Venue: Mandela Room
Contact: Susan Lightwing
No. | Item |
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Declarations of Interest To receive
any declarations of interest. Minutes: There were
no declarations of interest received at this point in the meeting. |
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Minutes- Corporate Affairs and Audit Committee - 15 August 2023 PDF 144 KB Minutes: The minutes of the Corporate Affairs and Audit meeting held on 15 August 2023 were submitted and approved as a correct record. |
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Section 24 Report - Delivery and Oversight Arrangements PDF 323 KB Additional documents: Minutes: A joint report of the Chief
Executive, Director of Finance and Director of Legal and Governance Services
was presented to provide the Committee with information in relation to the
planned reporting arrangements for delivery of the action plan that was agreed
by Council on 18 September 2023, in response to 11 statutory recommendations
made by the Council’s External Auditors Ernst & Young LLP (EY), exercising
their powers under Section 24, Schedule 7(2) of the Local Audit and
Accountability Act 2014. The agreed recommendations and
supporting action plan that was agreed by Council on 18 September 2023 was
attached at Appendix 1 to the submitted report.
Progress against the action plan
would be reported to the Audit Committee as a standing item until delivery of
all actions was complete. Progress would
also be reported to the Independent Improvement Advisory Board (IIAB) that had
been established to oversee delivery of the Council’s Corporate Governance
Improvement Plan, as set out in the report to Council on 18 September 2023 that
outlined phase three of the Corporate Governance Improvement Plan. The Chair of the IIAB and the
Council’s three statutory officers would also meet regularly with both the
External Auditor and the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Committees in
separate meetings to discuss the Board’s independent view of the Council’s
progress against both the Section 24 action plan and phase three of the
Corporate Governance improvement Plan.
Progress against the CGIP would be reported as a standing item to each
ordinary meeting of full Council to maintain Member visibility. Since the report was approved by
Council on 18 September 2023, two actions had been completed in line with their
target dates as follows: 1. A review of all existing purchasing cards had been
completed. A process was in place for reducing the number of cards across the
business and mandatory training had been developed for cardholders identified
moving forward. Training for the initial
cohort would be complete by November 2023 and then there would be a rolling
programme of training aligned with the assignment of cards going forward. 2. Pre-2021 ‘open’ exemptions had been identified and a full
analysis of would be reported to the Audit Committee in December within the annual assurance report on
Procurement activity. The first meeting of the
Independent Improvement Advisory Board (IIAB) had taken place on 2 October 2023
and another meeting was scheduled for November.
It was confirmed that a note of actions points had been made rather than
recorded minutes. This point was queried
by Members as it had been stated at a recent Council meeting that minutes would
be kept of IIAB meetings. The
Monitoring Officer confirmed the question had been raised at Council and agreed
that this position would be corrected. The first meeting had set the scene for the IIAB to understand Middlesbrough Council and discussion had also taken place regarding engagement with Members. An informal two-way conversation with Members was envisaged as well as the formal process, and this was high up on ... view the full minutes text for item 23/3 |
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Update on Audit of Accounts Progress PDF 355 KB Minutes: A report of the Interim Director
of Finance (Section 151 Officer) was presented to update the Audit Committee on
the audit of the Council’s Statement of Accounts and provide new information on
action proposed by the Department for Levelling Up Homes and Communities
(DLUHC) to address the current audit backlog. The report provided an update on
the outstanding audit of the Council’s Statement of Accounts for 2021/22. In addition, the Council draft accounts for
2022/23 had yet to be finalised for publication although the statutory date for
doing this was 31 May 2023. There was
also an update from DLUHC in relation to the national backlog of audits
currently outstanding within the local government sector and initial proposals
on how to address this. The completion of the external
audit of the Council’s last two years financial statements and value for money
assessment took significantly longer to finalise than in previous years: • For
2019/20, this was completed on 2 March 2021 (the statutory date for these
audited accounts was 30 November 2020). • For
2020/21, this was completed on 29 April 2023 (the statutory date for these
audited accounts was 30 September 2021). In previous years to these, the
statutory deadlines had been achieved. Reasons for the delays had been
reported to the Corporate Affairs and Audit Committee several times before and
were grouped into three main categories: 1. Onerous regulatory requirements for external auditors,
mainly from the National Audit Office and the Financial Reporting Council. This
had required extensive additional work to be undertaken and evidence to be
gathered by auditors as part of their examination of the Council’s financial
statements and transactions. This had been in response to a high number of
corporate failures in the private sector. 2. A significant amount of additional work had been required
on the value for money assessment, mainly in relation to the Ofsted judgement
on the quality of Children’s Services being delivered by the Council, and the
governance issues within the Council which had recently led to a set of
statutory recommendations being issued. 3. Extra work, evidence and focus on the Going Concern
Assessment, given the well-publicised issues on local authorities and their
financial sustainability. In addition, there had been
resource constraints and recruitment issues within both the Council’s financial
team and for Ernst & Young (EY), the external auditors, over most of this
period. The Head of Finance and
Investment confirmed that the Council had brought in additional resources to
assist with completion of the accounts and provide better resilience. The deadline for publication of the draft accounts for 2022/23 was consulted on by DLUHC during April 2023 due to some concerns as to whether this could return to normal following the pandemic. The outcome of this was announced on 3 April 2023 and the deadline returned to 31 May date. There was no penalty for failing to meet the statutory deadlines. However, it was important for local authorities and their stakeholders to have assurance of the Council’s financial position ... view the full minutes text for item 23/4 |
