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Contact: Democratic Services 01664 502579
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Apologies for Absence Minutes: Apologies for absence were received from Councillors Steven Carter, Leigh Higgins and Simon Lumley. Councillor Allen Thwaites substituted for Councillor Lumley. |
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To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 26 September 2023. Minutes: The Minutes of the meeting held on 26 September 2023 were approved. |
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Declarations of Interest PDF 60 KB Members to declare any interest as appropriate, in respect of items to be considered at this meeting. Minutes: Item 5 –
Internal Audit Progress Report – Exempt Appendix B: High Priority Actions
Overdue for More than Three Months Councillor Ian Atherton highlighted the nature of his employment and confirmed that he had no direct involvement with the issue detailed in exempt appendix B. |
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2020/21 External Audit Status Report PDF 4 MB The Council’s External Auditor Hayley Clark to present a report that summarises their work performed and conclusions reached to date for the Council’s financial statements for 2020/21. Report to follow. Minutes: Hayley Clark, External Auditor introduced the report, the purpose of which was to summarise work performed and conclusions reached to date for the Council’s financial statements for 2020/21. Ms. Clark confirmed that audit procedures were well progressed. External Audit continued to work through quality review procedures as well as general procedures on the review of the updated financial statements, with the aim of submitting a further report to Committee with its formal and final audit results in the New Year. Ms Clark provided a brief analysis of the risks (fraud, significant, other) detailed in Section 2 of the report: Fraud Risk · Misstatements Due to Fraud and Error. External Audit considered this risk on all their audits and there were no matters to report to Committee. · Risk of Fraud in Revenue Recognition. External Audit considered this risk on all their audits and there were no matters to report to Committee. · Risk of Fraud in Revenue and Expenditure. There were no matters to report to Committee. Significant Risk · Valuation of Property, Plant and Equipment (Land and Buildings and Investment Properties. This was elevated to a ‘significant risk’ due to a change in the Council’s valuation specialist. There were no matters to report to Committee. Other Risk · Pension Valuation – Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS). This represented a heightened focus but not a significant risk. As this audit was still in progress External Audit was required to consider any impact on the Council's financial statements. This audit would be completed as soon as possible. · Going concern - there were some changes to the auditing standards that required External Audit to undertake more work on this. Suyash Maharaj, External Auditor provided an overview of the Audit Differences, detailed at Section 4 of the report: · Five misstatements had been identified, two by senior management (change in pension figures/disclosures and tax income guarantee accrual reversal) and three by External Audit (capital adjustment account disclosure, officers' remuneration disclosures and provision disclosure). These had been corrected and reflected in the current version of the financial statements. · Two misstatements had been identified by External Audit. Disclosure relating to pensions benefits paid for 2020/21 had not yet been corrected by senior management. Disclosure relating to the New Burdens Grant had been corrected by senior management. However, External Audit had retained this misstatement on the uncorrected schedule, in order to review the final financial statements and verify the correction. · There were two uncorrected misstatements from the prior period financial statements, which had a turnaround impact on 2020/21. The net impact of the misstatements was £1,826. During discussion the following points were noted: · External Audit confirmed that the term ‘misstatements’ in their report referred to identifying an error or an adjustment made to the figures, as they appeared in the Council’s financial statements and there was no concerned about a broader risk of error across the financial statements. · External Audit explained that the disclaimer in their report, advising that it was ‘intended solely for the information and use of the Audit and ... view the full minutes text for item 18. |
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Internal Audit Progress Report PDF 174 KB The Chief Internal Auditor to submit a report updating on progress made by Internal Audit on plan delivery and outcome of assignments. Appendix B is exempt. Additional documents:
Minutes: Rachel Ashley-Caunt, Chief Internal Auditor introduced the
report, the purpose of which was to update Members on progress made by Internal
Audit on plan delivery and outcome of
assignments. The Chair highlighted that appendix B was
exempt and that any discussion on this appendix would need to take place in
private session. Ms Ashley-Caunt drew Members attention to
appendix 1 of appendix A (Internal Audit Plan), which detailed a list of audits
due to be delivered this year and their current status. 2 audits had been finalised (Housing Voids
Management and Landlord Health and Safety).
A number of other audits were progressing to
the latest stage of the process and would be reported to the Committee at its
next meeting on 16 January 2024: · Housing
Voids Management – Internal Audit were satisfied that the Council had controls
and a well embedded framework in place.
There were a number of areas highlighted for
potential improvements to policies and the processes being applied (around the
use of data to manage and report performance, the pre-termination process
etc). A moderate assurance opinion over
the control environment, a good assurance opinion over compliance and a low
organisational risk had been issued. ·
Landlord Health and Safety – This was reviewed
regularly and covered key areas such as gas safety inspections, electrical
installations, asbestos reports, passenger lift servicing, smoke detection and
carbon monoxide. Some properties were not
currently compliant but were known and subject to ongoing work. A good assurance opinion over control
and compliance had been issued. Concerning
the implementation of audit recommendations.
