Subject:
|
Targeted Budget
Management (TBM) Provisional Outturn 2020/21
|
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 the provisional outturn position
(i.e. Month 12 year-end) on the council’s revenue and capital
budgets for the financial year 2020/21.
1.3
As set out in the General Fund Revenue Budget 2020/21 report to
Budget Council, £7.825m was provided for in the budget for
reinvestment in identified cost and demand pressures across social
care and £7.220m for reinvestment in other priority service
areas. These sums were expected to meet identified demand-led, cost
and income pressures in 2020/21. The council also set aside a risk
provision of £0.750m to mitigate potential demand risks
and/or any difficulties in delivering savings targets. However,
since setting the budget the Coronavirus outbreak has had a severe
financial impact on the city and the council for which significant
financial support from government has been required. The financial
position has been reported through regular financial update reports
to Policy & Resources Committee throughout the year leading up
to the setting of the 2021/22 budget at February Budget Council.
This report provides the provisional outturn position and includes
memorandum information to indicate the element of the forecast
attributable to the pandemic.
1.4
The provisional outturn is a £9.733m underspend on the
General Fund revenue budget. This includes an underspend of
£0.989m on the council’s share of the NHS managed
Section 75 services. This is a further substantial improvement of
£4.921m from Month 9 reflecting underlying improvements in
income and expenditure as shown in paragraph 4.4 below.
1.5
As noted above, the council set aside a £0.750m risk
provision to mitigate risks identified at the time of setting the
budget. However, £0.575m of this was applied to meet the
additional costs of the pay award, confirmed at 2.75%, and the
remaining £0.175m has previously been released to support the
forecast outturn position. The report also indicates that
£2.909m (28%) of the substantial savings package in 2020/21
of £10.291m was unachieved. Most of this (£2.303m) was
due to pressures arising from COVID-19 for which grant support has
been provided.
2
RECOMMENDATIONS:
2.1
That the Committee note that the provisional General Fund outturn
position is an underspend of £9.733m and that this represents
an improvement of £4.921m compared to the projected and
planned resource position at Month 9 taken into account when
setting the 2021/22 budget.
2.2
That the Committee note the provisional outturn includes an
underspend of £0.989m on the council’s share of the NHS
managed Section 75 services.
2.3
That the Committee approve General Fund carry forward requests
totalling £5.321m as detailed in Appendix 5 and included in
the provisional outturn.
2.4
That the Committee approve the proposed allocation of additional
available outturn resources of £4.921m as set out in the
table at paragraph 10.4.
2.5
That the Committee note the provisional outturn for the separate
Housing Revenue Account (HRA), which is an underspend of
£0.436m.
2.6
That the Committee note the provisional outturn position for the
ring-fenced Dedicated Schools Grant, which is an underspend of
£0.746m.
2.7
That the Committee note the provisional outturn position on the
capital programme which is an underspend variance of
£7.132m.
2.9
That the Committee approve the creation of the Overdown rise
Footpath Maintenance Reserve as set out in paragraph 9.10.
2.10
That the Committee delegate the allocation of the Corporate Plan
Delivery Risk provision to the Chief Finance Officer following
consultation with the Member Budget Review Group as set out in
paragraph 10.3 iv).
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 4)
4.1
The General Fund includes general council services,
corporately-held budgets and central support services. Corporate
Budgets include centrally held provisions and budgets (e.g.
insurance). 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).
4.2
The table below shows the provisional outturn for
council-controlled revenue budgets within the General Fund for
2020/21. 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 4. Please note that the
‘COVID Variance’ column is a memorandum-only column
identifying the extent of the ‘Forecast Variance’
attributable to the pandemic.
Forecast
|
|
2020/21
|
Provisional
|
Provisional
|
COVID
|
Provisional
|
Variance
|
|
Budget
|
Outturn
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
Month 9
|
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
£'000
|
Directorate
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
%
|
765
|
Families, Children & Learning
|
90,371
|
90,449
|
78
|
1,655
|
0.1%
|
6,115
|
Health & Adult Social Care
|
62,949
|
66,781
|
3,832
|
7,302
|
6.1%
|
7,830
|
Economy, Environment & Culture
|
35,310
|
41,246
|
5,936
|
7,631
|
16.8%
|
1,541
|
Housing, Neighbourhoods & Communities
|
13,603
|
15,672
|
2,069
|
2,138
|
15.2%
|
1,052
|
Finance & Resources
|
21,452
|
22,174
|
722
|
255
|
3.4%
|
149
|
Strategy, Governance & Law
|
6,124
|
5,666
|
(458)
|
296
|
-7.5%
|
17,452
|
Sub Total
|
229,809
|
241,988
|
12,179
|
19,277
|
5.3%
|
(1,220)
|
Corporately-held Budgets
|
(46,092)
|
(46,607)
|
(515)
|
373
|
-1.1%
|
2,200
|
Corporate PPE Costs
|
0
|
1,847
|
1,847
|
1,847
|
0.0%
|
(23,244)
|
COVID-19 Grant
|
0
|
(23,244)
|
(23,244)
|
(23,244)
|
0.0%
|
(4,812)
|
Total General Fund
|
183,717
|
173,984
|
(9,733)
|
(1,747)
|
-5.3%
|
4,062
|
Collection Fund Deficit
|
|
|
5,404
|
|
|
(750)
|
Total Forecast
|
|
|
(4,329)
|
|
|
* The Collection Fund deficit (variance) is shown net
of government grant support of 75%.
