Subject:
|
Targeted Budget
Management (TBM) 2021/22:
Month 2 (May)
|
Date of Meeting:
|
1 July 2021
|
Report of:
|
Acting Chief Finance
Officer
|
Contact Officer:
|
Name:
|
Jeff Coates
|
Tel:
|
29-2364
|
|
Email:
|
Jeff.Coates@brighton-hove.gov.uk
|
Ward(s)
affected:
|
All
|
FOR GENERAL RELEASE
1
PURPOSE OF REPORT AND POLICY CONTEXT:
1.1
The Targeted Budget Monitoring (TBM) report is a key component of
the council’s overall performance monitoring and control
framework. This report sets out an early indication of forecast
risks as at Month 2 on the council’s revenue and capital
budgets for the financial year 2021/22. As last year, the report
includes memorandum information to indicate the element of the
forecast attributable to the ongoing pandemic.
1.2
The forecast risk for 2021/22 at this early stage is a
£6.205m overspend on the General Fund revenue budget. This
includes a forecast underspend of £0.308m on the
council’s share of the NHS managed Section 75 services.
Forecasts should be viewed with some caution at this time as it is
difficult to assess the potential ongoing impact of the pandemic on
the local economy, visitor activity and the associated demands this
can place on services. Cessation or changes in eviction
legislation, furlough, Universal Credit top-up’s and other
support later in the year could also have significant financial
implications in terms of demands on services such as Homelessness
or through increased Council Tax Reduction support.
1.3
The report indicates that £3.253m (30%) of the substantial
savings package in 2021/22 of £10.687m is at risk. Of this,
£0.890m is due to pressures arising from Covid-19.
2
RECOMMENDATIONS:
2.1
That the Committee note the forecast risk position for the General
Fund, which indicates a potential forecast overspend risk of
£6.205m. This is net of an underspend of £0.308m on the
council’s share of the NHS managed Section 75 services.
2.2
That the Committee note the forecast for the Housing Revenue
Account (HRA), which is currently an overspend of
£0.034m.
2.3
That the Committee note the forecast risk position for the
Dedicated Schools Grant which is an overspend of
£0.138m.
2.4
That the Committee note the forecast outturn position on the
capital programme which is a forecast underspend of £2.342m
and approve the variations and slippage in Appendix 5 and new
schemes as set out in Appendix 6.
3
CONTEXT/ BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Targeted Budget
Management (TBM) Reporting Framework
3.1
The TBM framework focuses on identifying and managing financial
risks on a regular basis throughout the year. This is applied at
all levels of the organisation from Budget Managers through to
Policy & Resources Committee. Services monitor their TBM
position on a monthly or quarterly basis depending on the size,
complexity or risks apparent within a budget area. TBM therefore
operates on a risk-based approach, paying particular attention to
mitigation of growing cost pressures, demands or overspending
through effective financial recovery planning together with more
regular monitoring of high risk demand-led areas as detailed
below.
3.2
The TBM report is normally split into the following sections:
i)
General Fund Revenue Budget Performance
ii)
Housing Revenue Account (HRA) Performance
iii)
Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) Performance
iv) NHS
Controlled S75 Partnership Performance
v)
Capital Investment Programme Performance
vi)
Capital Programme Changes
vii)
Implications for the Medium Term Financial Strategy (MTFS)
viii) Comments of the Chief
Finance Officer (statutory S151 officer)
4
General Fund Revenue Budget Performance (Appendix 3)
4.1
The table below shows the provisional outturn for Council
controlled revenue budgets within the General Fund. These are
budgets under the direct control and management of the Executive
Leadership Team. More detailed explanation of the variances can be
found in Appendix 3. Please note that the ‘COVID Variance
Month 2’ column is a memorandum-only column identifying the
extent of the ‘Forecast Variance Month 2’ attributable
to the pandemic.
