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No. | Item |
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APOLOGIES To receive apologies for absence. Minutes: Apologies were received from Councillors Menna Baines,
Arwyn Herald Roberts, Rob Triggs and Elfed Wyn ap Elwyn. |
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DECLARATION OF PERSONAL INTEREST To receive any declaration of personal interest. Minutes: None to
note |
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URGENT ITEMS To note any items which are urgent business in the opinion of the Chairman so they may be considered. Minutes: None to
note |
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The Chairman shall propose
that the minutes of the meeting of this committee, held on the 14th
December 2023, be signed as a true record. Minutes: The Chair
accepted the minutes of the previous meeting of this committee, held on 14
December 2023, as a true record. |
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IMPLEMENTING THE DECISIONS OF THE COMMITTEE PDF 728 KB To consider
the report and offer comments Decision: 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 addressed. It was noted that the report gave Members an
opportunity to consider the
decisions made with the intention of removing the item / decision when the action had been completed. Attention was drawn to the
fact that the item on Self-assessment
of the Effectiveness of the Audit
and Governance Committee
(14-12-23) needed to be corrected
to note that there was a need to arrange a day and identify a facilitator instead of 'no action'. Thanks was given for the report. During the ensuing discussion, the following observations were made by members: ·
The Complaints
and Service Improvement Annual
Report 2022/23 had been presented and therefore it was possible to delete item Complaints and Service Improvement Annual Report 17 November 2022 ·
The Chair had given an overview of the Committee's responsibilities and
had highlighted that the Committee would look at the Education Department's internal arrangements and receive a summary of the care services' work. In response to an observation that the Internal Audit Service's long-term illness absence had now come to an end,
the Head of Finance noted that it was possible to restart hosting meetings of the Controls Improvement
Working Group. RESOLVED: To accept the report. Note: Correction to 'Self-assessment on the Effectiveness of the Committee' -
action to identify a day. Take out the Proposals of the Service Improvement Annual Report 2021/22. |
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FINAL ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2023 AND RELEVANT AUDIT PDF 208 KB Submitted: ·
Statement of Accounts post-Audit; ·
Audit Wales’ ‘ISA260’ report; ·
Letter of Representation (Appendix 1) To consider and approve the information before authorising
the Chairman to certify the letter Additional documents: Decision: DECISION:
Minutes: Yvonne Thomas (Audit
Wales) was welcomed to the meeting. Submitted – the report of the Head of Finance Department, requesting that
the Committee consider and approve the Statement of Accounts 2022/23
(post-audit), Audit Wales's 'ISA260' report and the Letter of Representation
(Appendix 1 to the Audit Wales report), before authorising the Chair to certify
the letter electronically. The Cabinet Member for Finance noted that the Officers had released the
accounts to Audit Wales since the end of June 2023 so that Audit Wales could
prepare a report for approval by the Committee. He highlighted the frustration
that the accounts had not been returned until mid-December. The Assistant Head of Finance - Accountancy and Pensions led Members
through the statement, reminding them that provisional accounts had been
presented to the Committee in September 2023, where the main matters and relevant
notes had been highlighted. It was reported that minor amendments had been made
to that report and attention was given to the following: ·
That several of the amendments were technical
in terms of treatment / how something was categorised / how things were shown
and that they were moved from one heading to the other, but that they did not
impact the accounts' bottom line. ·
When referring to
one church school, that the figure was below the 'material' figures, and that
amending it would mean numerous amendments to notes and statements. Resolved to
agree to implement this in the 2023/24 accounts. Attention was given to the Council's balances and funds, and specifically to the Movement in Reserves Statement
that summarised the Council's financial position. It was noted that various funds
were bound (Reserves for the Capital Programme, Council Tax Premium Fund, Renewal Reserves
(vehicles, equipment, information technology equipment for schools),
Transformation Fund / the Council Plan and the Financial Strategy
Reserve). Audit Wales reiterated that Cyngor Gwynedd's Accountancy Service had
incorporated the amendments
to the final statement and
it was a pleasure to note an unconditional opinion once again
this year. It was noted that the accounts gave a correct and fair picture of the situation, complied with appropriate
practices and that Audit Wales worked to a level of 'relevance'. It was reported that the level of relevance was appointed to try and acknowledge
and correct misstatements that could otherwise
mislead those who used the accounts.