4.3
The position above shows an overall improvement compared with TBM
Month 9 of £4.921m. The TBM improvement arises from a mixture
of improved expenditure forecasts and an improvement in the overall
income forecasts offset by a reduction in Sales, Fees & Charges
compensation grant.
Updated Scenario (Moderate View)
|
Moderate View
Forecast
(July P&R)
(£m)
|
TBM
Month 9
Forecast
(£m)
|
TBM
Month 12
Forecast
(£m)
|
Movem’nt from July
Forecast
Better (-)
Worse (+)
(£m)
|
Movem’nt from Month 9
Forecast
Better (-)
Worse (+) (£m)
|
|
Base position: TBM
Forecast Month 2 (May)
|
36.003
|
36.003
|
36.003
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
|
Improvement due to
speed of recovery (Income)
|
-5.000
|
-9.479
|
-12.198
|
-7.198
|
-2.719
|
|
Further Mitigations
(i.e. cost improvements)
|
-3.000
|
-8.678
|
-11.638
|
-8.638
|
-2.960
|
|
Capital Programme
pauses
|
-0.500
|
-0.492
|
-0.492
|
0.008
|
0.000
|
|
Further government
COVID-19 funding
|
-10.000
|
-22.166
|
-21.408
|
-11.408
|
0.758
|
|
Revised Outturn Forecast 2020/21
|
17.503
|
-4.812
|
-9.733
|
-27.236
|
-4.921
|
|
Forecast Collection
Fund Deficit 2020/21 *
|
10.000
|
4.062
|
5.404
|
-4.596
|
1.342
|
|
Total Projected (Surplus)/Deficit 2020/21
|
27.503
|
-0.750
|
-4.329
|
-31.832
|
-3.579
|
|
* The Collection Fund deficit is shown net of government grant
support of 75%.
This table is
provided to aid understanding of movements since July 2020 when the
council undertook detailed analysis of the potential financial
impact scenarios arising from the pandemic. The second-to-last
column shows that there have been improvements in income, costs and
grant forecasts resulting primarily from the following:
·
Improved income performance due to the busier than expected summer
together with the Sales, Fees & Charges compensation grant of
almost £15m. Later lockdowns have also not had the same depth
of impact on economic activity;
·
Significant additional NHS income of over £8m for
discharge-to-assess care placements which is reflected in the
Health & Adult Social Care forecast;
·
Improved costs through effective financial management across the
board including, significantly, a reduced forecast of PPE costs of
£0.763m, and a reduced capital financing forecast of
£0.466m due to reported delays and pauses to capital schemes
which therefore reduces the Minimum Revenue Provision
requirement;
·
Substantial additional funding support from government for
Emergency Response costs (i.e. excluding income losses) and
outbreak containment which was £12.166m higher than estimated
in July;
·
An improved Collection Fund forecast due to a stabilisation of
Council Tax Reduction claimants and a lower than expected impact on
in-year collection performance together with application of the 75%
government grant support for Collection Fund deficits.
Demand-led Budgets
4.6
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.
Forecast
|
|
2020/21
|
Provisional
|
Provisional
|
COVID
|
Provisional
|
Variance
|
|
Budget
|
Outturn
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
Variance
|
Month 9
|
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
Month 12
|
£'000
|
Demand-led
Budget
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
%
|
46
|
Child Agency & In House Placements
|
21,997
|
22,074
|
77
|
466
|
0.4%
|
2,467
|
Community Care
|
70,527
|
70,802
|
275
|
576
|
0.4%
|
4,333
|
Temporary Accommodation
|
3,352
|
5,131
|
1,779
|
1,703
|
53.1%
|
6,846
|
Total Demand-led Budget
|
95,876
|
98,007
|
2,131
|
2,745
|
2.2%
|
The chart below
shows the monthly forecast variances on the demand-led budgets for
2020/21.
