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  • Agenda, decisions and minutes

    Governance and Audit Committee - Thursday, 9th October, 2025 10.00 am

    • Attendance details
    • Agenda frontsheet PDF 154 KB
    • Agenda reports pack PDF 9 MB
    • Printed decisions PDF 110 KB
    • Printed minutes PDF 182 KB

    Venue: Cyfarfod Rhithiol / Virtual Meeting. View directions

    Contact: Lowri Haf Evans  01286 679878

    Items
    No. Item

    1.

    APOLOGIES

    To receive apologies for absence.

    Minutes:

    Councillors Dafydd Meurig, Arwyn Herald Roberts, Meryl Roberts and Eifion Jones. Councillor Wendy Cleaver was experiencing technical problems and had been unable to join.   

     

    2.

    DECLARATION OF PERSONAL INTEREST

    To receive any declaration of personal interest.

    Minutes:

    None to note

    3.

    URGENT ITEMS

    To note any items which are urgent business in the opinion of the Chairman so they may be considered.

    Minutes:

    Concern about the costs should Cyngor Gwynedd appeal the High Court's ruling for the Article 4 Direction and how the Council would prepare a response / address the implications of using taxpayers' money to address the cost.

     

    In response to the concern, the Head of Finance noted, despite being an urgent matter, the service needed an opportunity to prepare a formal response. He noted that the Council was considering an appeal against the ruling and the cost of the appeal was part of those considerations. He elaborated that an update would be presented to the Committee in the near future and that this risk was appropriate for the Committee to consider.

     

    4.

    MINUTES pdf icon PDF 198 KB

    The Chairman shall propose that the minutes of the meeting of this committee, held on the 11th of September 2025, be signed as a true record.

    Minutes:

    The Chair accepted the minutes of the previous meeting of this committee held on 11 September 2025, as a true record.

     

    5.

    IMPLEMENTING THE DECISIONS OF THE COMMITTEE pdf icon PDF 225 KB

    To consider the report and offer comments

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    ·        To accept the contents of the report.

     

    Minutes:

    A report was submitted providing an outline of how the Council's departments had responded to the decisions of the Governance and Audit Committee so that Members could be assured that their decisions were being addressed. It was noted that the report gave Members an opportunity to consider the decision made with the intention of removing the item / decision when the action had been completed.

     

    Attention was drawn to the background information about the FMG Morgan Trust Fund that was included following the Committee's request at the September 2025 meeting. It was noted that the style of the information had been presented as it appeared in the four charities' governance documents on the Charities Commission website.

     

    Thanks was given for the report

     

    RESOLVED

     

    ·        To accept the contents of the report

     

    Note: A request to include full name / titles instead of using an acronym 

     

    6.

    MEDIUM TERM FINANCIAL PLAN pdf icon PDF 191 KB

    To receive the information, consider the risks arising from the Medium-Term Financial Plan, and scrutinise the Cabinet’s decisions

    Additional documents:

    • Appendix 1 , item 6. pdf icon PDF 974 KB
    • Appendix 2 , item 6. pdf icon PDF 1 MB

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    To accept the information and note the situation and relevant risks in relation to the Council's financial position.

     

    Note:

    Paragraph 2.10 of the Plan. Request to share information / county's population reduction figures

     

    Minutes:

    The report was submitted by the Cabinet Member for Finance in response to the financial challenges facing the Council. The purpose of the plan was to set out projections for the Council's position over the next three financial years, offering projections as well as proposals to address the financial deficit faced by the Council. It was explained that the document was live and was being updated regularly as information was received and the local and national financial assumptions or projections changed. Any updates would be presented to the Cabinet.

     

    The Head of Finance explained that finding cuts to the Council's services and budget was not a new process, as cuts were now introduced annually. Pride was expressed that the Council had managed to sustain services despite the reduction in the departments' budgets, but one part of the work was to identify the financial deficit, which was £40 million over the next three years and further work was underway to try to fill the gap through a factual plan. It was emphasised that the assumptions were based on information of recent years and there would be pressure to spend less, look at increasing income and implement saving plans.