A relevance level of £5.387
million was determined for the audit this
year. Reference was made once again
to the Property, Tools and Equipment's misstatement that included one
church school's building that was not the Council's property and that the figure was below the 'material' figures. It was reiterated that Audit Wales had accepted the decision to implement this in the 2023/24 accounts. The
Finance team were thanked for their
support to complete the audit. It was proposed and seconded to accept the report. RESOLVED: · To accept and approve the 'ISA260’ Report ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
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SAVINGS OVERVIEW: PROGRESS REPORT ON REALISING SAVINGS SCHEMES PDF 185 KB To note the position and the relevant risks regarding the Savings Overview, consider the decisions for the Cabinet and comment as necessary. Additional documents:
Decision: Minutes: Submitted - the report of the Cabinet Member for Finance requesting
that the Committee notes the position and relevant risks in respect of the
Savings Overview and considers recommendations to the Cabinet (23-01-2024) and
provides comments as required. The Cabinet Member noted that the savings
situation had intensified and that realising savings
was a cause for concern. The Assistant
Head of Finance reiterated,
·
To close the funding
deficit, £7.6 million worth of savings had to be implemented during 2023/24,
which was a combination of almost one million previously approved, savings for
Schools of £1.1 million, £3 million for Council departments and a further £2.4
million in reviewing the Council's capital debt repayment policy. ·
In recent years, and as had been consistently
reported to this Committee, it was seen that there were difficulties in
realising savings in some fields (which was prominent in the Adults, Health and Well-being Department and in the field of Waste).
Consequently, £2 million worth of plans, that had substantial risks to realise,
had been deleted as part of the End of August Review. Reference was made to the historical savings scheme
for the period from the 2015/16 financial year up until the 2023/24 financial
year and attention was given to the fact that 98%, which was over £33.7 million
of the £34.3 million of savings, had been realised by now. In the context of new schemes in the current financial year, it was
reported that 81% of the 2023/24 savings had already been realised and a
further 6% was in place to be realised on time. It was highlighted that there had been a slight
delay to realise £694k worth of savings from the 2023/24 scheme however, no
problems had been anticipated by the Departments to realise these. It was reiterated that the
majority of this amount included savings of £539k from schools, that was
slipping because schools worked according to the academic year – therefore
there was slippage to the next financial year. Reference was made to the value of the savings that
had already been approved for 2024/25 onwards, which highlighted that further
savings and cuts for 2024/25 were already under consideration by the Council. These would be subject to the Committee’s report
soon. It was therefore explained that £39 million of savings had been realised, namely 96% of the required £41 million over the period. It was anticipated that
a further 1% would be realised by the end of the financial year, but there was a delay and some risk associated with realising the remaining plans. Gratitude was expressed for
the report. The need to focus on the success
was noted - that 96% of the
Savings had been realised - the tendency was to focus too much
on those that had not been realised, which may be more difficult to deliver. During the ensuing discussion, the following observations were made by members: · How to choose between financial propriety and fulfilling statutory duties? ... view the full minutes text for item 7. |
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REVENUE BUDGET 2023/24 – END OF NOVEMBER 2023 REVIEW PDF 254 KB To receive the information, consider the risks arising from the forecast expenditure against the budget, and scrutinise the decisions to be presented to Cabinet regarding budget management by the Council and its departments. Additional documents:
Decision: DECISION: ·
To accept the report on the end of November 2023
review of the Revenue Budget ·
To consider the latest financial position regarding
the budgets of each department / service ·
To note that significant overspend is anticipated in
the Adults, Health and Well-being Department, the Children and Supporting
Families Department, and the Highways, Engineering and YGC Department this
year. ·
To agree with the recommendation to Cabinet (23-01-24)
to approve a transfer of £4,241k of underspend on corporate budgets to the Council's
Financial Strategy Reserve Note: The Cabinet is requested to, ·
consider the
timetable for the Adult Health and Well-being Department's overspend review and
the Environment Department's overspend review (Integrated transport issues) ·
consider the
imbalance in the use of grants. Minutes: Submitted - the report of the Cabinet Member
for Finance requesting that the committee scrutinises the position and relevant
risks in respect of the Council's budgets and those of its departments and
considers the recommendations for the Cabinet 24-01-23. The Cabinet Member set out the context for
the report, noting the following:- ·
Following a review at the end of November, the projections suggested
that all of the ten departments would overspend by the end of the year. ·
There was substantial overspend by the Adults, Health and Well-being
Department, the Children and Supporting Families Department and the Highways,
Engineering and YGC Department. ·
A delay in realising savings was a factor. He added that the
Finance Officers merely reported on the situation, and that the Departments
themselves were responsible for their budgets. The Assistant Head of Finance highlighted, following a review at the end
of November, that the projections suggested that all the ten departments would
overspend by the end of the year, with significant overspending by the Adults,
Health and Well-being Department, Children and Supporting Families Department,
and the Highways, Engineering and YGC Department. Additionally, it was