Provisional
|
|
2021/22
|
Forecast
|
Forecast
|
COVID
|
Forecast
|
Variance
|
|
Budget
|
Outturn
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
2020/21
|
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
£'000
|
Directorate
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
%
|
78
|
Families, Children & Learning
|
97,424
|
97,981
|
557
|
468
|
0.6%
|
3,832
|
Health & Adult Social Care
|
70,504
|
70,716
|
212
|
13
|
0.3%
|
5,936
|
Economy, Environment & Culture
|
41,923
|
46,150
|
4,227
|
4,168
|
10.1%
|
2,069
|
Housing, Neighbourhoods & Communities
|
24,986
|
25,877
|
891
|
945
|
3.6%
|
722
|
Finance & Resources
|
20,541
|
21,006
|
465
|
1
|
2.3%
|
(458)
|
Strategy, Governance & Law
|
6,184
|
6,184
|
0
|
9
|
0.0%
|
12,179
|
Sub Total
|
261,562
|
267,914
|
6,352
|
5,604
|
2.4%
|
(515)
|
Corporately-held Budgets
|
(67,760)
|
(67,907)
|
(147)
|
0
|
-0.2%
|
1,847
|
Corporate PPE Costs
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0.0%
|
(23,244)
|
COVID-19 Grant *
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0.0%
|
(9,733)
|
Total General Fund
|
193,802
|
200,007
|
6,205
|
5,604
|
3.2%
|
* The
Covid-19 Grant for 2021/22 is £8.023m but has been treated as
recurrent funding to balance the 2021/22 budget and does not
therefore show as a one-off grant above.
4.2
The General Fund includes general council services, corporate
budgets and central support services. Corporate Budgets include
centrally held provisions and budgets (e.g. insurance) as well as
some cross-cutting value for money savings targets. Note that
General Fund services are accounted for separately to the Housing
Revenue Account (Council Housing). Note also that although part of
the General Fund, financial information for the Dedicated Schools
Grant is shown separately as this is ring-fenced to education
provision (i.e. Schools). The chart below shows the monthly
forecast variances for 2021/22 and the previous three years for
comparative purposes. The impact of the pandemic clearly makes
comparisons difficult at this time.
Demand-led Budgets
Provisional
|
|
2021/22
|
Forecast
|
Forecast
|
COVID
|
Forecast
|
Variance
|
|
Budget
|
Outturn
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
2020/21
|
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
Month 2
|
£'000
|
Demand-led
Budget
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
%
|
63
|
Child Agency & In House Placements
|
23,052
|
23,363
|
311
|
461
|
1.3%
|
1,383
|
Community Care
|
82,898
|
84,776
|
1,878
|
0
|
2.3%
|
4,720
|
Temporary Accommodation
|
8,219
|
9,026
|
807
|
5,391
|
9.8%
|
6,166
|
Total Demand-led Budget
|
114,169
|
117,165
|
2,996
|
5,852
|
2.6%
|
4.3
There are a number of budgets that carry potentially higher
financial risks and therefore could have a material impact on the
council’s overall financial position. These are budgets of
corporate significance where demand or activity is difficult to
predict and where relatively small changes in demand can have
significant implications for the council’s budget strategy.
These can include income related budgets. These therefore undergo
more frequent and detailed analysis.
The chart below
shows the monthly forecast variances on the demand-led budgets for
2021/22.
TBM Focus Areas
The main pressures
identified at Month 2 are across parts of Families, Children &
Learning, Health & Adult Social Care, Homelessness, Transport,
City Environmental Management and Culture, Tourism & Sport.
Information about these pressures and measures to mitigate them are
summarised below:
4.4
Families, Children & Learning: The current projected
position identifies a number of cost pressures as follows:
£0.350m on Services for Children with Disabilities;
£0.267m on Services for Adults with Learning Disabilities,
£0.130m on Home to School Transport, and Council Nurseries
£0.150m. However, there is a forecast underspend on
Children’s Social Care Services of (£0.227m) and a
Recovery Plan for Home to School transport of (£0.130m)
together with other variances of £0.017m, this results in a
forecast of £0.557m overspend as at Month 2. Of this,
£0.468m relates to COVID-19 – this is a combination of
loss of income, impact on savings targets and additional
expenditure given the need to mitigate health risks posed by
COVID-19.