     

    In the context of the settlement, it was noted that the lack of clarity from the direction of the government meant that it was difficult to plan beforehand for 2026/27 as a result of mixed messages that there would be an addition to the public sector budget from the Westminster Government, but Welsh Government had warned that could not increase public expenditure under the current economic circumstances. Reference was also made to the possibility that the Welsh Government would be setting a 'rollover budget' for 2026/26, i.e., continuing with this year's budget with only a small addition towards inflation. It was estimated that the average addition would be approximately 1.5% to Gwynedd under the allocation formula. Clarity was expected on the Gwynedd settlement level by November 2025.

     

    Matters to be considered:

    -        Annual pay inflation for teachers would be 4% in 2026/27 and 3.4% for other staff members - these were salaries that were agreed nationally and there was a need to fund the annual increase

    -        There would be an increase in levies

    -        There was an increase in the number of properties paying tax, but no figure had been included

    -        A reduction to the pension rate was anticipated following a valuation. The pension fund was in a healthy situation and therefore offered an opportunity to reduce contributions - a £3 million saving was anticipated here.

    -        Every Department would present a business case for additional funding, with a rationale explaining why the addition was required. Every bid would be analysed in detail, with the fund for this reduced from £8 million to £5 million.

     

    Although the time to respond to the situation was scarce (from receiving the settlement to setting a balanced budget), it was confirmed that the hope was to present various options for the next steps for the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 6.

    7.

    SAVINGS OVERVIEW: PROGRESS REPORT ON REALISING SAVINGS SCHEMES pdf icon PDF 706 KB

    To consider the report

    Additional documents:

    • Appendix 1 Savings , item 7. pdf icon PDF 585 KB
    • Appendix 2 Savings , item 7. pdf icon PDF 713 KB
    • Appendix 3 Savings , item 7. pdf icon PDF 625 KB

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    ·        To accept the report

    ·        To note the progress towards realising the savings schemes for 2025/26 and previous years

     

    Minutes:

    Submitted - the report of the Cabinet Member for Finance requesting that the committee noted the position and relevant risks in respect of the Savings Overview, considered the decisions for the Cabinet (11-11-2025) and provided comment as necessary. It was noted that the report highlighted the situation until the end of August 2025.

     

    It was highlighted, in the 2025/26 Budget report to the Full Council on 6 March 2025, it was reported that £3.5 million worth of savings were profiled for the 2025/26 budget which was a combination of savings to the value of £100k which were newly approved in 2025, and £3.4 million approved in previous years.

     

    It was reported, over the past few years, and as reported to the Committee regularly, difficulties were seen with the delivery of savings in some fields. Attention was drawn to the new savings, as well as the savings approved previously, such as historical savings schemes for the period of the 2015/16 financial year to the 2025/26 financial year, with 98% of the historical savings delivered, namely £33.8 million of the £34.3 million of savings, had now been delivered. In the context of plans still not delivered, the value was £627k, with the majority of them in the Adults, Health and Well-being Department.

     

    In the context of new savings schemes worth £15.6 million, it was reported that 77% of the savings had already been delivered, with a further 4% on track to deliver on time. However, it was noted that risks to deliver the savings were prominent in some fields, such as in the Adults, Health and Well-being Department.

     

    It was reported, following the Chief Executive’s recent review of the savings schemes, it was concluded that there was a need for the following:

    ·        to remove one savings scheme in the Customer Contact field to review the Siop Gwynedd opening hours in the three main offices, which was worth £25k

    ·        to reduce the income target from £100k to £20k on a temporary basis on the Neuadd Dwyfor plan by the Economy and Community Department for a two-year period to give time to identify opportunities to act. It was suggested that the saving would be removed by using the savings provision set aside in the corporate budget.

     

    In summarising the situation, it was reported that £46 million of savings had been realised (92% of the required £50 million over the period) and a further 1.3% was forecast to be realised by the end of the financial year (although there was a delay and some risks to delivering the remaining schemes).