It should be noted
that the Community Care trend is not a reflection of underlying
trends in activity which have remained significantly higher than
budgeted. The line has fallen primarily due to substantial NHS
income being received during the year in respect of hospital
Discharge-to-Assess placements of which over £8m was received
in total. Similarly, homelessness (Temporary Accommodation) was
supported by successful MHCLG funding bids.
TBM Focus Areas
The main pressures
identified at outturn are across parts of Families, Children &
Learning, Health & Adult Social Care, Homelessness, Transport,
and Culture, Tourism & Sport. Information about these pressures
and measures to mitigate them are summarised below:
4.7
Children’s Services: The outturn position showed
significant cost pressures: £1.538m on Services for Children
with Disabilities and £0.896m on Home to School Transport.
However, this was offset by underspends on Children in Care
placements of (£1.165m) together with other underspends of
(£1.191m); this resulted in a final outturn of £0.078m
at the year end. £1.419m of the overspend related to Covid-19
– this was a combination of loss of income, impact on savings
targets and additional expenditure given the need to mitigate
health risks posed by Covid-19.
The position for
the Dedicated Schools Grant is an underspend of £0.746m.
There are some significant overspends in the high needs block, most
significantly mainstream school’s top-up funding of
£0.212m and education agency placements of £0.373m.
These pressures are offset by one-off changes to the apportionment
of costs between education and children’s social care
budgets, and a significant underspend in the early years block
mainly due to lower spring term free entitlement levels. It is
important to note this underspend will need to be carried forward
to fund the retrospective clawback of early years funding that will
be applied by DfE in 2021/22.
4.8
Adults Services: The service has faced significant
challenges in 2020/21 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 coronavirus pandemic, delivering a
significant financial recovery plan and developing integration
plans through the Better Care Fund.
·
Service pressure funding of £3.900m, including Better Care
and Winter Pressure funding, was applied in 2020/21 and used to
fund budget pressures resulting from the increased demands and
complexity in the city. However, £1.550m was needed to
backfill recent reductions in CCG funding contributions. Over the
last two years there has been an overall £3.750m reduction in
CCG funding due to pressures on local NHS budgets, however, this
has all been borne by the HASC budget although CCG funding also
relates to services in other directorates.
·
At
the end of the financial year, £2.962m of the total financial
recovery plan of £4.387m was unachievable. This is
predominantly due to COVID-19 impacts.
·
Overall, HASC has
overspent by £3.832m in 2020/21 which clearly indicates the
scale of the current challenges. 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 majority of the overspend is a result of:
o
COVID-19 related
spend £7.301m (excluding substantial PPE costs held
corporately);
o
Unfunded element
of cumulative CCG funding reductions of £0.400m;
o
£0.300m due
to System control issues following the implementation of new
software in April 2018, which have since been identified and are
being addressed.
·
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); and
o
There
is also focus nationally on improving rates of hospital discharge
in order to accommodate winter pressures.
The
funding of all care packages is scrutinised for Value for Money,
ensuring that eligible needs are met in the most cost-effective
manner which will not always meet people’s aspirations.
Established safeguards are in place to provide assurance within
this process.
4.9
Housing Services and Temporary Accommodation: The 2020/21
outturn position for Temporary Accommodation (TA) including the
accommodation for rough sleepers and those at risk of rough
sleeping in hotels as part of the ‘everyone in’
initiative is an overspend of £4.903m. However, use of
one-off funding from the Flexible Homelessness Support Grant of
£2.463m and further Housing Benefit income of £0.661m
for those in hotel accommodation means that the net position is an
overspend of £1.779m. Since the forecast at month 9, there
have been further costs relating to those in hotels including more
food costs and higher than expected costs of repairs works on TA
properties. The total overspend of £4.903m relates to the
following:
·
Overspend of £1.139m for the continued higher volumes of
temporary accommodation being required for ‘business as
usual’ (estimated 105 households). The budget was originally
set at an average of 36 units of spot purchase accommodation
throughout the year, but it proved very difficult to prevent
homelessness and move people on during the pandemic, hence the
overspend. This is in part due to the competing pressure for
available accommodation to ‘move on’ people
accommodated due to the pandemic and is also due to the continuing
local pressures. The teams have been overwhelmed by the numbers of
people needing accommodation during the pandemic, all of whom
require move on plans to be developed and this has resulted in
longer stays in temporary accommodation as those assessments are
worked through. The service has seen continued levels of
overspending as in 2019/20 on other areas of TA such as income
collection and repairs costs which means that £0.350m of
savings have not been met.