26 audit recommendations had been completed and closed and 34
recommendations remained overdue. Of
those overdue, four were high priority and over three months overdue: · Effectiveness
of Case Management Arrangements 2019-20 · Housing
Repairs 202.21 · Business
Continuity Management 2022/23. · Exempt
Recommendation (appendix B) These were detailed at appendix 3 of appendix a
and appendix B. Further progress would
be reported to Member at the next Committee meeting. Appendix 4 detailed the customer satisfaction
results for Internal Audit’s delivery of Audits, showing all as either good or
outstanding to date. Ms Ashley-Caunt concluded by assuring the
Committee that good progress was being made on delivery of the Audit Plan for
completion by the end of March. During discussion
the following points were noted: ·
Members
thanked the Ms Ashley-Caunt for her work. ·
Dawn
Garton, Director for Corporate Services advised that there were no concerns
over the contract for the Leicestershire Resilience Forum (for Business
continuity support), other than the delay in being able to action the
recommendation to fully complete the Plans.
Proposals and agreements for the support role were relatively new but
arrangements were progressing. ·
Members
noted the improvement in the average void re-let times from 149 days to 54
days. ·
Mrs
Garton advised that a Performance report would be submitted to Cabinet on 13
December, which would provide information on housing voids management targets
etc. · Ms Ashley Caunt confirmed that some of the Housing Voids Management policies reviewed by Internal ... view the full minutes text for item 19. |
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Counter Fraud Policy PDF 176 KB The Chief Internal Auditor to submit a report providing the Committee with a new Counter Fraud and Corruption Policy for review and approval. Additional documents: Minutes: Rachel Ashley-Caunt, Chief Internal Auditor introduced the report, the purpose of which was to provide the Committee with a new Counter Fraud and Corruption Policy for review and approval. Ms Ashley-Caunt highlighted that the new Policy was based on the latest national guidance, CIPFA guidance and Fighting Fraud and Corruption Locally guidance. It detailed: · Embedding a culture of zero tolerance within the Council, how to best use resources to detect and prevent fraud and how to respond if concerns are raised. · Formalising good practices already in place, documenting these and making ensuring clear communication of the counter fraud strategic approach. · Section 1.3 (Fraud Risks) had been added to alert to the types of risks the Council may encounter, which informed the Council’s risk management approach. · The Council was part of the National Fraud Initiative, which was run by the Cabinet Office and undertook additional proactive work (social housing fraud, data matching etc). Ms Ashley-Caunt confirmed that the Council had participated in Fraud Awareness Week during November and had held an ethical governance session with all staff. Should the Policy be approved, all staff would receive Fraud Awareness training. During discussion the following points were noted: · Ms Ashley-Caunt confirmed that she and her Counter Fraud Team covered a number of local authorities. She had much experience of fraud investigations across various organisations and this was 1 of her areas of interest. This knowledge and experience was shared with the Council’s Senior Management Team and staff during training sessions’. · Internal Audit were registered to receive ‘fraud alerts’ and these alerts were shared with the Council when relevant. · There was discussion on whether the objective and outcome at section 1.2 of the Policy was appropriate. Members commented that ‘and maintain that level’ was not necessary, as no target had been set for the reduction of fraud and corruption. Ms Ashley-Caunt commented that the aim was to reduce fraud and corruption as much as possible and to ensure the level achieved did not increase. · It was proposed to amend the objective and outcome ‘reduce fraud and corruption losses within the Council to an absolute minimum and maintain that level’ to read ‘reduce fraud and corruption losses within the Council to an absolute minimum’. · Members requested that documents containing indexes such as this Policy also have page numbers added for ease of reference. · There was discussion on the mediums in place for staff and the public to report fraud. The advantages and disadvantages of central and named email accounts were considered. · Central email accounts were independent of the Council. They were used at all local authorities covered by Internal Audit and were found to be working well, with a number of referrals received (particularly on council tax and business rates). · Members were assured that Customer Services staff knew how to deal with in person or telephone referrals (i.e. by emailing the central email address). · Staff were able to raise concerns with managers if they wished to do so. Managers would then email the ... view the full minutes text for item 20. |
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Anti Money Laundering Policy PDF 187 KB The Chief Internal Auditor to submit a report providing the Committee with a new Anti-Money Laundering Policy and Guidance for review and approval. Additional documents: Minutes: Rachel Ashley-Caunt, Chief Internal Auditor introduced the
report, the purpose of which was to provide the Committee with a new Anti-Money
Laundering Policy and Guidance for review and approval. Ms Ashley-Caunt advised that the new Policy was very much based on legislation and aligned with regulation (i.e. reducing the use of cash). It was both technical and complex in nature and as such, the aim was to draft a usable document. To assist this, a guidance note and disclosure templates had been included. Ms Ashley-Caunt highlighted that reporting arrangements were in place for any concerns raised. During discussion the following points were noted: · Ms Ashley-Caunt clarified that the date of birth requirement referenced in appendix 2 of appendix A (Money Laundering Reporting Officer disclosure form) was based on the referral form which Internal Audit were required to complete for the National Crime Agency. The Agency used this information to inform any intelligence gathering. · The heading at paragraph 7.1 of appendix A should be amended to read ‘Money Laundering Reporting Officer’ and the acronym ‘MLRO’should follow. RESOLVED that the Committee APPROVE the Anti Money Laundering Policy and Guidance. |
