Strategy,
Finance &
City
Item 101
Regeneration
Committee
Subject:
General Fund Revenue Budget, Capital & Treasury Management
Strategy 2024/25
Date of
meeting: Strategy, Finance
& City Regeneration Committee: 8 Feb 2024
Budget Council:
22 Feb 2024
Report
of:
Chief Finance Officer
Contact
Officer: Name: Nigel
Manvell
Tel: 01273 291233
James
Hengeveld
Tel: 01273 291242
Email: nigel.manvell@brighton-hove.gov.uk
james.hengeveld@brighton-hove.gov.uk
Ward(s)
affected: All
FOR GENERAL
RELEASE
1
PURPOSE OF REPORT AND POLICY CONTEXT
1.1
This report includes the proposed General Fund Revenue and Capital
Budget 2024/25 including the latest estimated resource position for
the Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) covering 2024/25 to
2027/28, including changes in assumptions arising from the key
impacts of the Autumn Statement 2023 and the subsequent provisional
Local Government Financial Settlement. It also includes revised
estimates of demographic and cost trends based on the latest
information and forecasts. This includes updated Council Tax and
Business Rate tax base forecasts as received by Strategy, Finance
& City Regeneration Committee at its January 2024 meeting.
1.2
The Autumn Statement 2023 and recent additional funding
announcement purport to increase Local Government Spending Power by
7.5% for 2024/25. However, this includes assumed maximum Council
Tax increases of up to 4.99%, including an Adult Social Care
precept of 2%, and a Business Rates increase of 6.7% in line with
September 2023 CPI. Therefore, a substantial element of the
increase will fall on local businesses and council tax-payers.
1.3
Real Terms inflation being experienced by the council is closer to
8% due to increases in the costs of social care provision, most of
which is externally provided, together with energy cost uplifts,
increased interest rates driving up capital financing costs, and
increased external contract costs. However, this is before
significant increases in demands are added including, for example,
significant growth in adult and children’s social care, home
to school transport, and homelessness. A further impact that is
compounding funding pressures is the impact of the cost of living
crisis on council incomes including everything from reduced
planning fees to lower commercial rent incomes to lower than
expected parking and permit income.
1.5
In this council, the conservative estimate of the growth in costs
and demands in 2024/25 is approximately £48 million, an
unprecedented increase of over 20% of the council’s net
budget. This includes the combined impact of inflation, increased
demands and reduced incomes as referred to above. It also includes
an assumption of 3% for the nationally set Local Government pay
award, yet to be negotiated.
1.6
The combination of unprecedented cost pressures and an Autumn
Statement that offered nothing above the 2-year announcement made
in 2022, despite inflation continuing to be much higher than
forecast by the Office of Budget Responsibility together with
increased interest rates and an ongoing cost of living crisis, has,
unsurprisingly, resulted in the biggest financial challenge this
council has ever faced. A budget shortfall (gap) of over £30
million is estimated for 2024/25 and this inevitably results in
some very difficult choices given that the council has no
unallocated provisions or risk reserves to help the position in the
short term. This is due to cumulative savings and cuts of over
£240 million having been required since 2010 in the context
of a loss of government grant of over £120 million in real
terms, the capping of Council Tax increases, and very significant
increases in demands and needs for statutory services such as
social care over the same period.
1.7
As before, the government continues to issue very late, short term
(one year) funding settlements; 2024/25 being the sixth one-year
settlement in succession. It has also failed to review or resolve
any of the long-term funding issues that it set out to address
including Adult Social Care, the Fair Funding review, and the
review of Business Rates. This adds to the challenge of councils
being able to develop viable, sustainable medium term financial
plans and it remains to be seen how many councils will continue to
be financially viable over the next 2 years without resorting to
unsustainable, short-term measures including using up emergency
reserves (Working Balances) or selling off public assets.
2
RECOMMENDATIONS:
That Strategy, Finance & City
Regeneration Committee recommends to Council:
2.1
The Administration’s proposed budget and Council Tax increase
on the Brighton and Hove element of the council tax,
comprising:
i)
A general Council Tax increase of 2.99%;
ii)
An Adult Social Care Precept increase of 2.00%;
iii) The
council’s net General Fund budget requirement for 2024/25 of
£246.353m;
iv) The
2024/25 budget allocations to services as set out in Appendix
1;
v) The
Budget Strategies and proposed savings as set out in Appendix
1;
vi) The
one-off resource allocations as set out in the table at paragraph
5.8.
vii) A recommended
working balance of £9.000m (approximately 3.7% of the net
budget) to be maintained or replenished over the period of the
Medium Term Financial Strategy.
2.2
That Council notes the updated 4-Year Medium Term Financial
Strategy included at paragraph 10.3 including predicted budget
shortfalls of £73m over the 4-year period.
2.3
That Council approves the Capital Strategy for 2024/25 at Appendix
2 comprising:
i) The
strategy for funding the investment in change, including the
flexible use of capital receipts as set out in section 8;
ii) The
capital resources and proposed borrowing included at Annex A of the
Capital Strategy;
iii) The Capital
Investment Programme for 2024/25 of £211.470m included at
Appendix 1 and incorporating allocations to strategic funds.
2.4
That Council notes the Equalities Impact Assessments to cover all
relevant budget options as set out in Appendix 6.
2.5
That Council further notes that approval of the budget is an
indicative resourcing decision to be taken in the context of the
explanation given in the Legal Implications at paragraph 18.2.
2.6
That Council approves the Treasury Management Strategy Statement as
set out in Appendix 3 comprising:
i) The
Annual Investment Strategy;
ii) The
Prudential and Treasury Indicators;
iii) The Minimum
Revenue Provision policy;
iv)
The
authorised borrowing limit for the year commencing 1 April
2024.
2.7
That Council notes that supplementary information needed to set the
overall council tax, including a detailed Budget Book, will be
provided for the Budget Council meeting as listed in paragraph
12.3.
That Strategy,
Finance & City Regeneration Committee:
2.8
Agrees that the council’s Chief Finance Officer be authorised
to make any necessary technical, presentational or consequential
amendments to this report before submission to Budget Council.
3
Context and background information
3.1
Whilst inflation appears to have peaked, it has been slower to
level out than the Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) had
predicted which has led to ongoing cost pressures across all areas
of spend including higher than anticipated pay award settlements.
The high uplift of the National Living Wage this year and next
(around 10%) is also driving up costs across a number of sectors,
most notably for councils across private and independent sector
adult and children’s social care providers from whom the
council purchases the great majority of its statutory care
services.
3.2
The continuing impact of inflation and subsequently high interest
rates on the economy is also a key factor, resulting in increased
demands due to the cost of living crisis and the continued
suppression of income from fees, charges and commercial rents, key
sources of funding for most councils. Latest OBR forecasts indicate
inflation falling to 2% by quarter four of 2024 but it remains to
be seen if this is realistic given the backdrop of ongoing global
and domestic events.
3.3
As noted above, the corollary of this is a very large projected
budget shortfall of over £30 million in 2024/25, the largest
in the authority's history. This comprises increased costs, demands
and income pressures of approximately £48 million offset by
additional funding from Council Tax increases and growth, Business
Rates increases, and Adult Social Care grant of £18 million.
This clearly demonstrates the failings of the Local Government
system of funding, both nationally and locally, and is being
replicated across every council in the country. The ability of
councils to manage this will come down to the strength of their
Council Tax and Business Rate tax bases, their ability to raise
other incomes, and the level of their reserves. However, many
councils are already struggling and at least 16 councils of all
political colours are known to have formally approached the
Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities
(DLUHC) for exceptional financial support including the ability to
sell public assets or borrow to fund annual revenue costs.
3.4
This authority has navigated through substantial budget shortfalls
over a long period of years, particularly since 2010, including
managing its finances through the pandemic, albeit with the help of
substantial government Covid grant funding. This report presents a
balanced budget for the Authority for 2024/25 but, given the scale
and cumulative impact of the projected budget gap next financial
year, this inevitably comes with consequences including:
·
The need to prioritise resources to ensure that core statutory
services such as social care and child protection can be maintained
to adequate and safe standards;
·
As a result, there are unavoidable cuts to some local services,
council staffing, and support to other organisations including the
Community & Voluntary Sector;
·
Significantly increased risks of delivering all budget savings
measures successfully;
·
An inability to address the entirety of the forecast medium-term
pressures;
·
Impacts on the council’s ability to invest for the future due
to challenges to the affordability of future capital investment
programmes;
·
Impacts on the council’s strategic partnerships due to
funding constraints on both the council and its partners, including
the NHS.