anticipated that there would be a financial deficit of £8.1 million (compared
with £9.1 million in the August Review), and therefore, although the situation
was a million times better overall, that the one-off grants had to be used to
help the departments' situation. Reference was made to the main matters: ·
Adults, Health and Well-being Department -
the latest projections suggested £5.4 million overspend, being a combination of
several factors including several new cases and costly supported accommodation
in the learning disability service, higher staffing costs, sickness levels and
high rates of non-contact hours in the field of Home Care, as well as high fees
by private providers in Older People's Services. In light of the exceptional
overspend projection by the Department, it was noted that the work commissioned
by the Chief Executive now conveyed a detailed picture of the complexity of
adults’ care spending and gave a better understanding of those matters to
create a clear programme to respond. It was reiterated that the work was led by
the Statutory Director of Social Services. ·
Children and Supporting Families Department - the department's financial
situation had worsened substantially since the end of August review, following
an increase in costs because of the complexities regarding the out-of-county
packages provided. By now, it was anticipated that there would be an overspend
of £1.3 million by the end of the financial year. · Education Department - a clear increase in the pressure on taxis and school buses funding this year, with an anticipated overspend of £1.5m. It was noted that the transport field had already been subject to a strategic review to try and manage the increase in spending and it was suggested that work continued to try and decrease the overspending and take advantage of efficiency opportunities. It was reiterated that a combination of underspend in other fields, as well as use of funds in reserve, reduced the ... view the full minutes text for item 8. |
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CAPITAL PROGRAMME 2023/24 – END OF NOVEMBER 2023 REVIEW PDF 188 KB To receive the information, consider the risks regarding the
Capital Programme, and scrutinise the decisions for the Cabinet Additional documents: Decision: DECISION:
-
an
increase of £3,576,000 in the use of borrowing -
an increase
of £2,373,000 in the use of grants and contributions -
an
increase of £317,000 in the use of revenue contributions -
an
increase of £1,038,000 in the use of renewal and other reserves. Minutes: Submitted - the report
of the Cabinet Member for Finance. The main purpose of the report was to present the capital programme (position as at the end of November 2023) and ask the Committee to consider the relevant sources of funding and scrutinise the recommendations to
the Cabinet (24-01-24). Concern was highlighted that the % of spending was low, but appropriate reasons addressed this. He also noted
that there was no threat of losing
grants as the capital plans transferred to the following year. Reference was made
to a Department-by-Department
analysis of the £185.9 million
capital programme for the 3 years 2023/24 - 2025/26
together with the sources available to fund the net increase which was approximately £7.3 million since the last review. The Assistant Head of Finance reiterated,
·
That the Council had firm plans in
place to invest approximately £86.8 million in 2023/24 on capital
schemes, with £41.5 million (48%) funded by specific grants. ·
The impact of recent
financial challenges would continue on the capital programme with £23.2 million, namely 27%, of the budget having been
spent by the end of November this year,
compared to 40% for the same period last
year. ·
That
an additional £27.4 million proposed spending had been re-profiled from 2023/24 to
2024/25 and 2025/26. The main plans that had slipped since the original budget included £12.2 million for Schools
Schemes (Sustainable Learning Communities and Others), £11.0 million for Housing Strategy
Plans, £3.9 million for Coastal Risks
and Flood Prevention Plans, £2.9 million for Carbon Management and Solar Panels Plans, £2.5 million for the Penygroes Health and Care Hub and £1.7 million Levelling-up Fund Plans. The Members' attention was drawn to the additional
grants list that the Council succeeded to attract since the last review that included
£661k - Circular Economy Capital Grant from the Welsh Government, £550k - Grants for a Synthetic 3G Field in Ysgol Syr Hugh Owen,
Caernarfon from Wales Football
Organisation and the Football
Foundation, £350k - Modern Art
Galleries Network from the Arts Council
for Wales and £329k - Transforming
Small Towns Grant from the Welsh Government. Gratitude
was expressed for the report. RESOLVED: ·
To accept the report. ·
To note the situation
and the relevant risks in the context of the budgets of the Council and its departments, ·
To agree with the recommendation to the Cabinet (23-01-24) to approve the revised financing: - an increase of £3,576,000 in the use of borrowing - an increase of £2,373,000 in the use of grants and contributions - an increase of £317,000 in the use of revenue contributions - an
increase of £1,038,000 in
the use of renewal and other reserves. |
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REVIEWING SCRUTINY ARRANGEMENTS PDF 197 KB To consider the
detailed review work that has been undertaken; To consider the Scrutiny Forum's
recommendation, namely, Option 1 - keeping to the current scrutiny arrangements
and to make a recommendation to present to the Full Council on 07/03/2024. Additional documents:
Decision: Minutes: Ian Jones (Head of
Corporate Services Department), Vera Jones (Democracy and Language Services Manager), Bethan Adams (Scrutiny Advisor) and Iwan Evans (Monitoring
Officer) were welcomed to the meeting. A report was presented that highlighted the work made to review
the current scrutiny arrangements following Audit Wales' report. The information included all the discussions held (in workshops for
Councillors, discussions with the Leadership Team and Heads of Department), presenting observations / findings through four options
to a joint meeting of the Scrutiny Forum and the Cabinet Members. The joint meeting was asked to consider the advantages and disadvantages of each option and draw a conclusion on the recommendation for the way forward.