·
A further net overspend of £1.870m in relation to housing
those assessed as at risk of rough sleeping as part of the response
to the ‘everyone in’ initiative from the Government,
during the pandemic. As at the end of January 2021, an additional
145 clients were housed over and above the 105 units in spot
purchase at the start of the year (so 250 units of spot purchase on
31st January 2021). However, by the end of March 2021 the 250 had
reduced to 198 (but still an increase on business as usual clients
of an additional 93 units).
·
A further cost £2.194m net of grant for the cost of hotel and
university accommodation and move on costs for housing rough
sleepers and those assessed as at risk of rough sleeping to 31
March 2021 as part of the 'everyone in' initiative by the
Government. The underlying gross costs of £4.523m are higher
than the forecast at month 9 (£4.290m) mainly due to more
hotel rooms than forecast being required in the last few months of
the financial year.
·
An underspend of £0.300m relating to the new investment
funding for an enhanced level of service for emergency short term
accommodation. This procurement of this contract has been delayed
due to the pandemic.
The service is
planning to move all those housed under the ‘everyone
in’ initiative (COVID 1 and COVID 2 cohorts) into more
sustainable accommodation by 30th September 2021 and details are
contained in the Next Steps and Rough Sleeping Accommodation report
to P&R Committee 18 March 2021. Further funding was agreed as
part of the Allocation of Contain Outbreak Management Fund (COMF)
report to P&R (Recovery) Sub-committee 28 April
2021.
Housing is
undertaking an overarching Temporary Accommodation ‘end to
end’ Improvement Programme with support resource from
Performance and Improvement team. This work includes
considering how to reduce the use and length of stay in Temporary
Accommodation and be linked to improving homeless prevention and
enabling move on to more sustainable accommodation. The review also
includes an assessment of void turnaround processes, income
collection and repairs.
4.10
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
has also been a challenging additional income target for Parking
Services of £3.800m for 2020/21. These activities and
services have been heavily impacted by the COVID-19 lockdown and
the outturn reflects significant income shortfalls compared to
budget for 2020/21 in all these areas.
The final outturn position has improved from that for Month 9 due
to higher Parking PCN income, reduced costs in Parking Services,
improvements to commercial waste income, lower costs for suppliers
relief and improvements to Seafront Property Income in Sport &
Leisure. These improvements are partially reduced by greater
arrears for commercial rents resulting in greater contribution to
bad debt provision.
Carry Forward Requests (Appendix 5)
4.11
Under the council’s Financial Regulations, the S151 Chief
Finance Officer[1]
may agree the carry forward of budget of up to £0.050m per
member of the Corporate Management Team (up to a maximum of
£1m in total) if it is considered that this incentivises good
financial management. However, due to the challenging financial
situation, all requests are being presented to this committee for
consideration. Similarly, carry forwards have only been proposed
where there is clear evidence of a fully-funded, prior commitment
that was not able to be completed or undertaken by the end of the
financial year. This will normally be supported by a contractual or
purchase order commitment.
4.12
Carry forward requests include grant funded and non-grant funded
carry forwards totalling £5.321m and have been assumed in the
outturn figures above. The principles outlined in paragraph 4.11
above also apply. An analysis of these is provided in Appendix 5
split into two categories as follows:
i)
The non-grant funded element of carry forwards totals
£2.023m. These items have been proposed where funding is in
place for contractual commitments, existing projects or partnership
working that cross over financial years and it is therefore a
timing issue that this money has not been spent in full before the
year-end.
ii)
The grant funded element of carry forwards totals
£3.298m. Under current financial reporting standards, grants
received by the council that are unringfenced or do not have any
conditions attached are now recognised as income in the financial
year in which they are received rather than in the year in which
they are used to support services. Carry forward is therefore
required to ensure the grants are available to fund the commitments
against them next year. The total also includes a sum of
£0.746m relating to the Dedicated Schools Grant. Under the
Schools Finance Regulations, the unspent part of the DSG must be
carried forward to support the schools budget in future years.
Monitoring Savings
4.13
The savings package approved by full Council to support the revenue
budget position in 2020/21 was £10.291m following directly on
from a £12.236m savings package in 2019/20. This was very
significant and followed 9 years of substantial packages totalling
over £165m that have been necessary to enable cost and demand
increases to be funded alongside managing reductions in central
government grant funding.
4.14
Appendix 4 provides a summary of savings in each directorate and
indicates in total what was achieved or unachieved. Appendix 5
summarises the position across all directorates and presents the
entire savings programme. The graph below provides a summary of the
latest position and indicates that £2.909m (28%) was not
achievable. All of this was in respect of pressures relating to
Covid-19.