3.5
However, producing a set of balanced budget proposals in the
extreme context set out earlier in the report demonstrates that the
council continues to do everything possible to manage the position
through effective financial management and planning, and without
resorting to a further depletion of emergency reserves or applying
to government for exceptional financial support. As set out in the
budget planning reporting to the July 2023 meeting of the Strategy,
Finance & City Regeneration Committee, this has been achieved
through a wide range of planned measures including:
i)
Working with the Administration on a regular basis throughout the
budget setting process to test out proposals and ensure alignment
with Council Plan priorities as far as possible, including a Star
Chamber process with each Directorate to test out final proposals
and options;
ii)
Identifying and investing in longer term MTFS workstreams that will
continue or start in 2024/25 but will aim for medium term savings
and efficiencies. There are many workstreams and examples
include:
·
a strategic review of parking across the city;
·
developing the Foster Care Plus incentive scheme to grow the number
of foster carers locally;
·
developing a new Housing Strategy to optimise the use of the wide
range of temporary accommodation and affordable and social housing
investments to prevent homelessness and reduce longer term
costs;
·
developing the new Family Hub model to improve prevention and
support for vulnerable families and children;
·
undertaking a review of organisational design and staffing
structures to ensure that management and administrative costs are
optimal, particularly in light of technological investments, and
that functionally similar areas are organised as efficiently as
possible, eliminating any duplication of effort;
·
continuing to optimise (reduce) the use of administrative offices
through adopting new ways of working, making the best use of new
technologies and computing devices, and maximising the layout and
use of floor space;
·
continuing to identify opportunities (business cases) to modernise
services to ensure they are cost effective, deliver services to
appropriate standards, and minimise waste;
iii) Ongoing scrutiny
of the value for money of services including reviewing the balance
of provision between in-house and externally commissioned and
procured services to ensure the most appropriate option is
utilised, as evidenced by a number of the budget savings
proposals;
iv) Reviewing the
affordability and financing of the 5-year Capital Investment
Programme;
v) Ensuring
that fees & charges keep pace with corporate inflation
assumptions as a minimum. However, this has proved to be one of the
most challenging areas to address due to ongoing unfavourable
economic conditions.
3.6
Delivering the budget proposals for 2024/25 will undoubtedly
present a major challenge to the organisation and a key risk
remains any worsening of the cost of living crisis or any deepening
of local or national economic challenges. The projections for later
years of the MTFS, while very difficult to predict with great
accuracy given the short term funding settlement and a forthcoming
General Election, suggest that there will almost certainly be
ongoing financial challenges for the council in future. Therefore,
proposals and initiatives that can contribute to longer term
financial sustainability through economies, efficiencies or
improved prevention and demand management should be a key priority
for focusing resources and/or investment.
3.7
This report covers the full scope of the General Fund budget for
2024/25 and sets out in the main report and appendices the
projections, strategies and proposals for the following:
·
Resources (funding) and financial planning assumptions;
·
The prioritisation of resources (‘Service Pressure
Funding’) to protect core statutory services, meet
unavoidable commitments and support key priorities;
·
Savings proposals (in Appendix 1) to contribute to addressing the
projected budget gap;
·
Estimates of one-off resourcing requirements and funding;
·
A Capital Strategy including a proposed 5-Year Capital Investment
Programme and the proposed use of capital receipt flexibilities
(Modernisation Funding);
·
Projections for the MTFS 2024/25 to 2027/28, and;
·
Implications of the budget proposals for council staffing.
3.8
The following section details the outcome of the Autumn Statement
and subsequent provisional Local Government Financial Settlement
alongside updated estimates of other costs and resources.
4
RESOURCES AND PLANNING ASSUMPTIONS 2024/25
Provisional Local Government Financial Settlement
(LGFS)
4.1
The provisional LGFS for 2024/25 was announced on 18 December 2023
and reflected the headline funding announcements for the second
year of the 2-year Autumn Statement originally announced on 17
November 2022 which included:
·
Confirmation of
an allowable 2% Adult Social Care precept which would provide an
additional £3.524m if agreed;
·
Confirmation
that the threshold at which an increase in
Council Tax requires a local referendum will be 5% including a 2%
Adult Social Care (ASC) precept. Any proposal to increase core
Council Tax by 3% or more would therefore need to be accompanied by
an agreed substitute budget, which would need to be implemented if
the increase were voted down by the electorate;
·
Additional Social
Care funding as part of the 2-year Autumn Statement which is
reflected in table 1 below;
·
A
reduction in Services Grant of £2.015m to £0.376m. The
scale of reduction was much higher than expected as this grant was
used to provide minimum funding guarantees to non-Social Care
authorities;
·
The
council’s income from Business Rates and section 31 grants
increased by September 2023 CPI of 6.7%;
·
An
increase in the Revenue Support Grant (RSG) of £0.526m
reflecting the application of a CPI inflationary increase of
6.7%;
·
A
further one year extension of the New Homes Bonus grant of
£2.627m which is once again provided on a one-off basis as
the government has said over a number of years it intends to
replace the mechanism for distributing this funding in the
future.
·
No
funding announcement for the Household Support Fund beyond the
current allocation which ends on 31 March 2024. During 2023/24 the
council received £4.281m.
Social Care and Better Care Funding (BCF)
4.3
In November 2022 the government announced it would delay the
introduction of the care reforms from October 2023 to October 2025
and re-purpose this funding to support councils with the increasing
costs of social care although there has been no further information
on how the care reforms will be funded from October 2025.
4.4
The government confirmed a further 2% Adult Social Care precept for
2024/25.
4.5
In addition, the government made a further announcement of
additional Social Care grant funding as described in paragraph
4.2.
4.6
All additional funding for Social Care has been directed towards
supporting the demand and cost pressures within Social Care
services. The table below summarises the resources available to
support Social Care pressures in 2024/25.
Table
1: Social Care Resources
|
2022/23
|
2023/24
|
2024/25
|
ASC
Precepting *
|
1%
£1.588m
|
2%
£3.295m
|
2%
£3.524m
|
Improved
BCF
|
£9.459m
|
£9.459m
|
£9.459m
|
Social Care
Grant
|
£10.815m
|
£17.856m
|
£20.976m
|
ASC
Discharge Grant
|
|
£1.326m
|
£2.210m
|
ASC
Market Sustainability and Improvement Fund and Workforce
Fund
|
|
£4.746m
|
£5.375m
|
Social Care Grant
announced 24/1/24 (Estimated share of £500m)
|
|
|
£2.250m
|
*
Subject to full Council approval for 2024/25
Business Rate Retention and Council Tax Income
4.7
Details of the expected business rate retention income forecasts
were set out in the report to the January 2024 Strategy, Finance
& City Regeneration Committee. The council is forecast to
receive £84.911m from its locally retained share of business
rates and Section 31 compensation grants in 2024/25, which is an
increase of £5.045m compared to 2023/24. This increase
includes 6.7% inflation, anticipated growth in business space in
the city and an estimate of the expected impact of successful
appeals against business rates rateable values. Note, the council
has no control over business rate multipliers which are set by
government.
4.8
The Council Tax taxbase report was also agreed by Strategy, Finance
& City Regeneration Committee in January 2024. Assuming a
Council Tax increase of 4.99% and taking into account changes to
the tax base, the total projected Council Tax income in 2024/25 is
£185.090m. This is an increase of £11.792m compared
with 2023/24.
Other Government Grants
4.9
The grant allocations for 2024/25 have been included within the
summary budget at Appendix 1. Some grant allocations for next year
have not yet been announced, in particular, homelessness, rough
sleeping funding and Public Health Grant. However, where these are
critical to the setting of the 2024/25 budget, as in the case of
those named, a rolled-forward estimate has been included.
Fees and Charges
4.10
The council’s Corporate Fees & Charges Policy requires
that all fees and charges are reviewed at least annually and should
normally be increased by a minimum of either the corporate standard
inflation rate, statutory increases, or actual increases in the
costs of providing a service to reflect cost inflation.
4.11
Over recent years, fees & charges have become an increasingly
important element of the council’s financial sustainability
following real terms government grant reductions of over £100
million since 2010. Services therefore benchmark non-statutory fees
and charges with other providers and councils to ensure that
charges are comparable and competitive within the local context and
can maximise discretionary income to protect essential services
wherever feasible. However, fees & charges must normally be set
to recover costs. Costs have increased substantially during the
last two years but the ability to successfully increase fees &
charges in-line with costs depends on the impact on demand (price
elasticity) and, where commercial, market conditions.