     

    The members thanked the officer for the report

     

    Matters arising from the ensuing discussion:

    -        What was the rationale behind reducing the Neuadd Dwyfor income target?

    -        There was a need to be vigilant of the recommendations in the Care field - if the savings could not be delivered, there was a need to revoke or review.

    -        Departments were now scraping for places to make cuts and the legal, statutory liabilities that had to  ...  view the full minutes text for item 7.

    8.

    RECOMMENDATIONS AND IMPROVEMENT PROPOSALS OF EXTERNAL AUDIT REPORTS pdf icon PDF 23 KB

    To consider that appropriate arrangements are in place to ensure that the improvement proposals that arise from external audit reports are implemented.

     

    Additional documents:

    • Full Report , item 8. pdf icon PDF 160 KB

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    To accept the report

     

    Note:

    To accept the 'Flow Out of Hospital' Investigation progress report, Spring 2026

     

    Minutes:

    A report was submitted by the Council's Business Support Service Manager. Members were reminded that the item was to be considered as a governance role and not as a scrutiny role, with a request that the Committee should be satisfied that there were appropriate arrangements in place to ensure that improvement proposals arising from external audits were achieved.

     

    It was noted that the work of responding to most of the improvement proposals was continuous work and that the Governance Group chaired by the Chief Executive had been addressing the improvement proposals and the progress of the recommendations. It was reiterated, for those proposals receiving a conclusion of 'completed', they were split in two to reflect whether the recommendations had been delivered or whether they were ongoing work for the department. It was stated that the report was also concise, compared with previous reports, because many had been completed and therefore removed, and presenting a formal organisational response form to inspections, which set a definite timetable, had facilitated the process. Reference was made to an additional step introduced, where the Performance Challenge and Support process would check that departments implemented what was recommended in the organisational response.

     

    Attention was drawn to the 'Urgent and Emergency Care: Flow out of Hospital' inspection, noting that the Committee would receive an 'update when timely'. It was highlighted that the Regional Board had received a progress report in Spring 2025 and following that, the Board requested another progress report 'in twelve months' time'. The option to share the original progress report was proposed or delay until Spring 2026 to receive a more recent progress report.

     

    The members expressed their thanks for the report.

     

    RESOLVED

     

    To accept the report 

     

    Note: 

    To accept the 'Flow Out of Hospital' Investigation progress, Spring 2026 

     

    9.

    TREASURY MANAGEMENT QUARTERLY UPDATE pdf icon PDF 246 KB

    To receive the report for information.

     

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    To accept the report for information.

     

     

    Minutes:

    Submitted - a report by the Investment Manager reporting on the actual results of the Council's treasury management during 2025/26 until 30 June 2025, against the Treasury Management Strategy for 2025/26 as approved by the Full Council in March 2025. It was noted, in accordance with the requirements of the strategy, that the Investment Manager was requested to report on treasury management prudential indicators every quarter.

     

    It was reported that it had been a very busy and prosperous period for the Council's treasury management activity and no organisation that the Council invested money into had been unable to pay back and a regular interest income had been received.

     

    On 30 June 2025, the Council was in a very strong position with net investments due to the high level of investments and operational capital. This included the Pension Fund’s money. It was noted that there had been no significant shift in the level of loans in the 3 months in question; the Council continued with the strategy of using internal resources before borrowing externally. However, it was reported that the Council had paid back a historical loan of £16.2 million and, as a result, had brought positive savings to the Council. In the context of investment activities, it was elaborated that the Council continued to invest into Banks and Building Societies, Local Authorities, Money Market Funds, the Debt Management Office and Pooled Funds, which were consistent with the type of investments that had been made by the Council for several years now.

     

    In the context of a compliance and indicators report, it was reported that all activities had fully complied with the CIPFA code of practice and the Council's Treasury Management Strategy - this was good news and highlighted that there was firm control over the funds.