5
Housing Revenue Account Performance (Appendix 4)
5.1
The Housing Revenue Account is a separate ring-fenced account
within the General Fund that covers income and expenditure related
to the management and operation of the council’s housing
stock. Expenditure is generally funded by Council Tenants’
rents, Housing Benefits and Universal Credit. The provisional
outturn is an underspend of £0.436m and includes the setting
up of a provision of £0.450m to be used for backdated
harmonisation costs for transferred Repairs & Maintenance
staff. More details are provided in Appendix 4.
5.2
The underspend on Repairs & Maintenance works has increased by
£0.376m since Month 7 and therefore this sum will be set
aside for repairs and maintenance catch up works in 2021/22 in
accordance with the recommendations in the TBM Month 7 report,
which was on the December Policy & Resources Committee agenda.
The transfer of this reserve is detailed in the TBM Month 2 report
also on this committee agenda.
6
Dedicated Schools Grant Performance (Appendix 4)
6.1
The Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) is a ring-fenced grant 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 provisional outturn is
an underspend of £0.746m and more details are provided in
Appendix 4. Under the Schools Finance Regulations any underspend
must be carried forward to support the schools budget in future
years.
7
NHS Managed S75 Partnership Performance (Appendix 4)
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
provisional outturn for the Health & Adult Social Care
directorate. The provisional outturn is an underspend of
£0.989m and more details are provided in Appendix 4.
8
Capital Programme Performance and Changes
i)
Variance: The ‘variance’ for a scheme or project
indicates whether it has broken-even, underspent or overspent.
Information on how forecast overspends will be mitigated is given
in Appendix 7. If the project is completed, any underspend or
overspend will be an outturn variance. Generally, only explanations
of significant forecast variances of £0.100m or greater are
given.
ii)
Budget Variations: These are changes to the project budget
within year, requiring members’ approval, and do not change
future year projections. The main reason for budget variations is
where capital grant or external income changes in year.
iii)
Slippage: This indicates whether or not a scheme or project
is on schedule. Slippage of expenditure from one year into another
will generally indicate overall delays to a project although some
projects can ‘catch up’ at a later date. Some slippage
is normal due to a wide variety of factors affecting capital
projects, however substantial amounts of slippage across a number
of projects could result in the council losing capital resources
(e.g. capital grants) or being unable to manage the cashflow or
timing impact of later payments or related borrowing. Wherever
possible, the council aims to keep slippage below 5% of the total
capital programme.
iv)
Reprofiling: Reprofiling of budget from one year into
another is requested by project managers when they become aware of
changes or delays to implementation timetables due to unforeseeable
reasons outside the council’s direct control. Reprofiling
requests are checked in advance by Finance to ensure there is no
impact on the council’s capital resources before they are
recommended to Policy & Resources Committee.
v)
IFRS changes: These accounting adjustments are only applied
at year-end and are necessary for the council to comply with
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) for the
Statement of Accounts. This concerns the determination of items of
expenditure as either capital or revenue expenditure. Only items
meeting the IFRS definition of capital expenditure can be
capitalised; expenditure not meeting this definition must be
charged to the revenue account.
For many capital
schemes there may be instances where some of the costs are of a
day-to-day servicing nature and are not true capital expenditure.
It would be impractical for an authority to assess every item of
expenditure when it is incurred as to whether or not it has
enhanced an asset. A practical solution is therefore applied
instead and as part of the closure of accounts process an
assessment is made by capital programme managers and Finance to
determine the correct classification of capital or revenue. Where
an element of the scheme is deemed to be revenue, the capital
budgets are reduced by the same amount as the items that are
subsequently charged to the revenue account to ensure no overall
budgetary impact. These changes are designated as ‘IFRS
Adjustments’ in Appendix 7.
8.2
The table below provides a summary of capital programme performance
by Directorate and shows that there is an overall underspend of
£7.132m which is detailed in Appendix 7.
Forecast Variance Month 9
|
|
Reported Budget Month 12
|
Provisional Outturn Month 12
|
Provisional Variance Month 12
|
Provisional Variance Month 12
|
£'000
|
Directorate
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
%
|
0
|
Families, Children
& Learning
|
11,739
|
11,694
|
(45)
|
-0.4%
|
0
|
Health & Adult
Social Care
|
738
|
223
|
(515)
|
-69.8%
|
10
|
Economy, Environment
& Culture
|
35,877
|
34,453
|
(1,424)
|
-4.0%
|
0
|
Housing,
Neighbourhoods & Communities
|
2,164
|
2,013
|
(151)
|
-7.0%
|
(5,128)
|
Housing Revenue
Account
|
42,944
|
38,169
|
(4,775)
|
-11.1%
|
(222)
|
Finance &
Resources
|
3,096
|
2,874
|
(222)
|
-7.2%
|
0
|
Strategy, Governance
& Law
|
747
|
747
|
0
|
0.0%
|
(5,340)
|
Total
Capital
|
97,305
|
90,173
|
(7,132)
|
-7.3%
|
(Note: Summary may include minor
rounding differences to Appendix 7)
8.3
Appendix 7 shows the changes to the 2020/21 capital budget. 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 in the Month 9 report.
