Agenda and minutes

Corporate Governance and Audit Committee - Monday, 18th March, 2024 10.30 am

Venue: Civic Hall, Leeds, LS1 1UR

Contact: Debbie Oldham  0113 37 88656

Link: to view the meeting

Items
No. Item

71.

Appeals Against Refusal of Inspection of Documents

To consider any appeals in accordance with Procedure Rule 15.2 of the Access to Information Procedure Rules (in the event of an Appeal the press and public will be excluded).

 

(*In accordance with Procedure Rule 15.2, written notice of an appeal must be received by the Head of Governance Services at least 24 hours before the meeting)

Minutes:

There were no appeals against refusal of inspection of documents.

72.

Exempt Information - Possible Exclusion of the Press and Public

1  To highlight reports or appendices which officers have identified as containing exempt information, and where officers consider that the public interest in maintaining the exemption outweighs the public interest in disclosing the information, for the reasons outlined in the report.

 

2  To consider whether or not to accept the officers recommendation in respect of the above information.

 

3  If so, to formally pass the following resolution:-

 

  RESOLVED – That the press and public be excluded from the meeting during consideration of the following parts of the agenda designated as containing exempt information on the grounds that it is likely, in view of the nature of the business to be transacted or the nature of the proceedings, that if members of the press and public were present there would be disclosure to them of exempt information, as follows:-

 

 

Minutes:

There were no exempt items.

73.

Late Items

To identify items which have been admitted to the agenda by the Chair for consideration

 

(The special circumstances shall be specified in the minutes)

Minutes:

There were no formal late items. However, there was supplementary information in relation to Agenda Item 10 – which was the Statement of Accounts for 2021/22. This was published and circulated to Members alongside the Agenda.

74.

Declaration of Interests

To disclose or draw attention to any interests in accordance with Leeds City Council’s ‘Councillor Code of Conduct’.

Minutes:

No declarations of interests were made at the meeting.

75.

Apologies for Absence

Minutes:

Apologies for absence were received from Cllrs Robinson and Firth.

76.

Minutes of the Previous Meeting - 12th February 2024 pdf icon PDF 185 KB

To receive the minutes of the meeting held on 12th February 2024, for approval as a correct record.

Minutes:

RESOLVED – That the minutes of the previous meeting held on 12th February 2024, be approved as a correct record.

77.

Matters Arising From The Minutes

Minutes:

It was noted that information requested in relation to the item on IDS had been provided to Members.

78.

Grant Thornton Final Accounts 2021-22 and Final ISA 260 Report pdf icon PDF 345 KB

The report of the Chief Finance Officer seeks approval of the 2021/22 Statement of Accounts and presents Grant Thornton Audit Report.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The report of the Chief Finance Officer presented the final audited statement of accounts for 2021/22 and Grant Thornton’s final report of their audit findings.

 

The Head of Finance provided the Committee with the following information:

·  The covering report set out the significant amendments that have been made to the accounts since the original draft accounts were approved in July 2022. It was noted that any events that occur up until the point Grant Thornton authorise the accounts may require further changes.

·  Since the agenda was published the Council had been made aware of an increase to Grant Thornton’s audit fee. Therefore, the relevant disclosure note in the final published accounts will be amended to show this increase.

·  There had been minor wording changes and presentation changes identified by the Council and Grant Thornton, but there were no substantive changes in comparison to the version of the accounts that had been circulated to the Committee. To date the Council were unaware of any further events that could cause changes to the Statement of Accounts.

·  Appendix 1 to the report is the Management Representation Letter which Grant Thornton request is provided at the close of the audit each year. It was noted that officers had reviewed the wording of the letter and they were unaware of any reasons why the letter should not be signed on behalf of the Council.

 

Grant Thornton presented their audit report providing the following information to the Committee:

·  The final ISA 260 report had been provided to Members as supplementary information.  Two interim versions of the ISA 260 report had been presented to the Committee at previous meetings. Therefore, attention was focused on the executive summary to aid the updates that had occurred since the previous version submitted to the Committee in November 2023. It was noted that all updates were presented in green text.

·  A number of adjustments to the accounts had been identified mainly around key risk areas of valuation of property, plant and equipment and pensions. It was noted that whilst significant in terms of value they did not impact on the usable reserves of the Council or the Medium-Term Financial Strategy.

·  It was noted that the level of engagement since the last meeting in February had been good with all working together to clear the residual areas of the audit that had been outstanding. Therefore, the audit fieldwork had been concluded and this could be presented as a final report. Grant Thornton wished to maintain the level of engagement seen in the last few weeks until the end of September for the 2022/23 audit process. They thanked the team for the level of engagement over the past few weeks.

·  The accounts have now been updated and adjustments agreed and were being cleared internally within Grant Thornton around the technical review, and the audit quality team. They were working through the completion steps and expected to sign off before the end of the month.

 

The Chair thanked all the officers involved and Grant  ...  view the full minutes text for item 78.

79.