     

    The members thanked the officer for the report

     

    In response to an observation regarding why there was a need to borrow if there was sufficient funding in the reserves, it was noted that the loans were historical and that the Council had not borrowed for 20 years.  It was noted that the penalty clause in the loan agreements meant that they were usually too costly to terminate early, but that an opportunity had arisen to repay a loan of £16.2 million following re-profiling and negotiations with Arlingclose.  The opportunity to repay this loan early was one of value

     

    RESOLVED

     

    To accept the report for information. 

     

     

     

    10.

    OUTPUT OF THE INTERNAL AUDIT SECTION pdf icon PDF 333 KB

    To consider and accept the report on the work of the Internal Audit Section in the period from 12 May 2025 to 28 September 2025, comment on the contents in accordance with members’ wishes, and support the actions agreed with the relevant service managers.

     

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    ·        To accept the report

    ·        To support the actions that had already been agreed with the relevant services

     

    Note:

    ·        A request to reconsider better terms to attract more workers to the Care field

    ·        Create a communication pathway and consider the method of sharing the findings of internal audit in Care Homes with Care Inspectorate Wales

     

    Minutes:

    Submitted, for information, the report of the Audit Manager updating the Committee on the internal audit work for the period from 12 May 2025 to 28 September 2025. It was highlighted that 3 audits of the 2024-25 operational plan had been completed and 6 audits of the 2025-26 operational plan had been completed and given an assurance level of high; adequate or limited.

     

    Each audit was referred to in turn.

     

    Matters arising from the ensuing discussion:

     

    Breakfast Clubs

    ·        staff members (during the visits) had not completed Fire training or any of the Council's mandatory e-learning modules - this was a fundamental issue

    ·        allergy policy, guidelines in relation to providing purple equipment to every child with an allergy

     

    Plas Hedd / Plas y Don

    ·        Care Staff had to work shifts in the kitchen to ensure that residents were fed

    ·        It was not possible to confirm the number of staff members who had read the Safeguarding Policy or completed mandatory E-learning modules - this was a fundamental issue, although the lack of resources was accepted, was there consistency in the same homes, was there an improvement from year to year? Training could prevent the risk of accidents and appeal costs!

    ·        The same Care Homes broke regulations continuously - this was a major concern.

     

    In response to the observations, it was noted that getting field workers to complete mandatory training modules was a problem throughout the Council and the Safeguarding Panel and the Safeguarding Operational Group was aware of the problem and tried to raise awareness through the Council to try to find a way of ensuring that the employees had access to the information. It was highlighted that a QR code was being trialled as a method of getting workers to complete modules on their mobile phones and work was being done to encourage face-to-face training instead of completing modules on-line.

     

    In the context that it was concerning that unqualified staff worked in kitchens, it was noted that staff recruitment continued to be a problem in the care field and accepted that the situation was not ideal. It was reiterated that the Management Improvement Working Group had conducted an inspection with the managers of some of the Care Homes and improvements had been proposed. It was noted that the inspections had been conducted in a three-year cycle and that three of the homes had received a follow-up audit with the intention of either presenting a follow-up report to the Committee or for the Management Improvement Working Group to discuss specific matters in detail with the Managers before reporting to the Committee.

     

    In response to a question as to whether Internal Audit shared their findings with Care Inspectorate Wales and whether there was a clear communication pathway with the Inspectorate, it was noted that Internal Audit looked at the Inspectorate's reports on homes to see whether actions had been included and evidence of improvements, but Internal Audit did not share the results of their findings with the Inspectorate. It was elaborated that this  ...  view the full minutes text for item 10.

    11.

    INTERNAL AUDIT PLAN 2025/26 pdf icon PDF 186 KB

    To note the contents of the report as an update on progress against the 2025/26 audit plan, offer comments thereon and accept the report

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    To accept the report and note progress against the 2025/26 Audit Plan

     

    Minutes:

    Submitted, for information, a report by the Audit Manager updating the Committee on the current situation in terms of completing the Internal Audit Plan 2025/26. Reference was made to the status of the work and the time spent on each audit. It was highlighted that 13.33%, out of the 45 individual audits in the amended plan, that 6 had been released in a final version / completed, or had been closed. 