Work will continue in implementing
financial recovery plans but there is concern in the profession
that demand for statutory social care services could increase as
families exit lockdown.
The projected position for the
Dedicated Schools Grant is an overspend of £0.138m. This is
largely due to some significant overspends in the High Needs Block,
most notably education agency placements £0.326m. These
pressures are offset by the remaining balance of the central DSG
carried forward from 2020/21.
4.5
Adults Services: The service is managing significant
challenges in 2021/22 in mitigating the risks arising from
increasing demands from client needs, supporting more people to be
discharged from hospital when they are ready and maintaining a
resilient local provider market. This is alongside supporting
vulnerable clients during the pandemic, delivering a significant
financial recovery plan and developing integration plans through
the Better Care Fund.
·
Service pressure funding of £12.700m has been applied in
2021/22 and used to fund budget pressures resulting from the
increased demands and complexity in the city. However,
£0.361m was needed to backfill the reduction in CCG funding
contributions. Over the last three years there has been an overall
£3.750m reduction in CCG funding due to pressures on local
NHS budgets.
·
At
this stage, £1.494m of the £4.515m cost management plan
are being forecast as unachievable in this financial
year.
·
Overall HASC is
forecasting to overspend by £0.212m in 2021/22. Actions are
focused on attempting to manage demands on and costs of community
care placements across Assessment Services and making the most
efficient use of available funds.
·
The
HASC directorate has a Modernisation Programme which aims to
implement a consistent strengths-based approach across key work
streams, ensuring robust pathways are in place, developing a
community reablement offer and re-designing the front door service.
Currently the Health & Social Care system is under considerable
pressure and this is generating additional costs for the council
due to:
o
Pressures on NHS
budgets resulting in reduced funding contributions from the
CCG;
o
Significant
pressures on the acute hospital resulting in increased costs to
support timely discharge into residential and nursing home
care;
o
Ongoing
transformation of GP practices and enhancement of their clinical
screening and general medical services which contribute to
preventative support;
o
Pressures on NHS
outreach and other preventative services including community
nursing (known as Integrated Primary Care Teams);
o
There
is also focus nationally on improving rates of hospital discharge
in order to accommodate winter pressures.
4.6
Housing Services and Temporary Accommodation: The budget for
Temporary Accommodation is currently forecast to break even. This
assumes use of all of the 2021/22 Homelessness Prevention Grant of
£6.240m in year and takes account of the £2.382m of
service pressure funding (net of savings) that was added to this
budget for 2021/22, in recognition of the large increase in
households using Temporary Accommodation during the pandemic. This
forecast assumes that for 2021/22 the numbers in Emergency
Accommodation (EA) increase slightly and then remain largely static
(an average of 619 units of EA). Move-ons from EA will be
challenging while the service prioritises moving on those housed in
hotels under the 'Everyone In' initiative. There is a risk that if
those moved on from hotels are moved into EA, this will result in
overspends on TA budgets. There is also a risk that costs of TA
will increase further if households become homeless as a result of
the ending of the restrictions on private landlord evictions. The
effects of this have yet to be factored into this forecast due to
the high levels of uncertainty.
There is a forecast overspend of
£0.807m for the cost of 'Everyone In' hotels. The forecast
assumes that some hotels will be needed beyond 30th September as
the number of move-ons required in the next three months will be
very challenging to achieve. The overspend is also caused by lower
than expected HB collection rates and higher damages/repairs costs
and security costs than originally forecast. Some of this overspend
is because Housing Benefit income is included in the forecast for
TA above and cannot be easily disaggregated. This is because hotels
are also being utilised for single emergency accommodation clients
as well as those housed under 'Everyone In' to ensure efficient use
of vacancies. This forecast assumes the use of £2.043m
Containment Outbreak Management Fund (COMF) Grant as agreed at
P&R (Recovery) Sub-Committee on 28 April 2021 and also the use
of £0.500m grant from MHCLG for continued housing of rough
sleepers in 2021/22 as included in the original budget
assumptions.