5
COUNCIL PLAN INVESTMENTS & PRIORITY SERVICE PRESSURE
FUNDING
5.1
The Council Plan 2023 to 2027 sets out a vision for Brighton &
Hove to be a city to be proud of, a healthy, fair and inclusive
city where everyone thrives. To deliver the vision the council aims
to be a responsive council with well-run services and will focus on
four outcomes over the next four years. For each of these, the
Council Plan describes what the council will do and how it will
measure progress.
5.2
The four outcomes are as follows:
1)
A
city to be proud of:
·
Investing in the
city and supporting a flourishing and inclusive local economy that
attracts and nurtures businesses and talent.
·
Creating an
accessible, clean, and sustainable city that we can all be proud
of.
2)
An
inclusive and fairer city:
·
A
city where people feel safe and welcome.
·
Homes
for everyone through delivery of accessible, affordable, and
high-quality homes for all residents of Brighton &
Hove.
3)
A
healthy city where people thrive:
·
Supporting a
better future for children and young people by keeping children
safe, for no child, young person or family to be left behind, and
by providing high quality, inclusive, and accessible
services.
·
Supporting living
and ageing well by promoting and improving health and wellbeing to
reduce health inequalities and supporting people to live
independent and fulfilling lives.
4)
A
responsive council with well-run services:
·
Our
goal is to be a responsive council that listens to and engages with
its communities and delivers positive results for the
city.
5.3
The investments to support these outcomes are continually
developing as many are informed by local demographic and economic
trends, ongoing research and policy development, and consultation
and engagement with residents, communities, partners and other
stakeholders. As the investment requirements become more certain
they are built into both the annual budget setting process and, for
longer term objectives, into the MTFS, so far as they can be
estimated and afforded.
5.4
A major investment area for the Council Plan continues to be
housing and homelessness including further capital investment plans
of over £78 million to deliver new build or purchased,
affordable housing and temporary and emergency accommodation
through the self-financing Housing Revenue Account (HRA) and other
innovative schemes including the Housing Joint Venture. These plans
are set out in detail in the HRA Revenue and Capital Budget also
reported to the February Strategy, Finance & City Regeneration
Committee and Budget Council.
5.5
Another important area requiring substantial investment concerns
services that can help to support a healthy city. Demands on Social
Care services continue to increase, reflecting the continuing trend
for people to live longer but increasingly with limiting illnesses,
disabilities, mental health illnesses or dementia that require
increasing social care support to help them remain in their homes
and communities. The government has recognised some of the
increased costs of Adult Social Care through the Autumn Statement
in terms of additional grant, an allowable Adult Social Care
precept and, belatedly, additional funding through the LGFS.
However, these fall significantly short of the actual costs and
demands being experienced by councils.
5.6
Significantly more investment is required in 2024/25 than in
previous years to simply maintain effective and well-run services
for the city. This is due to a range of factors including the
continuing impacts of inflation, the impact of market conditions on
suppliers and providers, and the impact of a weakened economy on
many income streams such as planning fees, parking revenues and
commercial rent incomes which are an important source of funding to
protect service delivery.
5.7
In total, there are proposed ongoing investments of £27.229m
and provisional one-off investments of £0.956m to support
services that contribute to Council Plan outcomes. These revenue
investments are enabled by proposed local taxation increases
(4.99%), including the 2% Adult Social Care precept, increased
government grant support, additional retained business rates
income, and the substantial package of savings proposals focused on
delivering services at a lower cost through redesign and/or
technological changes, or reprioritising investment to other
service areas. However, as for 2023/24, inevitably a significant
element of the required investment is to meet ongoing inflationary
impacts and significant increases in demands for statutory
services.
6
RESERVES POSITION AND ONE-OFF
FUNDING
Latest Financial Performance in 2023/24
6.1
Targeted Budget Management (TBM) is the council’s system of
budget monitoring and the TBM Month 9 (December) report included on
this committee agenda indicates a near break-even position with a
small projected overspend of £0.021m on the General Fund,
which includes a projected underspend of £0.159m on the
council’s share of NHS controlled Section 75 partnership
services. The overall overspend is a substantial improvement of
£2.849m since Month 7 (October).
6.2
The improved position has resulted from a combination of continuing
recruitment and spending controls since July, alongside normal
financial management actions and a number of one-off measures,
including using the one-off Public Health reserve to support
eligible General Fund services, particularly the development of
Family Hubs.
6.3
Conversely, the net Collection Fund deficit across Council Tax and
Business Rates has increased to £2.695m due to a range of
factors including pressures on collection performance, a sustained
Council Tax Reduction caseload and increased Business Rate appeals
against 2017 rateable values. The one-off resources table below
indicates that New Homes Bonus funding will need to be utilised to
mitigate the net Collection Fund deficit.
One-off Resource Liabilities and Proposed
Allocations
6.4
The working balance will be recommended to continue at a minimum of
£9.000m to meet general risks applicable to a unitary
authority. The overspend in 2022/23 resulted in the working balance
being reduced by £3.374m to £5.626m. This is planned to
be replenished over the next 3 financial years to support the
council’s overall financial resilience and the first
repayment of £1.125m is included in the budget proposals for
2024/25.
Table 3: One-off
Resources, Liabilities and Proposed Allocations
|
£m
|
£m
|
Revenue Budget
position 2023/24 (TBM):
|
|
|
Forecast outturn
overspend (as at TBM Month 9 / December)
|
-0.021
|
|
Assumed further
improvement between Month 9 and Outturn
|
+0.500
|
|
Sub-total
Estimated Year-end TBM Outturn
|
|
+0.479
|
|
|
|
Collection
Fund Position:
|
|
|
·
Estimated 2023/24
Council Tax collection fund net deficit
|
-1.174
|
|
·
Estimated 2023/24
Business Rates Retention collection fund deficit
|
-1.816
|
|
·
Contribution from
Section 31 grant towards 3 year smoothing
|
+0.295
|
|
Sub-total
Collection funds net position
|
|
-2.695
|
|
|
|
New homes bonus
one off allocation
|
|
+2.627
|
Outcome of the
review of reserves
|
|
+0.545
|
Projected One-off
Resources from 2024/25
|
|
+0.956
|
|
|
|
One-off
Allocations in 2024/25:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Minimum
requirement for Diseased Tree removals
|
-0.200
|
|
Minimum
additional resource requirement to support additional costs of
school reorganisation closures
|
-0.256
|
|
Development of a
Business Prospectus and a potential additional BID district for the
city from assumed TBM improvement *
|
-0.070
|
|
Contingency for
diseased trees and/or school organisation changes from assumed TBM
improvement
|
-0.430
|
|
Total One-off
allocations
|
|
-0.956
|
|
|
|
Balance
|
|
0.000
|
* Subject to the liabilities arising
from diseased trees and/or school organisation changes which would
be a first call on available resources.
6.6
The proposed one-off allocations for 2024/25 are explained in more
detail below:
·
Ongoing
management of Ash & Elm dieback (health & safety works)
(£0.200m): This allocation
is in relation to the recommendations emanating from the Tree
Diseases report, which were approved by the Environment, Transport
& Sustainability Committee at its meeting on 24 November 2020
(Item 43). Investment of £0.600m has been provided for the
last 3 years. The allocation above is a minimum level of investment
with overall resources for this financial liability being reviewed
at outturn. This will help to manage the ongoing spread of the
diseases as well as safely removing dying and unsafe trees from
public spaces.
·
School
Reorganisation:The council has
set aside a provision for costs relating to school reorganisation
but some costs are not fully known at this stage. Provision of
£0.500m for school closures and £0.315m for Homewood
College have been provided but a minimum additional allocation of
£0.256m will be required to meet growing school deficits and
severance costs of the relevant schools. As the costs become
clearer, the level of additional funding required will be reviewed
at 2023/24 outturn and reflected in TBM reports in
2024/25.
·
Business
Development:Subject to
available resources it is proposed to set aside £0.040m
funding to develop a Business Prospectus for the city to attract
investment into the city and potentially increase both employment
and Business Rates. Similarly, one-off funding of £0.030m is
proposed to research the feasibility of an additional Business
Improvement District (BID) for the city. Both are subject to
availability of funding after meeting unavoidable liabilities as
noted above.