The joint meeting's perspective was presented to the Management Team that agreed with
the recommendation to present
option 1 - keeping to the current arrangements. Members were
reminded that the Governing Committee had a responsibility to ensure that the appropriate governing arrangements had been implemented when undertaking the review on the scrutiny
arrangements. During the ensuing discussion, the following observations were made by members: ·
It was disappointing
that the current arrangement continued - the current arrangement did not allow to look at matters in detail. ·
Bulky reports presented to the meetings and the
officers' presentations were too lengthy
- taking time away from scrutinising
the matter. ·
Too
many fields were being presented
- could not meet the demand. ·
Hard
to prioritise. ·
The system does not work
- it was not effective. The Scrutiny
Committees did not manage
to change anything. ·
Scrutiny
Investigations have an impact, but
not enough of them. ·
That
the arrangement offers 'performance of system' giving the
impression that good scrutiny existed
here. ·
Examples of good scrutiny in the past - need external input
and appropriate training to
move forward. ·
That there was no political element
to Scrutiny - Gwynedd's residents were important here. ·
Need
to consider how the Governing Committee intertwined with the arrangement. When the Committee referred matters to the relevant scrutiny Committees, they were too
late or had not prioritised
them on the relevant scrutiny committee's agenda. ·
Option
1 did not create an impression - option 4 (establishing a fourth Scrutiny Committee) was a balanced one and gave an opportunity
to develop the arrangement. ·
The report did not convey
/ represent the many opinions and workshop's comments - the results of the workshops had not been shared with the attendees. In response to a question regarding how Scrutiny Committees added value to the Council's work, the Democracy and Language Manager noted that the purpose of Scrutiny was to ensure and challenge the Cabinet's work; act as a Critical Friend, ensuring that attention was given to the voice of the people of Gwynedd; hold the Cabinet and the Cabinet's individual Members accountable for their decisions ... view the full minutes text for item 10. |
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To consider the update
on report(s) recently published by Audit Wales - Use information about performance: perspective and results of service users - Cyngor Gwynedd Additional documents:
Decision: Minutes: Alan Hughes and Lora Williams (Audit Wales), Geraint Owen (Corporate Director)
and Dewi Wyn Jones (the Council's Business
Support Service Manager) were
welcomed to the meeting. A report was presented by Audit Wales highlighting their findings on how the Council
uses information about performance. A response document was also presented by Cyngor Gwynedd,
outlining what the Council intends to do to respond to Audit Wales' recommendations. The Audit Wales Officer noted that each
Council uses performance information, but that there
was a need to consider whether the information delivered the aims and ensured value for
money. He reiterated that Cyngor Gwynedd shared a lot
of good examples - provided much information
about performance to senior leaders to help them understand service users' perspective and use the feedback from improving
services' customers that reflected on recent performance
arrangements. However, it
was reported that there was less evidence regarding data verification arrangements and that information about results were
limited. In
response to the report, the
Supporting Business Service
Manager noted that the report appeared to be negative in its nature,
but after discussing further with Audit Wales' officers, the concerns had been alleviated and most of the steps offered were
things that the Council were already
working on or had now realised. He referred to examples of including more people in the challenging performance process, establishing a cross-departmental
engagement group to encourage managers to engage / consult with different groups, to identify specific milestones in projects; was confident that current arrangements existed within the services to verity data quality and the information presented to senior leaders, Committees and the
Cabinet. During the ensuing discussion, the following observations were made by members: ·
Correct and good data was integral to make decisions. ·
There was a need to consider measuring results instead of measuring actions - for the future, this would be a way of referring resources to the correct place and seeing investments having an impact. In response to a comment regarding whether Audit Wales was happy that some of the recommendations had already been completed, it was noted that Audit
Wales' code of practice was
to accept that appropriate consideration had been given to the recommendations and that there was no formal
threshold to approve the progress report. In response to a further comment about how Cyngor Gwynedd compared to other Councils, it was noted that the priority was how each Council
compared to the criteria, and not to each other. However,
it was noted that not every Council's report had been published so far, so it would be unfair to report on that, but
that findings would be included in the national report. In response to the observation regarding past experiences of putting too much emphasis on activity instead of results, the Business Support Service Manager noted that work ... view the full minutes text for item 11. |