The service will be working to improve
this overspend position as the year progresses. It has recently
employed the services of a Housing Transformation Manager to head
up an ‘end-to-end’ improvement programme to help the
service improve its processes in order to reduce the use and length
of stay in Temporary Accommodation by improving homeless prevention
and enabling move on to more sustainable accommodation. This in
turn should also lead to cost reductions by improving move on
processes, void turnaround times in emergency accommodation and
improving income collection for example. There are however staffing
challenges including significant vacancies and recruitment
challenges in this area.
4.7
Environment, Economy & Culture: The Directorate
has substantial income budgets for parking, planning and venues and
for the council’s commercial property portfolio, all of which
are dependent on visitor numbers and commercial activity.
There is also a challenging additional income target for Parking
Services of £1.750m for 2021/22. These activities and
services have been heavily impacted by the COVID-19 restrictions
and the forecast is for significant income shortfalls compared to
budget for 2021/22 in most of these areas. The Sales, Fees &
Charges Compensation Grant has reduced the impact of some of these
lost incomes. The hope will be for significant recovery as
restrictions continue to be lifted and local tourism improves which
could improve later forecasts. However, there are also unavoidable
cost pressures (mainly agency staffing) related to maintaining core
services, such as refuse collection & recycling and street
cleansing. The overall effect of these factors is an early forecast
risk of £4.340m for Month 2.
Monitoring Savings
4.8
The savings package approved by full Council to support the revenue
budget position in 2021/22 was £10.687m following directly on
from a £10.291m savings package in 2020/21. This is very
significant and follows 10 years of substantial packages totalling
over £175m that have been necessary to enable cost and demand
increases to be funded alongside managing reductions in central
government grant funding.
4.9
Appendix 3 provides a summary of savings in each directorate and
indicates in total what is anticipated/achieved or is at risk.
Appendix 4 summarises the position across all directorates and
presents the entire savings programme. The graph below provides a
summary of the position as at Month 2 which is an early indication.
This shows that £3.253m (30%) is currently at risk. Of this
£0.890m is in respect of pressures relating to COVID-19.
Mitigation of these risks will be included in the development of
services’ financial recovery actions as far as possible.
5
Housing Revenue Account Performance (Appendix 3)
5.2
This year is more challenging for the HRA and the relatively small
overspend is mainly the result of the catching up on the backlog of
repairs from 2020/21 together with a reduction in rent income
caused by empty properties awaiting works. These costs are largely
offset by other underspends across the service resulting in a
relatively small forecast overspend of £0.034m. However, if
the HRA cannot manage this overspend through the year, this can be
met from HRA reserves.
6
Dedicated Schools Grant Performance (Appendix 3)
6.1
The Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) is a ring-fenced grant within the
General Fund which can only be used to fund expenditure on the
schools budget. The schools budget includes elements for a range of
services provided on an authority-wide basis including Early Years
education provided by the Private, Voluntary and Independent (PVI)
sector, and the Individual Schools Budget (ISB) which is divided
into a budget share for each maintained school. The forecast
outturn is an overspend of £0.138m and more details are
provided in Appendix 3. Under the Schools Finance Regulations any
underspend or overspend must be carried forward to support the
schools budget in future years.
7
NHS Managed S75 Partnership Performance (Appendix 3)
7.1
The NHS Trust-managed Section 75 Services represent those services
for which local NHS Trusts act as the Host Provider under Section
75 Agreements. Services are managed by Sussex Partnership
Foundation Trust (SPFT) and include health and social care services
for Adult Mental Health and Memory and Cognitive Support
Services.
7.2
This partnership is subject to separate annual risk-sharing
arrangements and the monitoring of financial performance is the
responsibility of the respective host NHS Trust provider.
Risk-sharing arrangements result in financial implications for the
council where a partnership is underspent or overspent at year-end
and hence the performance of the partnership is included within the
forecast outturn for the Health & Adult Social Care
directorate. An underspend of £0.308m is currently forecast
and more details are provided in Appendix 3.