Summary of Capital Budget Movement
|
Reported Budget Month 12
|
|
£'000
|
Budget approved as at Month 9
|
141,007
|
IFRS changes
|
(1,268)
|
New schemes to be approved in this report
|
0
|
Variations to budget (to be approved)
|
1,829
|
Reprofiling of budget (to be approved)
|
(40,487)
|
Slippage (to be approved)
|
(3,776)
|
Total Capital
|
97,305
|
8.4
Appendix 7 also details any slippage into next year. In total,
project managers have forecast that £3.776m of the capital
budget may slip into the next financial year and this equates to
approximately 0.91% of the capital budget. The Committee will note
the unusually high reprofiling requirement which is a direct
consequence of the pandemic that has caused a wide range of delays
due to working restrictions, supply chain issues, impacts on
consultation processes and many other impacts.
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 investment
programme. For 2020/21 a total of £7.700m capital receipts
(excluding ‘right to buy’ sales) have been received.
Disposals during the year include the sale of Oxford Street car
park and Greenways Corner cottage; overage from Shoreham Airport;
the transfer of dwellings to the HRA for new homes from Gladstone
Court and Graham Avenue; plus the transfer of sites at Belgrave
Centre and Coldean Lane land toward the housing joint venture.
9.3
The Government receives a proportion of the proceeds from
‘right to buy’ sales with a proportion required by the
council to repay debt; the remainder is retained by the council and
used to fund the capital investment programme. The total net usable
receipts for ‘right to buy’ sales in 2020/21 is
£2.316m including £1.652m available for replacement
homes.
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 & 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
The council tax collection fund ended the year with a deficit of
£6.645m, an increase of £0.743m, and the council's
share of the overall deficit is £5.637m.The main contributors
to the deficit are set out in the table below:
Council Tax Element
|
Gain/(Loss) compared to Taxbase Estimate
£m
|
BHCC
Share
£m
|
Expected losses in collection relating to both the current year and
the collection of arrears
|
(2.633)
|
(2.234)
|
Cost
of increased Council Tax Reduction (CTR) awards
|
(1.813)
|
(1.538)
|
Ongoing increase in Severely Mentally Ill (SMI) exemptions
(including backdated elements)
|
(0.405)
|
(0.344)
|
Shortfalls in liability in part due to less properties being added
to the valuation list
|
(0.785)
|
(0.665)
|
Higher
net awards of other discounts (includes Single Person Discounts and
disregards for students and SMI claimants),
|
(0.495)
|
(0.420)
|
Reduction in student exemptions
|
0.355
|
0.301
|
Other
net exemptions and disregards
|
(0.339)
|
(0.288)
|
Brought Forward 2019/20 Deficit
|
(0.530)
|
(0.449)
|
Council Tax Loss compared to Taxbase Estimate
|
(6.645)
|
(5.637)
|
9.6
The business rates collection fund ended the year with a net
deficit of £5.364m after allowing for S31 compensation grant
funding. The main reasons are the impacts from Covid-19 on reduced
collection of business rates income of £3.580m and increased
empty relief £1.057m. There was also a net increase to the
appeals provision of £0.253m. The council’s 49% share
of the net deficit is £2.628m.
9.7
The combined collection fund deficit of £8.265m will be
spread over three years and partially offset partly by government
funding (at 75%) which provides for identified Covid-19 impacts on
the tax base but does not cover any impacts on collection
performance as the government does not want to disincentivise
recovery of debt. This leaves a net Collection Fund deficit of
£5.404m to be managed over the 3 years.
Reserves, Budget Transfers and Commitments
9.8
The creation or redesignation 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.
9.9
As normal, the council’s reserves and provisions have been
fully reviewed as part of the annual closure of accounts process
and a schedule of the reserves is shown at Appendix 8. Current
reserves and balances are considered to be appropriate to meet
normal risks, commitments and liabilities, although one new reserve
is proposed – see paragraph 9.10 below. Similarly, provisions
identified during the closedown process are considered appropriate
and reasonable and will be subject to review by the external
auditor to ensure they adequately reflect identified liabilities
and obligations.
10.1
The provisional outturn position for 2020/21 indicates that
additional resources of £4.921m are available to support the
council’s financial position.