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Internal Audit Plan Development for 2024/25 PDF 180 KB The Chief Internal Auditor to submit a report providing an overview of the proposed Audit Planning process for 2023/24 and consulting Members on risk areas for consideration in the development of the Audit Plan. Minutes: Rachel Ashley-Caunt, Chief Internal Auditor introduced the
report, the purpose of which was to provide an overview of the proposed Audit
Planning process for 2023/24 and consult Members on risk areas for
consideration in the development of the Audit Plan. Ms Ashley-Caunt confirmed that the Internal Audit Plan 2024/25 would be submitted to this Committee for approval in March next year. In development of the Plan, Internal Audit would review the Council’s Risk Registers, consult with Senior Management Team on risk areas within their services and consult with Members of this Committee, inviting suggestions for possible audits to undertake (suggestions to be received by 31 January 2024). Suggestion would be risk assessed along with all other areas identified for audit to determine where best value can be added. During discussion the following points were noted: · Members thanked Ms Ashley-Caunt for her report. · Members proposed a follow up audit on housing voids. Ms Ashley-Caunt confirmed that she would include this in the audit planning process and discussion with Senior Management Team, commenting that the 2023/24 audit of housing voids was specific to this area. It may be that a wider review, focussing on housing voids as well as other areas for assurance would add best value. · Ms Ashley-Caunt advised Members to submit their suggestions via email direct to her, to the Director for Corporate Services or to Councillors Higgins or Mason (Chair and Vice Chair of this Committee). RESOLVED that the Committee 1) NOTED the proposed approach to developing the Audit Plan for 2024/25; 2) HIGHLIGHTED any risk areas where the Committee required assurance during the year ahead to the Chief Internal Auditor by 31 January 2024. |
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Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) Update 2022-23 PDF 192 KB The Monitoring Officer to submit a report updating members in relation to the Council’s use of powers under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (RIPA) from April 2022 to March 2023. Additional documents:
Minutes: Alison McKane, Monitoring Officer introduced the report, the purpose of which was to update Members in relation to the Council’s use of powers under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (RIPA) from April 2022 to March 2023 and seek approval of the updated RIPA Policy Mrs McKane advised that the use of covert surveillance was highly regulated and the Council was required to review its RIPA Policy annually. Minor amendments to the Policy were detailed at paragraph 5.13 of the report. RIPA training had been arranged for 9 January 2024, for authorising officers and other relevant officers.
Mrs McKane drew Members’ attention to appendix B (the Council’s response letter to the Investigatory Powers Commissioner’s Office), which set out responses to the IPCO’s request for information. During discussion the following points were noted: · Members thanked Mrs McKane for her report. · References to ‘maximum term of at least 6 months imprisonment’ at paragraphs 2.2, 6.2 and 8.1.3 of the report would be reviewed to ensure it reflected the correct authorisation. Members would be advised accordingly outside of this meeting. RESOLVED that the Committee 1) NOTED the update for the period April 2022 to March 2023; 2) APPROVED the reviewed RIPA Policy, NOTING minor proposed changes as detailed in paragraph 5.13 of the report. |
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Member Development Group/CRWG - Update Including Review of Constitution - General Update PDF 197 KB The Monitoring Officer to submit a report updating the Committee on the work undertaken by the Constitution Review Working Group (CRWG) from May 2023 to date. Minutes: Alison McKane, Monitoring Officer introduced the report, the purpose of which was to update the Committee on the work undertaken by the Constitution Review Working Group (CRWG) from May 2023 to date and to request Members provide any feedback on the Member Development Program for 2024. Mrs McKane drew Members attention to the Group’s Work Plan at paragraph 5.1 of the report, which detailed the work undertaken and to the Member Induction Programme at paragraph 5.2 of the report, which detailed the training sessions and the number of Members in attendance. Members were encouraged to provide comments/suggestions for future training/development opportunities for members. During discussion the following points were noted: · Members thanked Mrs McKane for her report. · Members noted the training offered by the Council, which was of particular use to new Members. · Member Induction Training sessions were well attended. They were undertaken in person and recorded for those unable to attend in person. · There were mandatory training sessions for some committees (i.e Licensing and Planning). Members and substitute Members must have completed the training before sitting on these committees. RESOLVED that the Committee 1) NOTED the work undertaken by the Constitution Review Working Group; 2) NOTED the information provided in relation to the Member Induction Programme and provide feedback on the Member Development Programme 2024. |
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Urgent Business To consider any other items that the Chair considers urgent. Minutes: There was no urgent business. |