years disclaimer was quite significant and therefore for the 2023/2024 accounts it was important to produce a good quality set of accounts and supporting documents.
The Committee was informed that David Ridler who would be taking over as a partner from Mark Hodgson, would be attending the next Audit Committee meeting regarding the 2023/2024 accounts.
The Chair thanked Vicky Chong for the report and invited questions and comments from the Panel.
The Assistant Director, Resources explained that an announcement was expected from the Government regarding the backlog of accounts. The Assistant Director added that she had attended a recent LGA Conference where Simon Ball, MP had attended in person and it was hoped that an announcement would be made end January/beginning February 2024.
The Chair commented that it was his understanding that it was acceptable for the next three audits to be presented as unqualified. In response, the Assistant Director, Resources explained that there was a proposal out for consultation but that the outcome had not yet been confirmed and an announcement was imminent.
The Chair invited the Portfolio Holder for Finance to address the Committee.
The Portfolio for Finance confirmed he had nothing further to add.
The Chair commented that in his view there was an issue with delays and after reading the report objectively got the impression that those delays were caused by the Borough Council ... view the full minutes text for item A141 |
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Statement of Accounts for 2019/2020 PDF 249 KB Additional documents:
Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
The Financial Services Manager explained that a training session had been held the previous week which had looked at the Statement of Accounts in detail.
The Committee was advised that Ernst Young had provided an assurance on content and the supplementary Statement of Accounts.
The Committee’s attention was drawn to the Core Financial Statement as set out below:
• P115: Income and Expenditure Account – deficit of £5.7m after pension payment and Internal Drainage Board levies. • Movement – usable and unusable reserves. • Council’s net worth. • Administrative process to sign off the 2019/202 Statement of Accounts. • Auditor’s final validation process – it was anticipated that no further significant changes would be required.
The Chair thanked the Financial Services Manager for the report and invited questions and comments from the Committee, a summary of which are set out below.
The Assistant Director, Resources explained that the ISA 260 set out the process required to sign off the 2019/2020 accounts and added that there were minor amendments required such as typographical errors, etc. It was anticipated that the 2019/2020 Statement of Accounts would be signed off on 22 January 2024.
The Assistant Director, Resources responded to questions from the Chair on the financial performance – capital and how the Council performed on the capital programme compared to the budget.
The Financial Services Manager responded to questions from the Chair in relation to the pension fund entry on the Balance Sheet.
At the invitation of the Chair, the Portfolio Holder for Finance addressed the Committee and comment on the lessons learnt from the King’s Lynn Innovation Centre (KLIC) and added that since that time the Council had improved its governance arrangements.
Councillor Dark provided background information on the KLIC entry in the 2019/2020 accounts and explained that Councillors needed to be mindful that during that time there was the Pandemic and the report showed testament to how officers and Councillors had dealt with the finance. Councillor Dark added that KLIC had raised concerns in the past and explained that there was now a legal in-house team and a Member Major Projects Board which monitored major projects. The KLIC building was now owned by the Council at a value of £2.36m and was fully occupied by tenants which was a good end result.
Under Standing Order 34, Councillor Coates commented that he was pleased to learn that the old accounts would shortly be signed off and highlighted that the Committee needed to deal with more current issues and that there was a requirement to get up to date as soon as possible.
In response to comments made regarding KLIC, the Chair referred to the comments made by Councillor Dark in that the Council now had its own in-house legal team and would continue to learn and hoped that the work required for the 2024/2025 statements of accounts would reduce.
The Assistant Director, Resources responded to questions from Councillor Dark ... view the full minutes text for item A142 |
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Annual Governance Statement 2019/2020 PDF 300 KB Additional documents: Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
The Corporate Performance Manager presented the report which brought the Council’s final version of the Annual Governance Statement (AGS) 2020 to the Committee for approval. The draft AGS had previously been considered at the Committee’s meeting on 17 December 2020 and 26 July 2021.
The Committee was reminded that the preparation and publication of the AGS was a statutory requirement. The document was a public statement that described and evaluated the Council’s overall governance arrangements, in particular how it had complied with its Code of Corporate Governance during a particular financial year.