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Internal Audit and Counter Fraud Progress Report PDF 290 KB Additional documents:
Minutes: The Head of Internal Audit, Veritau, presented a report to provide the Audit Committee with an update on the delivery of internal audit and counter fraud work and on reports issued and other work completed since the last update report to Committee. The internal audit progress report was contained at Appendix 1 to the submitted report. This included a summary of current work in progress, internal audit priorities for the year, completed work, and follow-up of previously agreed audit actions. Good progress had been made since the last update. Seven reports had been finalised and 3 reports were in draft. One of the 3 draft reports – Homecare - had been finalised since this report was written. The final report on Middlesbrough Development Company was reported to the August meeting of the Corporate Affairs and Audit Committee. Five of the final reports provided substantial or reasonable assurance. The opinion on the Children’s Commissioning and Contract Management audit was limited and actions had been agreed with target dates. The actions would be followed up to ensure they had been completed. Annex E to the submitted report provided details of the follow up of agreed actions and one action has been completed since the last report to Committee. This was a priority 3 action relating to the audit of the main accounting system. A total of 18 actions with original due dates that had passed were still outstanding. Of those 18, 15 had revised target dates agreed and the remaining 3 were being followed up. Members asked questions in relation to the prioritisation of audits, the length of time taken to complete and overdue actions. The purpose of Internal Audit was to help the Council and its managers to mitigate and manage risk. Interna Audit focussed on areas that would be of most benefit to the Council and likely to be the most risky. The counter fraud progress report was contained at Appendix 2 to the submitted report. A range of work was detailed including activity to promote awareness of fraud, work with external agencies, and information on the level of fraud reported to date. Veritau
had worked with Human Resources to update the Council’s Whistleblowing
Policy. The updated policy was finalised
in June 2023 and reflected national guidance and best practice as well as
detailed guidance for managers on how to address whistleblowing concerns. A central log of whistleblowing reports was
now being maintained by Veritau. With the support of the Communications Team,
the revised Whistleblowing Policy was highlighted to all Council employees as
part of World Whistleblowers’ Day on 23 June. Middlesbrough had participated in a National Day of Action against Blue Badge fraud in June 2023, alongside 80 other councils. The exercise involved making checks on blue badges displayed in the town to determine if they were being properly used by legitimate badge holders. The Counter Fraud and Neighbourhood Safety Teams worked together to check 38 badges on the day, which resulted in one penalty charge ... view the full minutes text for item 23/5 |
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Counter Fraud Framework Annual Report PDF 369 KB Additional documents: Minutes: A report of the Head of Internal
Audit, Veritau, was presented to update Members on
the impact of fraud nationally and in particular on
local authorities; summarise outcomes from the annual review of the Council’s
counter fraud policy framework; and present an updated Counter Fraud Strategy
action plan and Fraud Risk Assessment. Fraud was a significant risk to
the public sector. The government
estimated that between £33.2 and £58.8 billion of public spending was lost to
fraud in 2020/212. At a local level,
fraud could impact a council’s ability to support public services and cause
reputational damage. To effectively
combat fraud councils should have a counter fraud framework that helped to
prevent, detect and deter fraud. Covid-19 payments to businesses
and the public concluded last year.
Councils across the country had been working with the former Department
for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) to
complete reconciliation and assurance exercises. BEIS estimated that 8.4% of payments (£985m
nationally) was lost to fraud from the initial Covid-19 schemes at the start of
the pandemic. Later schemes lost 1% (£83m) of payments due to fraud. Councils and central government were
currently working together to recover money lost due to fraud through Covid-19
grant schemes. The Government had reacted to
those losses and set up a public sector fraud authority to give advice and
improve the fraud mechanisms in Government.
New legislation, which might affect public sector organisations, was
being introduced to criminalise larger organisations who failed to prevent
fraud from occurring. The Bill was
currently going through Parliament and the Committee would be kept updated on
progress. Veritau
began providing counter fraud services to the Council in January 2020.
Raising awareness of fraud within the authority and with the public had
been a key priority. This had resulted
in year on year increases in the numbers of cases of suspected fraud being
referred to the team. The chart at
paragraph 8 of the submitted report showed the number of referrals received by
the team since 2020, and the source of the referrals. Between 1 April and 31 August
2023 the team received almost as many referrals as the total received in the
previous year. The number of referrals
from Council officers and the public had also grown each year. The team was increasingly taking more
responsibility for the investigation of data matches highlighted by the
National Fraud Initiative. The Council’s current counter
fraud and corruption strategy was adopted in 2020. The strategy set out the Council’s aims for
counter fraud work up to 2024. The
strategy also included actions needed to maintain and develop counter fraud
arrangements at the Council. The
associated strategy action plan was reviewed and updated annually. This year’s update was contained in Annex A
to the submitted report and detailed progress made against last year’s plan and
introduced new priorities for the counter fraud team in 2023/24 taking into account local and national developments. New objectives this year included: • Presenting a new counter fraud strategy ... view the full minutes text for item 23/6 |
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Any other urgent items which in the opinion of the Chair, may be considered. Minutes: The Chair suggested that the Audit Committee might need to meet more frequently in future to meet an increased workload which included the Section 24 Report updates, outstanding accounts and completed audits. The Democratic Services Officer would circulate a provisional date for a meeting in November 2023. AGREED that a provisional date would be circulated for a meeting of the Audit Committee in November 2023. |