10.2
Before considering allocation of these resources, the committee is
advised that the following items are currently placing pressure on
the council’s financial resilience and level of available
reserves:
i)
Financial Smoothing: In setting the budget for 2021/22,
Budget Council agreed to the use of Financial Smoothing (i.e.
internal borrowing from reserves) in the sum of £3.971m to
balance the 2021/22 budget, to be repaid over 10 years starting in
2022/23. While the final use of Financial Smoothing is
significantly below earlier projections made prior to government
Covid funding announcements, the use of any reserves to balance the
annual budget is not a financially healthy position for any
authority. Ideally, reserves should therefore be replenished at the
first opportunity in order to provide mitigation against any future
financial risks or shocks.
ii)
Collection Fund deficits spread over 3 years: The
council’s Business Rate and Council Tax collection was
significantly impacted by the pandemic resulting in large
Collection Fund deficits. These require further one-off resources
of £1.238m to be identified in both 2022/23 and 2023/24 to
meet the balance of the 2020/21 Collection Fund deficit remaining
after government Covid funding and following the government’s
announcement that local authorities would be allowed to spread the
deficit over 3 years. These sums will need to be identified from
available one-off resources in 2022/23 and 2023/24 otherwise
further financial smoothing (borrowing from reserves) may be
required.
iii) Summary
of all reserve calls: Together with the Financial Smoothing
above, the council has approved the use of reserves to support
other initiatives on a temporary basis pending repayment. While
these reserves will therefore be returned, it does mean that the
level of cash-backed reserves available is suppressed until these
are fully repaid. The reserves currently ‘loaned’ and
the relevant payback periods are as follows:
Item/Reserve
|
Amount
£m
|
Repayment Period
|
Repayments Start
|
Financial
Smoothing of the 2021/22 General Fund Budget
|
3.971
|
10 years
|
2022/23
|
Term Time Only (TTO) back pay settlement for
schools
|
3.300
|
10 years
|
2021/22
|
Surface Water Action Management Plan
|
0.385
|
10 years
|
2020/21
|
Waste PFI
|
0.170
|
4 years
|
2021/22
|
Royal Pavilion & Museums Trust Cash
Facility
|
4.000
|
Up to 10 years
|
2021/22
|
Brighton Youth Centre
|
0.325
|
6 years
|
Est 2022/23
|
Total Borrowed
|
12.151
|
|
|
iv) The
National Joint Council (NJC) pay offer: The employers’
side of the NJC has made a pay award offer of 1.5% under the
national pay bargaining mechanism. Brighton & Hove City
Council, as in previous years, followed the government’s
Spending Review assumptions for pay which was for a pay freeze,
accept for those earning £24,000 or less for which provision
was made in the council’s budget. A 1.5% pay award (the
minimum now likely) will cost £1.680m more than the current
provision and will need to be addressed on a one-off basis in
2021/22 and permanently from 2022/23.
10.3
There are a small number of priority one-off costs that the
committee are recommended to consider for allocation as
follows:
i)
Moulescoomb Primary School £0.317m: The school is
currently designated for transfer to Academy status in 2021/22
under a statutory order. However, the school is currently in
deficit and this is continuing to grow during 2021/22. At the point
of transfer the deficit is estimated to be approximately
£0.301m. In addition, there are legal and pension actuary
costs relating to the TUPE transfer of staff estimated at
£0.016m. The committee is therefore recommended to set aside
£0.317m from the General Fund underspend for the potential
transfer of the school to Academy status, which would otherwise
need to be funded from the Dedicated Schools Grant following
consultation and agreement with the Schools Forum.
ii)
The World Reimagined £0.160m: The council has the
opportunity to become one of 10 cities participating in this mass
participation project which explores the impact of the
Transatlantic Slave Trade over hundreds of years through to modern
day barriers and looking into the future. This council has made a
public pledge to work towards being actively anti-racist and this
initiative could make a significant positive contribution to this
commitment.
The project will see
trails of large globe sculptures in cities across the UK in the
summer of 2022, created by artists to bring to life the impact of
the Transatlantic Slave Trade. The trails will be the centre of a
broader education and engagement programme, with schools, community
groups, sports and cultural institutions across the country. At the
end of the project, The World Reimagined will auction a large
number of the sculptures to raise money for people and
organisations doing important work for racial justice.