The Corporate Performance Manager explained that the document was reviewed by Ernst Young.
The Committee was informed that the development of the AGS, and the consultation process, had engaged service managers, assistant directors and executive directors, In particular input had been obtained from the Monitoring Officer, Internal Audit Manager and the S151 Officer.
The Committee’s attention was drawn to Section 1.3 of the report and it was explained that Covid had had an impact on a number of actions.
The Chair thanked the Corporate Performance Manager for the report and invited questions/comments from the Committee, a summary of which is set out below.
In response to questions from the Chair on a similar action plan for 2019/2020 and 2020/2021 being a matter of concern, the Corporate Performance Manager explained that the actions remained as at today and that some of those actions would be flagged on a future action plan.
RESOLVED: The Committee:
1) Confirmed that the Annual Governance Statement 2020 (as attached) property reflected the risk environment and the actions required to improve it are in hand.
2) Approve the Annual Governance Statement 2020 (as attached) and confirm that the Chair of the Audit Committee should sign accordingly.
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Corporate Risk Register Update (August 2023) PDF 523 KB Additional documents: Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
The Corporate Performance Manager presented the report which presented an updated version of the register as at August 2023. It gave details of the risks falling into the ‘Very High’ category and the associated work being progressed to mitigate the effects.
The Committee’s attention was drawn to the key issues set out in the report.
The Corporate Performance Manager explained that there were many external factors which influenced risk and which still remained.
The Corporate Performance Manager advised there were no proposals to revise the score for any of the risks, add or remove risks.
The Chair thanked the Corporate Performance Manager for the report and invited questions and comments from the Committee, a summary of which is set out below.
Councillor Bearshaw thanked the Corporate Performance Manager for the work undertaken on the Bowtie methodology and drew attention to page 303, the risk register being monitoring by Management Team and asked if smart actions had been looked at or did Management Team make the decisions to strengthen the process?
At the invitation of the Chair, the Portfolio Holder for Finance addressed the Committee and outlined the major improvements which had been made in producing the risk register. The Portfolio Holder referred to page 321 and the corporate risks in score order and added that there were difficulties in financial stability. In conclusion, the Portfolio Holder commented that the risk register was a fair reflection on the Council’s current position.
The Portfolio Holder for Finance commented that the format of the AGS had been changed and was closer in alignment to the Corporate Plan. The Portfolio Holder outlined the work being undertaken in relation to the list of statutory and discretionary services.
Councillor Dark commented on Risk 1 – Financial Stability and the issue of the Internal Drainage Board (IDB) levies and added that the Council could put a cap on the increase on council tax but IDB’s were not in that position to do so. Councillor Dark further commented that the existing mitigating control for financial stability was previously £3m was set aside for the capital programme which could generate income streams and asked why this had not been included in the existing plan. In response, the Assistant Director – Resources provide clarification on the General Fund Reserve (which could be drawn upon for a rainy day) and the Earmarked reserve (which could be used for a specific purpose).
It was explained that a review of the reserves was being undertaken. With regard to the £3m mentioned by Councillor Dark, the Assistant Director explained that this money was still available but it had not yet been determined what it would be used for and was created by a review and release of historic reserves. The only commitment made was for the feasibility study for the Kaset project.
Following questions from Councillor Bearshaw on reserves, the Assistant Director, Resources explained that reserves were separate from the revenue budget. ... view the full minutes text for item A144 |
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Business Continuity - Annual Update PDF 350 KB Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
The Senior Corporate Governance and Risk Officer/Climate Change Manager presented the report which outlined the current position of the Council’s business continuity arrangements, summarised progress made since the last update on 26 September 2022 and described work that was planned to be undertaken over the coming months.
The key issues were outlined as set out in the report.
The Committee’s attention was drawn to the following sections of the report:
· Current position. · Progress since last report in September 2022. · Forward Work Plan
The Committee noted that the policy was last reviewed in 2019 but publication initially delayed to 2020 pending the senior management restructure and then by the ongoing requirements of the Covid-19 response.
The Chair thanked the Senior Corporate Governance and Risk Officer/Climate Change Manager for the report and invited questions and comments from the Committee, a summary of which is set out below.