8
Capital Programme Performance and Changes
|
Reported Budget Month 2
|
Forecast Outturn Month 2
|
Forecast Variance Month 2
|
Forecast Variance Month 2
|
Directorate
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
%
|
Families, Children
& Learning
|
25,025
|
25,025
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Health & Adult
Social Care
|
715
|
715
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Economy, Environment
& Culture
|
82,661
|
82,661
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Housing,
Neighbourhoods & Communities
|
2,990
|
2,990
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Housing Revenue
Account
|
90,464
|
88,122
|
(2,342)
|
-2.6%
|
Finance &
Resources
|
2,799
|
2,799
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Strategy, Governance
& Law
|
600
|
600
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Total
Capital
|
205,252
|
202,910
|
(2,342)
|
-1.1%
|
(Note: Summary may include minor
rounding differences to Appendix 5)
8.2
Appendix 5 shows the changes to the capital budget and Appendix 6
provides details of new schemes for 2020/21 to be added to the
capital programme which are included in the budget figures above.
Policy & Resources Committee’s approval for these changes
is required under the council’s Financial Regulations. The
following table shows the movement in the capital budget since
approval at Budget Council.
|
Reported Budget
Month 2
|
Summary of Capital Budget Movement
|
£'000
|
Budget approved as
at Budget Council
|
206,658
|
Changes reported at
other committees and already approved
|
10,639
|
New schemes to be
approved in this report (see Appendix 6)
|
511
|
Variations to budget
(to be approved)
|
2,671
|
Reprofiling of
budget (to be approved)
|
(15,227)
|
Slippage (to be
approved)
|
0
|
Total
Capital
|
205,252
|
8.3
Appendix 5 also details any slippage into next year. However, as
normal, project managers have forecast that none of the capital
budget will slip into the next financial year at this early
stage.
9
Implications for the Medium Term Financial Strategy (MTFS)
9.1
The council’s MTFS sets out resource assumptions and
projections over a longer term. It is periodically updated
including a major annual update which is included in the annual
revenue budget report to Policy & Resources Committee and Full
Council. This section highlights any potential implications for the
current MTFS arising from in-year TBM monitoring above and details
any changes to financial risks together with any impact on
associated risk provisions, reserves and contingencies. Details of
Capital Receipts and Collection Fund performance are also given
below because of their potential impact on future resources.
Capital Receipts Performance
9.2
Capital receipts are used to support the capital programme. Any
changes to the level of receipts during the year will impact on
future years’ capital programmes and may impact on the level
of future investment for corporate funds and projects such as the
Strategic Investment Fund, Modernisation Fund, Asset Management
Fund and the Information, Technology and Digital Investment Fund.
The planned profile of capital receipts for 2021/22, as at Month
02, is £11.4m which includes receipts expected from the land
transferring to the HRA for the Moulsecoomb housing redevelopment,
land disposals at the Cliff and Braypool Lane, disposal of
properties at the Old Steine and a number of lease extensions. To
date there have been receipts of £1.473m in relation to the
lease re-gear for commercial premises in Western Road,
Brighton and some minor loan repayments. The capital receipts
performance will be monitored over the coming months against
capital commitments
9.3
The forecast for the ‘right to buy sales’ in 2021/22
(after allowable costs, repayment of housing debt and forecast
receipt to central government) is that an estimated 30 homes will
be sold and net retained receipt of up to £2.000m available
to re-invest in replacement homes. In addition to this net retained
receipt the HRA will also retain circa £0.520m to fund
investment in the HRA capital programme. To date 3 homes have been
sold in 2021/22.
Collection Fund Performance
9.4
The collection fund is a separate account for transactions in
relation to council tax and business rates. Any deficit or surplus
forecast on the collection fund relating to council tax is
distributed between the council, Sussex Police and Crime
Commissioner and East Sussex Fire Authority, whereas any forecast
deficit or surplus relating to business rates is shared between the
council, East Sussex Fire Authority and the government.