     

    Attention was drawn to the 'Global Internal Audit Standards', (January 2026) arranged for the Committee members as an opportunity for them to discuss work aspects and the role of the Committee.

     

    The members expressed their thanks for the report, noting that it was a very small team addressing a wide range of fields.

     

    RESOLVED

     

    To accept the report and note progress against the 2025/26 Audit Plan  

     

     

    12.

    CAPITAL PROGRAMME 2025/26 - END OF AUGUST 2025 REVIEW pdf icon PDF 1 MB

    To receive the information, consider the risks regarding the Capital Programme, and scrutinise the decisions for the Cabinet

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    To accept the report and agree on the recommendations for the Cabinet to consider

     

    Minutes:

    Submitted - a report by the Cabinet Member for Finance outlining the capital programme (end of August 2025 position) and also approving the relevant funding sources. The Committee was asked to scrutinise the information and offer comments before submitting the report for the Cabinet's approval on 11 November 2025.

    Reference was made to a breakdown per Department of the £152.9 million capital programme for the 3 years from 2025/26 - 2027/28, as well as the sources available to fund the net increase of approximately £47.9 million since the original budget, with £36.9 million of it deriving from re-profiling at the end of the previous year.

    It was elaborated that,

    ·        There were firm plans in place to invest £100.7 million in 2025/26 on capital schemes, with £47.4 million (47%) of it funded through specific grants.

    ·        An additional £12.4 million proposed spending had been re-profiled from 2025/26 to 2026/27 and 2027/28.

    ·        the main schemes that had slipped since the original budget included £4.5 million for Schools Schemes (Sustainable Learning Communities and Others), £3.5 million in Levelling-up Fund Schemes, £1.2 million from Care Project Joint Funding Provision, £1.0 million from Economic Boost and Industrial Units Schemes and £1.0 million from other Housing and Grants Schemes.

     

    Attention was drawn to the additional grants list that the Council had managed to attract since the last review which included, £2.9 million - Grants from the Local Transport Fund (LTF) and the Active Travel Fund (ATF) from the Welsh Government for many different schemes, £2.0 million - Energy Wales Grant - from the Welsh Government towards electric batteries and work in Plas Ogwen, £1.8 million - Shared Prosperity Fund Grant from the UK Government - an amount is paid for Cyngor Gwynedd to allocate across the counties in north Wales, £1.4 million - Childcare Capital Grant from the Welsh Government and £0.8 million - Sustainable Learning Communities Grant

     

    Reference was made to the information about the Council's Capital Prudential Indicators and highlighted that, in accordance with the CIPFA Prudential Code, the Council was obliged to report the information - he added that the Council had complied in full with the policy on borrowing for capital purposes.

     

    The members thanked the officer for the report

     

    RESOLVED

     

    To accept the report and agree on the recommendations for the Cabinet to consider 

     

    13.

    ANNUAL PERFORMANCE REPORT AND CYNGOR GWYNEDD SELF-ASSESSMENT 2024/25 pdf icon PDF 203 KB

    To consider the contents of the draft document for 2024/25 and propose any comments and recommendations.

    Additional documents:

    • Appendix 1 - Cyngor Gwynedd Self-assessment 2024/25 , item 13. pdf icon PDF 465 KB
    • Annual Performance Report & Self Assessment 2024-25 Draft , item 13. pdf icon PDF 430 KB
    • Social Partnership Duty Annual Report 2024-25 Cyngor Gwynedd Draft , item 13. pdf icon PDF 231 KB

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    To accept the draft report

     

    Note:

    ·        To consider the impact of a reduction in the numbers of young people and an increase in the County's older population on the Council's services.

    ·        To refer to work being done to increase the responses to the staff survey.