The Senior Corporate Governance and Risk Officer/Climate Change Manager responded to questions from Councillor Dark on the regular testing arrangements and explained that testing events were planned with advance notice. The Assistant Director, Resources provided an example of the power network test which was the first undertaken for a number of years. Advance notice was given as there were critical systems which the Council could not afford to be taken down at that time. A following briefing session looking at what worked, what didn’t work and the next test would involve all systems being taken down. A note of the lessons learned would be addressed and corrective action taken in those areas which demonstrated weaknesses.
The Senior Corporate Governance and Risk Officer/Climate Change Manager undertook to feedback the comments from Councillor Dark on actual live testing to the Business Continuity Group.
In response to further questions from Councillor Dark on the Council’s partnership with other Norfolk local authorities regarding business continuity arrangements, the Assistant Director, Resources that she would liaise with the relevant officer and respond direct to the Committee.
The Chair asked what the Metis 24 test would be. In response, the Senior Corporate Governance and Risk Officer/Climate Change Manager explained that it may be emergency planning.
RESOLVED: The Audit Committee reviewed progress made and endorsed the approach being taken to the Council’s business continuity arrangements.
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Internal Audit Follow Up Recommendations Half Year Report PDF 89 KB Additional documents: Minutes: Click here to view a recording of this item on You Tube
The Senior Internal Auditor presented the report which sought to provide an update on the status of all internal audit recommendations, highlighting management responses where any are over the agreed deadline for completion.
The Committee was advised that the current position in relation to the outstanding internal audit recommendations was shown within the attached report.
Members were advised that unfortunately, there had been slow progress demonstrated with a total of 26 recommendations being closed since the last report. It was noted that the report contained an error where it stated “there were some recommendations for which updated had not been received”, following follow up activities concluding a response was received for all outstanding recommendations. The report now contained a total of 59 outstanding Internal Audit recommendations (4 high, 26 medium and 29 low). A further 52 recommendations were not yet due for implementation. This had increased since the last report in May 2023 where 52 recommendations were outstanding and 36 were not yet due.
The Senior Internal Auditor explained that Appendix 1 to the report showed the details of the progress made to date in relation to the implementation of the agreed recommendations. The appendix also reflected the year in which the audit was undertaken to enable the Committee to easily identify historical outstanding recommendations.
It was explained that Appendices 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 to the report showed the details of any high and medium priority outstanding recommendations split by the year in which they were raised. The outstanding recommendations included within each appendix also provided a progress update and details of the total number of days the recommendations were overdue.
The Chair thanked the Senior Internal Auditor for the report and invited the Committee to ask questions/comment, a summary of which is set out below.
In response to a question from Councillor Devulapalli in relation to the Council being too ambitious to complete the outstanding recommendations, the Senior Internal Auditor explained that in his opinion he did not think so. The Committee was advised that upon completion of an audit recommendations and timescales were agreed with the responsible officer. However, Covid, etc had impacted on implementation/responses. The Senior Internal Auditor added that the Internal Audit Team were looking to review the recommendations on a more frequent basis, roughly every eight weeks across the organisation.
Councillor Dark explained that his understanding was that the Council’s car parking strategy was originally boroughwide to include Hunstanton and Downham Market, etc and not just King’s Lynn. The Senior Internal Auditor undertook to liaise with the relevant officer and provide a response to the Committee.
The Senior Internal Auditor responded to questions from Councillor Everett on starters and leavers and the next steps to bring a number of recommendations to fruition. The Assistant Director, Resources outlined the discussion from the previous meeting and the Committee would have received the audit results and recommendations. The Assistant Director explained that this report ... view the full minutes text for item A146 |
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Cabinet Forward Decisions List PDF 174 KB Minutes: The Committee noted the Cabinet Forward Decisions List.
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Committee Work Programme 2023/2024 PDF 319 KB To note the Committee’s Work Programme for 2023/2024.
Minutes: The Committee noted the work programme.
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Date of Next Meeting To note that the date of the next meeting of the Audit Committee will take place on 11 March 2023.
Minutes: The next meeting of the Audit Committee will take place on 11 March 2023 at 4.30 pm in the Council Chamber, Town Hall, King’s Lynn.
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