·
Contingency:
Improvement in
the TBM forecast between month 9 and outturn is anticipated given
the continuation of recruitment and spending controls and further
expected improvements in Waste PFI energy incomes. A prudent
assumption of a £0.500m improvement by year-end is included
in the resource assumptions above. The first call on this resource
will be the two pressures above, diseased trees and school
reorganisation. Subject to availability up to £0.070m will be
utilised to support the Business Development initiatives as
described above.
7
SAVINGS PROPOSALS 2024/25
7.1
Council Tax, Business Rate Retention and Adult Social Care precept
increases, together with additional resources provided by the
Autumn Statement, are not sufficient to balance the budget due to
the need to provide cover for substantial excess pay award costs
and provide for ongoing inflationary increases and growing demands
across critical statutory services such as Adult and
Children’s social care, homelessness and home-to-school
transport. To balance the budget therefore requires a substantial
savings programme as has been the case for the previous 13 years
since 2010.
7.2
However, the level of budget shortfall next year is the highest the
authority has ever seen at over £30 million. Whilst some of
this can be mitigated by changes to the tax base, including
introducing the long-term empty premium after one year instead of
two, significantly reducing capital financing charges through the
review of the Capital Investment Programme, and reviewing planned
contributions to earmarked reserves, a very substantial package of
cuts and savings is inevitably required to achieve a legally
balanced budget. The savings package proposed totals some
£23.730m for 2024/25, almost £10m greater than in the
current year, and therefore clearly presents a higher level of
risk. Savings proposals are provided at Appendix 1 and are
accompanied by Equality Impact Assessments (EIAs) at Appendix 6
where appropriate.
Capital Strategy 2024/25
8.1
The Prudential Framework requires local authorities to produce a
Capital Strategy which is to be presented and approved by full
Council each year. The purpose of the Capital Strategy is to
provide a single place for transparency and accountability of local
authority non-financial investments and its Capital Investment
Programme, including any commercial investments in property or
loans to third parties.
8.2
The aim of the Capital Strategy is to ensure members are fully
conversant with the risks of capital investments and are aware of
how the risks are proportional to the council’s core service
activity. The document will include:
·
The
proposed Capital Investment Programme
·
The
Governance & Risk Framework
·
Potential and
pending non-financial
investments
·
An
overview of the council’s risk exposure
8.3
The new Prudential Code for Capital Finance issued in 2021
prohibits Public Works Loan Board (PWLB) lending to local
authorities that plan to borrow to buy commercial assets primarily
for yield. The PWLB will still be available to all local
authorities for refinancing. In order to borrow from the PWLB,
local authorities are now required to submit a summary of their
planned capital spending and PWLB borrowing for the following three
years. The Capital Strategy and Treasury Management Strategy are
compliant with the new code and do not include capital investment
activity for commercial yield only.
8.4
The Capital Strategy forms part of the General Fund budget report
to ensure that the link between capital and revenue decisions is
maintained and to ensure that budget resourcing decisions are taken
in the context of the full range of proposed revenue and capital
budgets, resources, investments and savings.
Capital Investment Programme
8.6
During 2023/24, the council established an officer Capital
Programme Board to provide governance and monitoring of the Capital
Investment Programme and undertake a detailed review of the
programme within the context of the severe financial challenge
facing the authority. A large element of the capital programme is
funded through borrowing and the Board’s initial focus was to
review schemes that had not progressed to potentially decommit them
as well as update the expenditure profile of continuing schemes.
These actions have helped reduce financing costs and increase
investment interest in 2023/24 and for future years. The schemes
decommitted are included in the TBM month 9 report elsewhere on the
agenda which will ensure that the council’s capital budget is
amended accordingly.
8.7
The capital expenditure estimates incorporate planned rolling
investment programmes alongside major infrastructure projects. The
creation of a Commercial Asset Investment Fund (CAIF) was approved
by this committee in December 2023 and this has been incorporated
into the capital programme, funded from net capital receipts
generated from the commercial property portfolio.
8.8
The key rolling programmes, including those re-focused to support
Council Plan priorities, are as follows:
·
Investment in
Housing Stock and acquisition through the Housing Revenue
Account;
·
The
Education Capital programme, which provides investment from central
government for Education Capital Maintenance, High Needs
provision and Devolved Formula Capital for schools;
·
Disabled
Facilities Grants to help maintain people in their
homes;
·
The
Carbon Neutral Investment Programme;
·
The
Local Transport Plan (LTP) to support sustainable transport and
transport infrastructure;
·
The
Information Technology & Digital Investment Fund and
Modernisation Fund delivering the Digital, Data and Technology
Strategy (DDaT) approved in March 2023;
·
The
Asset Management Fund (AMF) to ensure the strategic elements of the
Asset Management Plan can be supported;
·
The
CAIF to protect and enhance the income generated from the existing
commercial and farmland property portfolios;
·
Corporate Planned
Maintenance (PMB) to ensure the operational elements of the Asset
Management Plan are supported and that backlog maintenance does not
build up unduly;
·
The
Strategic Investment Fund (SIF) to support the advancement of major
regeneration schemes and initiatives, and;
·
The
Vehicle Fleet and plant replacement annual programme.
8.9
The current strategy identifies longer term capital investment
plans as well as a funding strategy and the potential outcomes for
each investment plan. This strategy includes major investment
requirements such as investment in food waste collection, coast
protection works, A27 junction works and investment in New England
House.
8.10
Capital receipts from the sale of surplus land and buildings
support the capital programme and the projections are regularly
reviewed. The capital strategy allows for an assessment of the
potential social value of surplus or underperforming assets against
the potential disposal value and where possible will aim to
maximise the use of assets to enhance social value across a 4-year
Asset Management Plan.
8.11
The detailed capital programme is set out in Appendix 1 (and will
be included in the Budget Book) and shows the approved and proposed
capital investments for each directorate.
8.12
The overall Capital Investment Programme for 2024/25 is
£211.470m. The proposed investments are summarised as
follows:
Table
4: Capital Investment Programme 2024/25
|
£m
|
Housing
including New
Homes for Neighbourhoods, the Home Purchase scheme, the Hidden
Homes programme, the Housing Joint Venture, Temporary Accommodation
purchases and conversions
|
78.846
|
Sustainability
& Carbon Reduction including Carbon
Neutral and Net Zero investment, Street Lighting and carbon
reduction measures to operational buildings
|
16.180
|
Parks & Open
Spaces including
Kingsway to the Sea LUF and parks infrastructure including tree
replacement
|
8.784
|
Sport &
Recreation including
Playground refurbishment and maintaining and improving the
city’s swimming facilities
|
2.514
|
Transport &
Highways reflecting the
Local Transport Plan (LTP) allocation for 2024/25, Pothole Action
funding and the major Bus Service Improvement Scheme
|
13.194
|
Schools
Investment to provide
educational places for pupils based on demographic changes in the
city
|
4.534
|
Regeneration
including Madeira
Terraces, Black Rock, Valley Gardens, The Royal Pavilion Estate and
New England House
|
37.109
|
Tackling
Inequality including
Disabled Facilities Grant (DFG) projects and the Knoll House
redevelopment
|
10.679
|
Building
Maintenance including the
Workstyles programme, Planned Maintenance, Education and Social
Care Buildings Maintenance, the Asset Management Fund and various
security, fire and safety works
|
26.828
|
IT&D /
Modernisation including the
Modernisation Fund as well as re-procurement of the Local Area
Network, investment in digital services for customers, and ongoing
investment in the IT&D infrastructure and Digital Data &
Technology (DDaT) strategy
|
10.302
|
Vehicles &
Equipment for the
council’s vehicle fleet replacement programme
|
2.500
|
TOTAL
CAPITAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMME 2024/25
|
211.470
|
8.13
The Capital Strategy at Appendix 2 sets out how the programme will
be funded from a combination of government grants, capital
receipts, capital reserves, HRA direct revenue funding, external
contributions and prudential borrowing.
Future Potential Investments
8.14
Whilst the 5-year capital programme highlights known or
quantifiable investment plans, there are a number of schemes that
are high priority but require further development before inclusion
in the capital programme. These currently include:
·
Research and
design for a Park and Ride scheme in the city.
·
A
feasibility study to consider improvements to the Brighton Station
to the Sea thoroughfare to add to the quality of the city as a
visitor destination.
·
Potential
redevelopment of Brighton Town Hall including community, civic
and/or commercial spaces.
The above potential schemes will
require resources to undertake feasibility studies which are likely
to require expert advice and consultancy at a cost. This could be
enabled through further decommitment of lower priority capital
investments or through identifying alternative one-off capital or
revenue resources during 2024/25.