    ·        To include examples and evidence to provide substance to some sentences in the report.

     

    Minutes:

    Councillor Nia Jeffreys (Leader of the Council) and Dewi Jones (Council Business Support Service Manager) were welcomed to the meeting.

     

    A draft of Cyngor Gwynedd's Annual Performance Report and Self-Assessment 2024/25 was submitted for the Committee's consideration asking them to provide comments and recommendations on the content of the report. It was reported that the Self-Assessment was a statutory requirement under the Local Government and Elections (Wales) Act 2021 which also stated that the Committee needed to be involved in the self-assessment process.

     

    Members were reminded that their observations and recommendations on the draft matters from the May 2025 meeting had been incorporated in the Self-assessment and any further observations would be included in the same manner with an expectation for the Cabinet and the Full Council to consider them.

     

    During the ensuing discussion, the following observations were noted:

    ·        A 1% increase in the number of the working age population and an increase in the number of people aged 65 and above in the County suggested major future implications for the care and health service. Has studies or research been carried out to look at these effects?

    ·        The Gwynedd and Eryri Sustainable Visitor Economy Plan 2035 had been published, but what was the output of that plan?

    ·        There was a reference to the introduction of Article 4, but was there a need to add a comment on the current situation?

    ·        Staff Well-being Questionnaire / Staff Survey - needed to try and reach all Council employees to get a better response.

    ·        Contrary to other reports submitted to the Committee, the report was an aspiration rather than a factual statement. The document was self-promotional - needed a more realistic, factual and useful reflection and a suggestion to include examples and evidence to give substance to some sentences in the report

    ·        Penrhos Scheme - needed to promote the development of care services in Penrhos, and not just housing

    ·        Flood Strategy - welcomed the consideration to the A499 highway

     

    In response to the comment that the report may be self-promoting and that there was a need to be more 'honest', it was noted that the report highlights strengths, but weaknesses and risks are also included. The suggestion to include examples and evidence to strengthen some elements of the report was accepted. In the context of an increase in the older population of the County and a decrease in the numbers of young people, it was noted that the Llechen Lân Project had looked at the situation and that there was a reference to the work in the report. The Project also included plans to try to respond to the situation.

     

    The Leader thanked the Committee and officers for their work, which included a broad range of topics.

     

    RESOLVED

     

    To accept the draft report 

     

    Note: 

    ·       To consider the impact of a reduction in the numbers of young people and an increase in the County's older population on the Council's services 

    ·       To refer to work being done to increase the responses to the staff survey  ...  view the full minutes text for item 13.

    14.

    THE COMMITTEE'S FORWARD PROGRAMME pdf icon PDF 123 KB

    To consider the work programme

    Decision:

    DECISION:

     

    ·        To accept the Work Programme for November 2025 - October 2026

    ·        A request for an update on the work of the Finance Department on drawing up the policy on exceptions to the Council tax premium in relation to self-catering accommodation businesses that fail to reach the 182-day letting threshold

     

    Note:

    Remove the Recommendations and Proposals for Improvement from External Audit Reports for November as it was discussed in October 2025

     

    Minutes:

    Submitted - a forward programme of items for the Committee's meetings until September 2026.

     

    In response to an observation regarding the consideration to add items to the forward programme, it was noted that the Chair holds discussions with the Head of Finance to discuss the forward programme, ensuring that items do not overlap with the items on the Council's Scrutiny Committees. It was elaborated that many of the items were cyclic and statutory, but there was room to consider more items if they were appropriate to the Committee's work.

     

    It was proposed to receive an update on the work of the premium exemption policy.

     

    RESOLVED:

     

    ·       To accept the Work Programme for November 2025 - October 2026 

    ·       To request an update on the work of the Finance Department on drawing up the policy on exceptions to the Council tax premium in relation to self-catering accommodation businesses that fail to reach the 182-day letting threshold. 

     

    Note: 

    Remove the Recommendations and Proposals for Improvement from External Audit Reports item for November as it was discussed in October 2025