9.5
At this stage of the financial year the council is forecasting that
the collection funds will be in deficit for council tax by
£0.743m and business rates by £0.335m. This relates
solely to the brought forward deficit relating to changes between
January 2021 and March 2021 as it is currently forecast that the
in-year position will achieve break-even. The council’s share
of these combined deficits is £0.791m and may be subject to
spreading over future financial years.
Reserves, Budget Transfers and
Commitments
9.6
The creation of reserves, the approval of budget transfers
(virements) of over £0.250m, and agreement to new financial
commitments of corporate financial significance that are not
provided for in the approved budget and policy framework require
Policy & Resources Committee approval in accordance with the
council’s Financial Regulations and Standard Financial
Procedures. There are no new reserves or budget transfers requiring
approval at this stage.
10
ANALYSIS & CONSIDERATION OF ANY ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS
10.1
The provisional outturn position on the General Fund is an
overspend of £6.205m. This includes a forecast underspend of
£0.308m on the council’s share of the NHS managed
Section 75 services. The accuracy of forecasts at this stage is not
likely to be within high confidence limits, particularly given the
very wide range of variables and factors driven by the ongoing
pandemic. The recovery of Parking Incomes will clearly be an area
to monitor closely alongside ongoing pressures on Homelessness
services.
10.2
The committee are advised that there are no set aside financial
risk provisions available to mitigate the position, however, the
council does have 2021/22 Contain Outbreak Management Funding of
£2.070m, part of which may be available to mitigate some
costs, for example, Homelessness costs.
11
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT & CONSULTATION
11.1
No specific consultation has been undertaken in relation to this
report.
12.1
The forecast risk at Month 2 represents 3.2% of the net General
Fund. This early forecast indicates a number of demand and cost
pressures alongside income pressures, the majority of which are
driven by the ongoing pandemic. All directorates and services will
continue to do everything possible to mitigate the position as far
as they are able through the development of financial recovery
plans and actions.
13
FINANCIAL AND OTHER IMPLICATIONS
Financial Implications:
13.1
The financial implications are covered in the main body of the
report. Financial performance is kept under review on a monthly
basis by the Executive Leadership Team and the management and
treatment of forecast risks is considered by the Audit &
Standards Committee as part of its review of strategic risks.
Finance Officer Consulted: Jeff
Coates
Date: 22nd June 2021
Legal Implications:
13.2
Decisions taken in relation to the capital and revenue budget must
enable the council to observe its legal duty to achieve best value
by securing continuous improvement in the way in which its
functions are exercised, having regard to a combination of economy,
efficiency and effectiveness. The council must also comply with its
general fiduciary duties to its Council Tax payers by acting with
financial prudence, and bear in mind the reserve powers of the
Secretary of State under the Local Government Act 1999 to limit
Council Tax & precepts.
Lawyer Consulted: Elizabeth
Culbert
Date: 21st June 2021
Equalities Implications:
13.3
There are no direct equalities implications arising from this
report.
Sustainability Implications:
13.4
Although there are no direct sustainability implications arising
from this report, the council’s financial position is an
important aspect of its ability to meet council priorities. In
addition, the council’s response to managing the impact of
the pandemic, in lieu of further government funding announcements,
will be important to demonstrate that in a worst case scenario, it
has plans to manage the financial impact and avoid financial
collapse.
Risk and Opportunity Management Implications:
13.5
The council’s revenue budget and Medium Term Financial
Strategy contain risk provisions to accommodate emergency spending,
even out cash flow movements and/or meet exceptional items. The
council maintains a recommended minimum working balance of
£9.000m to mitigate these risks. The council also maintains
other general and earmarked reserves and contingencies to cover
specific project or contractual risks and commitments. However,
current reserves and balances were not set at a level to manage
financial shocks of the scale of the pandemic and any depletion of
reserves and balances to manage this position will normally require
a plan for replenishment in future years.
SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION
Appendices:
1.
Financial Dashboard Summary
2.
Revenue Budget RAG Rating
3.
Revenue Budget Performance
4.
Summary of 2021/22 Savings Progress
5.
Capital Programme Performance
6.
New Capital Schemes
Documents in Members’ Rooms:
None.
Background
Documents
None.