Modernisation Programme Funding (‘Modernisation
Fund’)
8.15
As noted earlier the council has focused on identifying and
supporting the delivery of savings through its Modernisation
Programme supported by significant capital investment. This is
enabled by generating capital receipts from the sale of surplus
assets to create an invest-to-save budget using the
government’s capital receipt flexibilities, which allowed
capital receipts to be applied to revenue saving projects and
programmes.
8.17
The Modernisation Fund is kept under review as budget plans develop
and spend-to-save opportunities and investment requirements emerge
in more detail over the planning period. The indicative profile of
the Modernisation Fund for 2024/25 is shown in the table
below.
Table 5:
Indicative Modernisation Fund
|
Programme
Area
|
2024/25
|
£m
|
Invest to Save
business cases
|
0.571
|
Customer
Digital
|
1.550
|
Modernisation
enablers
|
1.040
|
Managing staffing
changes
|
1.000
|
Total
|
4.161
|
8.18
The Modernisation Fund is expected to be deployed as follows:
·
Invest-to-Save
Business Cases: Investment of
£0.571m is estimated to be required to support implementation
of specific savings and efficiency programmes including service
redesigns, recommissioning and process improvements. For 2024/25
these include school reorganisation, the review of operational
buildings, and the transformation of homelessness services. Further
investments can be added during the year subject to viable business
cases, however, due to the many competing demands for capital
receipts the preference will be for business cases to be
self-financing through future revenue savings.
·
Customer
Digital: A further
£1.550m is anticipated to be required next year to maintain
ongoing investment in digital infrastructure and applications and
to support continued development of the council’s digital
services and integration of data across systems and services to
improve the accessibility, efficiency and ease-of-use of on-line
services. This resource forms part of the Digital, Data and
Technology (DDaT) Strategy approved by the former Policy &
Resources Committee in March 2023,
·
Modernisation
Enablers: £1.040m is
estimated to be required to support ongoing change and
modernisation programmes next year. This includes everything from
an effective project management support team, business improvement
analysts, investment in ‘Our People Promise’ for staff
development and skills programmes, resources to implement changes
and reductions to office accommodation, together with additional
specialist support where required. Although eligible for funding
from capital receipt flexibilities, it is noted that some of these
resources have now been resourced through the Modernisation Fund
since 2016/17 and there is therefore an argument for mainstreaming
funding within the General Fund revenue budget in future years if
this becomes viable.
·
Managing staffing
changes: Efficiency
programmes and a continual drive for improved value for money,
alongside the significant budget savings proposals for 2024/25 will
result in changes in the level and/or mix of staffing and skills
required across the council. Changing staffing levels or skills
will often need financial consideration in order to effect
severance for roles or posts no longer required or needing to be
replaced or re-trained with different roles or skills. Minimum
estimated resources of £1.000m are required to meet severance
costs to manage change next year.
9.1
An estimate of the posts to be deleted in relation to the budget
proposals has been made and indicates that approximately 186 full
time equivalent (fte) posts are expected to be deleted from the
council’s staffing structure, approximately 5% of total
staffing. Many of these posts will already be held vacant in lieu
of savings proposals but some may initially result in staff being
potentially placed at risk of redundancy. This is difficult to
estimate with certainty but approximately 75 fte staff (not
headcount) have been identified as potentially at risk at this
stage of the process. The proposals also include the potential TUPE
of up to 12 fte staff. This information has been shared with the
council’s recognised trades unions and the staff affected in
advance of the release of this report.
9.2
However, the savings proposals for 2024/25 also include a set of
‘Organisational Design’ savings recognising the
necessity of reducing overall staffing costs to contribute to
achieving a balanced and sustainable budget. This work will focus
on management spans and layers, improving administrative and
business support efficiency, and exploring opportunities for
rationalisation or economies across functionally similar areas, for
example, commissioning and contract management, customer service,
project management and so on. Eleven potential areas for review
have been identified but others may emerge as this work
progresses.
9.3
As in previous years, actual numbers of staff affected will be
highly dependent on the detailed options proposed and on the
outcome of formal consultation with staff and unions. As previously
experienced, it is likely that some of these will be resolved
through normal turnover, or through redeployment to other vacancies
across the council, thereby further minimising the risk of
redundancies.
9.4
As always, if the forthcoming proposals do potentially place any
staff at risk of redundancy the council will support them by:
·
Providing
appropriate support to staff throughout the change process to
enable them to maximise any opportunities available;
·
Controlling
recruitment and ensuring there is a clear business case for any
recruitment activity;
·
Managing
redeployment at a corporate level and maximising the opportunities
for movement across the organisation;
·
Managing the use
of temporary or agency resources via regular reports to Directorate
Management Teams (DMT’s);
·
Inviting
applications for voluntary severance where appropriate to staff
affected by budget proposals, subject to viability and approval on
a case by case basis.
These measures
will remain in place as consultation with trade unions, staff and
other stakeholders is undertaken. Where necessary, a targeted
voluntary approach to releasing staff in areas undergoing change
will be managed to support service redesigns whilst ensuring that
the organisation retains the skills that will be needed for the
future.
10.1
The council produces an annual Budget Book which aims to support
understanding and transparency of the council’s budget by
providing:
·
Information at
sub-divisional levels to aid understanding of the wide range of
services and teams in each service directorate;
·
Analysis of
spending and income by category (subjective analysis);
·
Staffing
information for each service;
·
Analysis of
budget movements between years;
·
Analysis of
savings, investments and service pressure funding by
category;
·
Information on
capital investments.
10.2
The MTFS planning assumptions, resource and expenditure estimates
are also included within the Budget Book. The MTFS has been revised
to reflect the latest cost, income and demand pressures and the
proposed 4.99% council tax increase, including a 2% Adult Social
Care precept.
10.3
This year, the very late announcement of the LGFS and the severe
financial challenge facing the authority mean that the development
of savings and the review of service pressure funding has continued
throughout late December and January and has delayed production of
the Budget Book. This will therefore be provided to Budget Council
as part of the Supplementary Budget report. However, all of the
information contained in the Budget Book is separately provided in
appendices to this report including budget strategies, savings
proposals, capital investment proposals and summary Budget and MTFS
information. The MTFS summary is also presented in the table
below:
Table
6:
Medium Term
Financial Strategy 2024 to 2028
|
2024/25
|
2025/26
|
2026/27
|
2027/28
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Net Budget
Requirement B/Fwd
|
232.385
|
246.353
|
267.463
|
273.246
|
Remove net
one-off short term funding and expenditure
|
2.631
|
0.200
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Net Budget
Requirement B/Fwd
|
235.016
|
246.553
|
267.463
|
273.246
|
Standard Pay and
Inflation – Expenditure
|
14.046
|
12.892
|
12.036
|
12.228
|
Standard
Inflation – Income
|
(3.614)
|
(3.539)
|
(3.642)
|
(3.747)
|
Demographic and
inflationary pressures across Adult Social Care and Adult Learning
Disabilities
|
10.302
|
7.000
|
5.500
|
5.500
|
Demographic and
inflationary pressures for Children’s Disability, Children in
Care, and Care Leavers
|
3.407
|
2.000
|
1.750
|
1.750
|
Temporary
Accommodation and Rough Sleepers - cost and demand
pressures
|
2.776
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Home to School
Transport - cost and demand pressures
|
1.069
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Housing Benefit
Subsidy shortfall
|
0.700
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Income and
Commercial Rent pressures (due to falling demand)
|
5.346
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
All other
pressures across council services
|
4.129
|
4.000
|
3.800
|
3.800
|
Commitment -
Increase in Social Care Grant and Better Care Fund
|
(5.390)
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Commitment - New
Homes Bonus - One-off allocation
|
(2.627)
|
2.627
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Commitment -
Reduction/loss of Services Grant
|
2.016
|
0.079
|
0.214
|
0.000
|
Commitment -
Change in S31 grants
|
(3.035)
|
10.176
|
(0.108)
|
(0.108)
|
Commitment - Pay
award 2023/24 above 3.75%
|
3.809
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Commitment -
Change in contributions to/from reserves
|
(0.090)
|
1.020
|
0.000
|
(1.125)
|
Commitment -
Change in capital financing costs
|
1.371
|
4.223
|
1.033
|
(0.195)
|
Commitment -
Impacts of previously approved decisions
|
0.852
|
1.632
|
0.900
|
0.350
|
Savings Package
2024/25
|
(23.730)
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Budget Gap
(Future Savings Requirements)
|
0.000
|
(21.200)
|
(15.700)
|
(12.600)
|
Budget
Requirement C/Fwd
|
246.353
|
267.463
|
273.246
|
279.099
|
Funded
by:
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue Support
Grant (RSG)
|
8.453
|
8.538
|
8.538
|
8.538
|
Locally retained
Business Rates
|
55.800
|
67.371
|
67.864
|
68.360
|
Net Collection
Fund position
|
(2.990)
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
Council Tax
including Adult Social Care Precepts
|
185.090
|
191.554
|
196.844
|
202.201
|
Total
Funding
|
246.353
|
267.463
|
273.246
|
279.099
|
10.4
The MTFS above includes estimates for pay awards, price inflation,
and pension changes taking into account OBR forecasts for deflators
alongside actuarial pension forecasts. Detailed assumptions are set
out in the MTFS at Appendix 1. The MTFS also includes assumptions
regarding future resources including predicted taxbase growth and
assumed taxation increases.