It costs
£0.085m to participate in The World Reimagined but, as a
London-led scheme, there would need to be linked projects provided
locally, estimated to cost £0.075m. Full engagement over the
project content with relevant local groups will be programmed
over the summer with the details of the project being relayed to
and agreed at the September Tourism, Equalities, Communities &
Culture (TECC) committee. The projects would take place over
2021/22 and 2022/23 and therefore the request at this stage is to
ring-fence £0.160m from the available outturn resources to
secure the council’s commitment to this initiative.
iii)
Services for Young People with Special Educational Needs &
Disability (SEND) £0.025m: A key third sector provider in
the city has suffered a large, unexpected loss of Big Lottery
Funding which will put in jeopardy a number of important services
for vulnerable young people with SEND. In the interim, the provider
is furloughing some staff to reduce costs while it explores other
fund raising opportunities but has requested additional temporary
funding support from both the City Council and East Sussex County
Council to ensure continuity of services. These services contribute
to many of the outcomes identified in the City Council’s SEND
strategy 2021 to 2026 and provide important peer support and
careers advice for young people with SEND. A contribution of
£0.025m is recommended.
The budget identified
some additional resources to support delivery of these priorities
but the ongoing impact of the pandemic through to at least July,
has caused further delays to existing and planned programmes of
work, including capital investment schemes, and has continued to
divert staffing resources to the management of the pandemic. It is
proposed that this sum be set aside to help to manage delivery
risks and provide necessary short term resources to ensure
advancement of projects and programmes including those relating to
work already underway to address disadvantage, narrowing the
attainment gap and providing safe routes and active travel to
schools.
The requirement for
resources is likely to fluctuate across programmes depending on
current capacity and the impact of the pandemic on services, which
does not fall evenly. To determine the use of this resource, it is
therefore proposed to delegate allocation to the Chief Finance
Officer following consultation with the Member Budget Review Group
(BRG) attended by the Finance Leads of the three main groups.
Proposed
Allocations
|
Amount
(£m)
|
One-off provision for the 2021/22 Pay
Award
|
1.680
|
Moulsecoomb Academy Transfer Costs
|
0.317
|
The World Reimagined
|
0.160
|
Services for Young People with SEND
|
0.025
|
Corporate Plan Delivery Risk Provision
|
0.239
|
Repayment of 2021/22 Financial Smoothing
|
2.500
|
Total Proposed
Allocation
|
4.921
|
Note that repaying
£2.500m financial smoothing will reduce the level of
recurrent financial commitments in 2022/23 by £0.250m and is
therefore preferred over holding funds for years 2 and 3 of the
Collection Fund deficit.
10.5
In the event that the pay award is agreed at a higher level than
the current (rejected) offer, the pay award provision will be
increased and the amount set aside to repay Financial Smoothing
will be correspondingly reduced.
11
ANALYSIS & CONSIDERATION OF ANY ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS
11.1
The provisional outturn position on council controlled budgets is
an underspend of £9.733m including the council’s
risk-share of the provisional underspend on NHS managed Section 75
services of £0.989m. This is an improvement of £4.921m
compared with the projected position at month 9 providing
additional resources for either repayment of reserves, or
allocation to other priorities or reserves.
12
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT & CONSULTATION
12.1
No specific consultation has been undertaken in relation to this
report.
13.1
The overall resource position has improved by £4.921m
compared with the position at Month 9 and assumed in the 2021/22
Revenue Budget report to Policy & Resources Committee and
Budget Council in February 2021. This represents a good outcome for
2020/21 compared to early forecasts in the financial year before
government Covid-19 funding support became clear. There remain
underlying pressures across income generating areas and, in
particular, homelessness and rough sleeping, which will need a
smooth and orderly exit from the pandemic in order to avoid similar
costs building up again in 2021/22.
14
FINANCIAL AND OTHER IMPLICATIONS
Financial
Implications:
14.1
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 cross-party Budget
Working Group and the management and treatment of strategic
financial risks is considered by the Audit & Standards
Committee.
Finance Officer Consulted:
Jeff
Coates
Date: 07/06/2021
Legal
Implications:
Decisions taken in
relation to the 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: 21/06/21
Equalities
Implications:
14.2
There are no direct equalities implications arising from this
report.
Sustainability
Implications:
14.3
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 Corporate Plan and Medium
Term Financial Strategy priorities. The achievement of a break-even
position or better is therefore important in the context of
ensuring that there are no adverse impacts on future financial
years from performance in 2020/21.
Risk and
Opportunity Management Implications:
14.4
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 and which
also help to manage unexpected financial shocks.
SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION
Appendices:
1.
Financial Dashboard Summary
2.
Revenue Budget Performance RAG Rating
3.
Revenue Budget Movements since Month 9
4.
Revenue Budget Performance
5.
Year-end Carry Forward Requests
6.
2020/21 Savings Progress
7.
Capital Programme Performance
8.
Schedule of Reserves
Documents in Members’ Rooms:
None.
Background Documents
None.