10.5
Many other elements of the MTFS reflect previous decisions made by
the council including the outcome of local pay negotiations, the
award of market supplements, and other approved commitments. The
MTFS also reflects the demographic and other cost pressures set out
in Table 2 of this report. For 2025/26 and beyond, the demographic
and other cost pressures are estimates based on the midpoint of
high and low estimates.
10.6
The Budget Gaps indicate the estimated additional savings required
in future years of the MTFS period to balance the budget and,
importantly, to repay any reserves used to balance (smooth) the
budget in earlier years. The predicted budget gaps remain very
significant assuming a return to 1.99% Council Tax increases from
2025/26 onwards. Total shortfalls of £73m are projected over
the 4-year period, meaning further savings of £49m will
potentially need to be identified over the period.
11.1
The Treasury Management Strategy Statement (TMSS) and Annual
Investment Strategy (AIS) are now incorporated in the budget report
to ensure that inter-related financial decisions and strategies can
be considered together. The council is required to operate a
balanced budget, which broadly means that cash raised during the
year will meet cash expenditure. Part of the Treasury Management
operation is to ensure that this cash flow is adequately planned,
with cash being available when it is needed (liquidity) and that
surplus monies are only invested into counterparties and
instruments commensurate with the council’s risk
appetite.
11.2
Another important function of the Treasury Management service is
the funding of the council’s capital plans. The capital plans
provide a guide to the council’s borrowing need, which is
essentially the longer term cash flow plan, to ensure the council
can meet its approved capital spending obligations.
11.3
The strategy reflects best practice as set out in the CIPFA
Prudential code and the CIPFA Treasury management Code of Practice.
The Treasury Management Practices and schedules identify the
practices and procedures that will be followed to achieve the aims
of the TMSS and that underpin the council’s Treasury
Management function.
11.4
The AIS for 2024/25 is also incorporated within Appendix 3 to this
report. The AIS gives priority to security and liquidity.
11.5
Security is achieved by:
·
selecting only
those institutions that meet stringent credit rating criteria or,
in the case of non-rated UK building societies, have a substantial
asset base; and
·
limiting exposure
risk by limiting the amount invested with any one
institution.
11.6
Liquidity is achieved by limiting the maximum period for investment
and matching investment periods to cash flow requirements.
11.7
There are no changes proposed to the council’s AIS or risk
appetite for 2024/25.
12
COUNCIL TAX SETTING
12.1
The Administration is proposing a council tax increase of 4.99%
which includes a 2% Adult Social Care precept allowed by government
within the local government finance settlement. A council tax
increase of 4.99% results in a Band D council tax of
£1,977.66 for the council’s element, an increase of
£94.03 from 2023/24; of this increase £37.66 relates to
the Adult Social Care precept.
12.2
In order to propose an overall Council Tax for the city, the
Council Tax set by the precepting authorities needs to be known and
this information will be included in the Supplementary Budget
Report to Budget Council.
Supplementary Budget Report to Budget Council
·
Confirmation of the final LGFS 2024/25.
·
Any other grants that are announced before Budget Council.
·
The agreed Council Tax set by East Sussex Fire Authority and Sussex
Police & Crime Commissioner.
·
The statutory Council Tax calculations required under the 1992
Local Government Finance Act.
·
The full budget and Council Tax resolution for Budget Council.
·
Other information as necessary including a detailed Budget
Book.
13.1
Section 25 of the Local Government Act 2003 requires the Chief
Financial Officer (Section 151 Officer) of a local authority to
report on the robustness of the estimates included in the budget
and the adequacy of the reserves for which the budget provides.
This report has to be considered by the Strategy, Finance &
City Regeneration Committee and the full Council as part of the
budget approval and council tax setting process.
Robustness of Estimates
13.3
For 2024/25, further funding of over £48 million has had to
be identified to support estimated inflationary and demand
pressures including for core statutory demand-led services across
Adults Social Care, Children’s Safeguarding & Care
services, and Homelessness services. Provision for this level of
investment substantially supports the predicted demand-led service
pressures at the time of setting the budget. Assuming no other
changes, this considerably lessens potential overspending risks in
2024/25 but cannot completely remove all risks, particularly
concerning locally fragile provider markets and sufficiency, and
therefore services will need to continue to contribute to the
mitigation of residual risk through management of non-statutory
budget areas as normal.
13.4
As seen in the current year, the continuing cost of living
situation and inflation continuing at higher levels than government
forecasts have placed significant pressures on finances, requiring
early implementation of recruitment and spending controls alongside
other financial management actions. However, this has successfully
mitigated risks in the current year. In addition:
·
The
authority continues to demonstrate its proactive approach to
managing its budget. The current year followed on from the severe
inflationary challenges of 2022/23 which led to an overspend of
over £3 million met from the Working Balance – the
authority’s first overspend. 2023/24 also started with
substantial early overspend forecasts of around £14 million
and therefore spending and recruitment controls were brought in
earlier, in July, to tackle the position. A steady and sustained
reduction in forecast risk has seen the position reach near
break-even at month 9. Unlike many authorities, this council places
very limited reliance on the use of reserves to balance its budget
as it has a very low level of unallocated reserves. While not
enviable, this does mean that the authority has developed a robust
approach to in-year financial management as it is aware that living
beyond its means for a sustained period would quickly result in
government intervention.
·
Despite the
ongoing challenges from inflation and the cost of living, the
authority continues to achieve substantial savings, including
nearly £10 million this year, supported by its Modernisation
Programmes and the use of capital receipt flexibilities. However,
over recent years, including the two pandemic years, the
achievement of savings in full has been problematic and has been
hampered partly by the impact of events on capacity to manage and
deliver savings, and partly by a range of economic conditions that
have impacted on original assumptions. The External Auditor has
commented on this in recent Annual Reports and has recommended
aiming for the over-programming of savings to mitigate against the
risk of under-achievement.
·
While
‘over-programming’ of savings is accepted as a sensible
objective, with such a large gap to close in 2023/24 and a
significantly larger gap in 2024/25, the largest in the
authority’s history, the External Auditor accepts that this
is not a realistic aim in the immediate future but should be
considered and modelled for future MTFS projections which continue
to indicate significant budget gaps over the next 3 years. Aiming
to restore the minimum recommended Working Balance is a
pre-requisite which is supported within the 2024/25 budget
proposals and begins the process of de-risking the budget and
restoring financial sustainability.
·
The
authority continues to work closely with NHS Sussex to jointly
manage and mitigate risks as far as practicable. This has been
evidenced in the current year where the NHS has continued to
provide funding to assist in managing hospital discharges and
provide joint funding for Section 117 Mental Health provision.
Proposals for joint funding arrangements under the Integrated Care
System (ICS) continue to be developed for the medium
term.
·
The
authority has been able to maintain adequate reserves and
provisions against known and identified risks and, in the current
proposals, has made provision to restore its minimum recommended
Working Balance to £9 million over 3 years.
13.5
Taking into account identified risks as set out in Appendix 5, the
council is recommended to maintain and, where utilised in an
emergency, replenish its minimum working balance of £9.000m.
This is approximately 3.7% of the net General Fund and represents
around 2.5 weeks’ council tax income. The council should also
continue to maintain other earmarked reserves to meet long term
commitments and provide additional flexibility to manage any short
term pressures. The Working Balance and other usable reserves are
held to mitigate exceptional legal and financial risks including
appeals and challenges, as well as potential billing failures,
civil contingencies and other emergencies.
Adequacy of Reserves
13.7
As indicated above, current analysis of authority-level risks and
past experience indicates that a working balance at a level of
£9.000m remains prudent and appropriate having taken into
account all known and foreseeable risks in relation to the 2024/25
budget. This is supported by the experience of the current year
which has seen the mitigation of significant financial pressures
and is not expected to require emergency use of the Working
Balance.
13.8
All specific reserves have been reviewed in detail to ensure they
are set at an appropriate level as set out in Appendix 4. The
council’s earmarked reserves fulfil specific contractual,
legal or financial risk requirements and are not therefore
available to support the annual revenue budget. However, they can
be borrowed from internally provided that provision for their
replenishment is built into the budget and MTFS ahead of when they
are required.
Assurance Statement of the Council’s Section 151
Officer
13.9
In relation to the 2024/25 General Fund revenue budget, the Section
151 Chief Finance Officer has examined the budget proposals and
considers that, with the very substantial investments and service
pressure funding provided, reasonable assumptions regarding pay and
prices informed by a prudential view of OBR estimates, realistic
profiling of capital investments, prudential treasury management
estimates, and a reasonable balance of low, medium and higher risk
savings proposals, the budget plan for 2024/25 is potentially
deliverable with effective governance and accountability at all
levels. However, learning from the previous two years, there will
need to be a continued focus on spending and recruitment controls
from day one of the new financial year to ensure that forecast
risks, including the risks inherent in a very large savings
package, are managed proactively.
13.10 In terms of the
adequacy of reserves, the Section 151 Chief Finance Officer
considers a minimum working balance of £9.000m (or
replenishment thereof) to be appropriate to manage risks, taking
into account other available reserves.
14
ANALYSIS & CONSIDERATION OF ANY ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS
14.1
The budget process allows all parties to engage in the examination
of budget proposals and to put forward viable alternative budget
and council tax proposals to Budget Council on 22 February 2024.
Budget Council has the opportunity to debate the proposals put
forward by this committee at the same time as any viable
alternative proposals. Budget Council will normally be recommended
to adopt special procedures at the start of the Budget Council
meeting, which set out the procedure applicable to any alternative
budget proposals put forward.
14.2
In this respect, a ‘Budget Protocol’ for managing
alternative proposals (Budget Amendments) will be presented to full
Council on 1 February 2024 and will determine both the number of
allowable Budget Amendments and the process and timeline for their
prior assessment and sign off by the council’s Section 151
Chief Finance Officer, Chief Executive and Monitoring Officer.
Dedicated Schools Grant Funding 2024/25 -
Overview
15.1
The Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) is divided into four blocks
– the schools block, the high needs block (HNB), the central
school services block (which allocates funding to local authorities
for their ongoing responsibilities towards both maintained schools
and academies), and the early years block. Each of the four blocks
of the DSG are determined by separate national funding formulae
(NFF).
15.2
In December 2023, the Department for Education (DfE) announced the
updated DSG funding settlement for the 2024/25 financial year. This
is set out in the table below, together with a comparison to
2023/24.
Financial Year
|
Schools Block*
£’000
|
Central
School
Services
Block
£’000
|
High Needs Block
£’000
|
Early Years Block
£’000
|
Total DSG
£’000
|
Provisional 2024/25
|
165,039
|
2,074
|
38,883
|
26,554
|
232,550
|
2023/24
|
159,378
|
2,136
|
37,364
|
15,433
|
214,311
|
Increase / (Decrease)
|
5,661
|
(62)
|
1,519
|
11,121
|
18,239
|
Schools Block
15.3
For 2023/24, schools have received a separate mainstream additional
grant outside of the main DSG. This equates to £5.364m. For
2024/25, this funding is being rolled into the Schools Block of the
DSG meaning the overall Schools Block funding is virtually
unchanged between the two financial years. In overall terms, after
other adjustments are considered, it is estimated that total
funding available to mainstream schools through core formula budget
allocations between 2023/24 and 2024/25 will increase by c.
£0.500m. This equates to a percentage increase in cash terms
of just 0.3%, and an increase in per pupil funding of 2.0%. For
presentational purposes the Schools Block figures above are
inclusive of funding for non-domestic business rates.
15.4
It should be noted that the Schools Block pupil numbers have
decreased from 29,451 in October 2022 to 28,972 in October 2023.
This is a reduction of 479 pupils and equates to an overall loss of
DSG Schools Block funding to the local authority of c.
£2.450m.
High Needs Block
15.5
The headline allocation of high needs block funding is shown in the
table above. The high needs block position for the 2024/25
financial year looks very challenging. The government increase in
funding of c. £1.5m (4%) is significantly below the demand
and cost pressures the council is expecting, and forecasts show a
potential deficit in the 2024/25 high needs block of approximately
£2.5m
15.6
The council continues to seek to provide additional local
specialist provision linked to the SEN Sufficiency Strategy however
costs associated with the establishment of this are high.
15.7
Under current national legislation a statutory override mechanism
is place which allows local authorities to keep DSG deficits
separate from General Fund budget, however this statutory override
arrangement is due to finish in March 2026.
15.8
The latest published data shows that approximately 100 out of 150
local authorities are operating with deficits against the high
needs block of their DSG allocations.
Early Years Block
15.9
There are significant extensions to free entitlement in 2024/25
resulting in a large increase to Early Years Block funding. For
2024/25 the main early years entitlements are:
·
the 15 hours entitlement for eligible working parents of children
from nine months to two years old (new entitlement from 1 September
2024);
·
the 15 hours entitlement for eligible working parents of
two-year-old children (new entitlement from 1 April 2024);
·
the 15 hours entitlement for disadvantaged two-year-olds;
·
the universal 15 hours entitlement for all three and
four-year-olds;
·
the additional 15 hours entitlement for eligible working parents of
three and four-year-olds.
Government funding rates are increasing
for 2024/25 and there is a requirement for the local authority to
pass on a minimum of 95% Early Years Block funding to
providers.
Mainstream Schools
15.10 Core funding
allocations for each mainstream school and academy will be
determined through calculation using the local authority’s
funding formula. During autumn 2023 it was agreed that limited
changes would be made to the operation of the local school funding
formula for 2024/25. These proposals were subject to consideration
by the Schools Forum in October 2023. The key changes to the
2024/25 local formula are summarised below and follow the principle
of moving towards the proposed National Funding Formula (NFF) on an
incremental basis as follows:
·
the mainstream school additional grant funding provided by
government in 2023/24 has been rolled into the Schools Block and
core formula budgets in 2024/25;
·
in line with government requirements, all local formula factor
values outside of permitted tolerance levels will be moved 10%
closer to those in the NFF;
·
apply the mandatory factor to ensure that minimum funding per pupil
levels (excluding premises factors) are set at £4,610 for
primary schools and £5,995 for secondary schools;
·
apply uplifts to formula factors to reflect increases in national
funding allocations;
·
split site funding will be allocated using a DfE set formulaic
approach, replacing the previous locally determined split sites
factor;
·
apply a minimum funding guarantee of +0.50% per pupil.
15.11 As in previous
years, academies and free schools are included in the DSG
allocation to ensure all schools, academies and free schools are
funded on the same basis using the LA’s funding formula. DfE
then recoups the funding attributable to academies and free schools
and pays this directly to these establishments.
15.12 Funding
proposals for 2024/25 were presented to, and agreed with, the
Schools Forum on 15 January 2024 and are subject to final sign off
by the government.
15.13 The net school
carry forwards at the end of 2023/24 are expected to be around the
breakeven mark, a reduction of around £4.500m from
£4.540m carried forward into 2023/24. School budgets for
2024/25 are likely to be issued in early February 2024, once DfE
have completed compliance checks to funding regulations. Overall
funding for mainstream schools is increasing in the 2024/25
financial year by an average of approximately 2% per pupil.
However, a large number of schools are continuing to see reductions
in pupil numbers, and this will have an adverse impact on the
financial position of these schools with approximately half of all
mainstream schools seeing a reduction in actual funding in 2024/25
compared to 2023/24. There is considerable uncertainty about
unavoidable cost pressures, such as the level of pay awards in
2024/25. The impact on future levels of school balances will become
clearer in early March once draft school budget plans for 2024/25
are received.
16
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT & CONSULTATION
16.1
General information and advice about the council’s budget
will continue to be provided through the council’s web site
which provides information and graphics on how money is spent on
services, where the money comes from and a summary of the financial
challenges ahead. These materials will continue to be promoted to
residents across the budget setting period.
16.2
The council will also publicise on-line its key proposals from the
budget along with information about council services, and questions
and comments invited from residents over the period leading to the
February Budget Council meeting.
16.3
Frequently asked questions and common themes have previously
emerged through the development of the annual budget and have been
responded to in our ‘Behind the Budget’ web page:
Behind the budget
(brighton-hove.gov.uk)
16.4
The frequently asked questions and themes include:
·
Doesn’t
Council Tax [alone] pay for all council services?
·
How
about using [i.e. raising or changing] parking charges
further?
·
[Why
not] Cut pay instead of services?
·
[Why
not] Make students pay Council Tax?
·
[Why
not] Just cut councillors and/or their allowances?
·
[Why
not] Charge wealthier people more Council Tax?
·
Extra
Business Rates will solve the problem [won’t
they]?
Other consultation
and engagement processes are as follows:
16.5
Information will be shared with Strategic Partners and community
groups as normal. Local Strategic Partners remain acutely aware of
the potential cumulative impact of funding pressures across public
sector agencies on the city. All Local Strategic Partnership
representatives will therefore ensure that information is shared
across the sector to assess and mitigate adverse cumulative impacts
wherever possible and develop joint actions where appropriate.
Engagement with statutory partners will continue on an ongoing
basis to further share and understand the potential cumulative
impact of budget proposals across the city as they take shape.
16.6
In particular, the council continues to engage fully with the NHS
Sussex Integrated Care System to ensure that the budget processes
of the two organisations are aligned and communicated as far as
practicably possible. As with the council, the local NHS is likely
to remain under severe financial pressure due to continually
increasing demands on the local health economy. Unfortunately, NHS
funding announcements (Operating Plans) are normally announced much
later than Local Government, often close to or after the start of
the next financial year.
16.7
There is ongoing liaison and discussion with the Economic
Partnership that covers potential funding sources and bids, city
regeneration, economic growth, employment and apprenticeship
strategies. Officers of the council and members of the
administration meet periodically with representatives of the
Chamber of Commerce and B&H Economic Partnership to discuss the
council’s high level plans and over-arching budget
situation.
16.8
The Schools Forum, a consultative body attended by representatives
of all school phases, received a report on the overall budget
position and potential scale of General Fund budget savings at its
meeting on 15 January 2024, providing an opportunity to feedback
views. Unfortunately, the lateness of the Local Government
Financial Settlement precluded detailed proposals being shared as
in previous years, due to proposals still being developed
throughout January. The forum is a public, minuted meeting and
agendas and minutes are available on the council’s
website.
16.9
Similarly, officers of the council and members of the
Administration met with representatives of the Community &
Voluntary Sector on 22 January 2024 to discuss the budget
proposals, including reductions in third sector funding, and to
provide them with an opportunity to feedback their views to the
council and members.
16.10 For staffing
proposals, there have been a number of confidential meetings with
the council's recognised unions, including appropriate officers and
members of the Administration, to keep unions abreast of developing
proposals to ensure they have early sight of where support to their
memberships may be required. See also Section
9 Staffing
Implications for further information. Proposals will be shared with
staff ahead of formal publication of budget proposals through
Departmental Consultative Groups (DCGs) and through line
management. Further updates and communications are
provided via the council’s intranet, corporate email
broadcasts and Chief Executive blog. Formal consultation and
engagement with directly affected staff will be undertaken as
normal, including relevant union representatives, under the
council’s Organisation Change Management Framework.
16.11 Similarly, where
appropriate or required by statute, specific consultation will be
undertaken with residents and other people directly affected by
proposed changes to service delivery.
17
CONCLUSION
17.1
The council is under a statutory duty to set its budget and council
tax before 11 March each year and must agree a lawfully balanced
budget. This report sets out the budget assumptions to be used as
the basis for Council Tax calculations in order to meet the
statutory duty and the proposals to achieve a balanced budget. The
full details of 2024/25 revenue and capital budgets are appended to
this report and will be brought together in an annual Budget Book
which will provided to Budget Council as a supplementary item.
18
FINANCIAL & OTHER IMPLICATIONS
Financial
Implications
18.1
These are contained within the main body of the report.
Finance Officer Consulted: James Hengeveld
Date: 29/1/24
Legal Implications
18.3
Any decisions taken as part of the budget setting process are
subject to compliance with relevant legal requirements, where
appropriate, before implementation. The revenue budget and capital
strategy recommendations in the report do not commit the council to
implement any specific savings proposal. When specific decisions on
budget reductions are necessary, focussed consultations and the
full equality implications of doing one thing rather than another
will be considered in appropriate detail. If it is considered
necessary, in light of equality or other considerations, it will be
open to those taking the decisions to spend more on one activity
and less on another within the overall resources available to the
council.
18.4
For these purposes, the “budget” includes the
allocation of financial resources to different services and
projects, and setting the council tax.
18.5
Section 52ZB of the Local Government Finance Act 1992 requires a
billing authority to determine whether its relevant basic amount of
council tax is “excessive”. If the amount is excessive,
the billing authority is required to hold a referendum, with a view
to applying an alternative amount if the excessive amount is
rejected in a referendum.
18.6
The determination of whether a relevant basic amount of council tax
is excessive must be made in accordance with principles determined
by the Secretary of State.
18.7
Strategy, Finance & City Regeneration Committee has delegated
power to formulate the council’s revenue budget proposals,
Capital Strategy, including the capital investment programme, and
the Treasury Management Strategy Statement, including the Annual
Investment Strategy, and to recommend their adoption by full
Council as part of the overall budget setting process.
Lawyer Consulted: Elizabeth
Culbert
Date: 30/01/2024
Equalities
Implications
18.8
In Brighton & Hove City Council a budget Equality Impact
Assessment (EIA) process has been used to identify the potential
disproportionate impacts of proposals on groups/individuals covered
by legislation (the ‘protected characteristics’ in the
Equality Act 2010) and actions to mitigate these negative impacts
or promote positive impacts. This is a key part of meeting the
requirements of the Act and demonstrating that the council is doing
so.
18.9
In law, the potential impacts identified, and how far proposed
actions mitigate them, must be given due regard by decision-makers
when making budget and resource decisions. However, as noted under
legal implications above, in setting the budget members are making
resourcing decisions which remain subject to compliance with all
necessary legal and statutory consultation requirements.
18.10 All proposals
with a potential equalities impact in 2024/25 will have an EIA
completed and provided to all Members for the Budget Council. EIAs
are cross-referenced with savings proposals in Appendix 1. Detailed
EIAs are available at Appendix 6.
18.11 Note that, as in
previous years, EIAs relating to staffing impacts are not published
with the budget report as these may contain sensitive information.
Instead, EIAs relating to staffing changes are provided as part of
the relevant consultation paper issued to affected staff and
recognised trade unions.
Sustainability Implications
18.12 One of the
criteria considered for developing budget proposals, aligned with
the Council Plan, is whether or not budget proposals contribute to
carbon net zero. This plays out through everything from reviewing
the council’s use of office buildings and facilitating remote
working for staff which can reduce office space, to increasing the
number of electric vehicles in its fleet, through to embedding
sustainability within its procurement requirements.
18.13 The capital and
revenue budget proposals for 2024/25 cannot address all of the
Council Plan objectives but do aim to balance support to these and
other priorities within the resources available. In addition, the
council has been successful in attracting external funding to
support this objective including Active Travel funding, Bus
Services Improvement Plan funding and funding for Electric Vehicle
charging infrastructure.
Crime
& disorder implications:
18.14 The budget
includes provision for many services that support the prevention of
crime and disorder, in particular, through the Community Safety
budget which includes budgets for supporting Women’s Safety
including those affected by Domestic Abuse, as well as budgets to
promote the council’s Anti-Racism Strategy, support efforts
to reduce anti-social behaviour and reduce drug related crime.
There are also budgets for commissioned or contracted support from
third sector organisations also working across these and other
areas.
Public health
implications:
18.15 The budget
includes the ring-fenced Public Health Grant which is spent on
providing priority public health services, including advice and
support, in accordance with the Joint Health & Well-Being
Strategy (with the NHS) and Annual Public Health Reports both of
which link to national research and guidelines and involve
considerable engagement and consultation.
SUPPORTING
DOCUMENTATION
Appendices:
1.
Budget Strategies
and proposed savings
2.
Capital Strategy
including the Capital Investment Programme 2024/25
3.
Treasury
Management Strategy Statement 2024/25
4.
Review of
Reserves
5.
Assessment of
Risks
6.
Equalities Impact
Assessments (EIAs) – Individual Assessments
Documents in
Members’ Rooms
1.
None
Background
Documents
1.
Budget files held
within Finance