Internal Audit Plan 2024-25 pdf icon PDF 336 KB

The report of the Senior Head of Internal Audit provides Members with assurance over the approach to Internal Audit Planning for 2024-25, outlining the ways in which the process is risk-based and satisfies regulatory requirements. It also provides an opportunity for Members to review and comment on the proposed changes to the Internal Audit Charter.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The report of the Senior Head of Internal Audit, Corporate Governance and Insurance provided Members with assurances over the approach to Internal Audit Planning for 2024-25, outlining the ways in which the process is risk-based and satisfies regulatory requirements.

 

The Head of Finance - Internal Audit provided the following information to the Committee:

·  It was noted that the report was different to last year’s report, rather than developing a list of audits for the year for approval, Internal Audit had sought to adopt a more agile approach.

·  The report set out the statutory obligations and immediate priority commitments for approval. It was acknowledged that some of these would be ongoing throughout the year, such as the core business transformation work and counter fraud work. It was noted that progress on these would be reported in the update report in June along with planned activity for the next period for approval and subsequent updates reports would also follow this format.

·  It was recognised that in regularly reporting on the audit planning activity, they would be able to highlight clearer links between emerging organisational priorities, changes in recognition of risks at a corporate and directorate level and internal audit activity.

·  The Internal Audit Charter had been updated to reflect the additional responsibilities of the Chief Audit Executive and how independence would be maintained when reviewing areas, they are responsible for. Section 10 on reporting had also been updated to reflect the more agile approach to the work and acknowledged that a traditional report was not always issued with an assurance opinion, and it included the recommendation tracking process.

 

Members were of the view that the agile approach to working was good and that regular updates on risks were welcome going forward. It was noted that Internal Audit had put together a list of all the areas to audit and there were some key prioritisation criteria that could be shared with the Committee.

 

It was acknowledged that the areas amended had been discussed in Committee. It was the view that it was a credit to the team that these areas had been considered and changed to reflect the discussions.

 

RESOLVED

a)  To review and approve the proposed Internal Audit Plan for 2024/25

b)  To review and approve the updated Internal Audit Charter which will be effective from 1st April 2024.

80.

Annual assurance report in relation to employment policies and employee conduct pdf icon PDF 396 KB

This is the annual report of the Chief Officer, Human Resources to the committee concerning the Council’s employment policies and employee conduct. The report provides assurance to the Committee that, employee conduct is properly managed, policies are regularly reviewed and employee conduct forms part of normal manager/ employee relations.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

This report presented the Chief HR Officer’s annual report to the committee concerning the Council’s employment policies and practice. The report provided assurance to the Committee that employee conduct is properly managed, policies are regularly reviewed and employee conduct forms part of normal manager/ employee relations.

 

The Chief HR Officer highlighted the following information:

  • It was noted that Appendix 1 provided a detailed account of the employment policies and practices, and this information had been shared and discussed at Strategy and Resources Scrutiny Board and Executive Board through 2023.
  • The actions set out in the report were linked to the 5-year People Strategy which links to the organisational plan and the organisational values.
  • There was a new recruitment and selection toolkit and guidance which was issued during the year. The Health, Safety and Wellbeing Policy had also been updated.
  • It was acknowledged that there was an internal audit during 2023 on organisational culture and HR are working through the specific actions and recommendations from this.
  • The staff survey had taken place in 2023. HR have shared the results of the survey throughout the organisation with actions developed at an organisational, team and individual level.
  • There was also the survey of internal control which is important as it checks how well embedded the employment policies and procedures are across the organisation. Appendix 1 showed analysis from this survey.

 

Responding to questions from Members the following information was provided:

  • The survey of internal control recommended that HR develop towards a consistent model for employment to ensure that the organisational values and behaviours are reflected. It was recognised that the organisation has several employment policies and there is a new framework that sets out the rolling programme of review over the next few years. It was noted that these have been RAG rated to identify those which are more critical. It was the view that it would take two to three years to embed the new framework. Members requested that the framework and the RAG rating be provided to the Committee.
  • It was acknowledged that the policies and procedures of a contractual nature are reviewed in consultation with the trade unions.
  • It was noted that some policies will need to be updated on a timeframe to reflect legislative changes (e.g. flexible working, family leave, carers leave). It was noted that the Employee Code of Conduct was close to being finalised and would be ready for the next meeting of Standards and Conduct Committee. Councillor Dowson the Chair of the Standards and Conduct Committee said that this Committee would meet as often as was necessary to review relevant policies.
  • During the meeting last year on the annual report from HR, Members had raised concerns regarding formal and meaningful performance indicators especially in areas to illustrate that staff were doing a good job and providing services that were value for money. It was noted that the employment performance indicators are well established and are regularly presented to Scrutiny. It was also explained that for  ...  view the full minutes text for item 80.

81.

Corporate Governance and Audit Committee Work Programme 2024-25 pdf icon PDF 412 KB

The report of the Director of Strategy and Resources presents the proposed work programme for the Corporate Governance and Audit Committee for the 2024-25 municipal year, setting out future business for the Committee’s agenda, together with details of when items will be presented. The report also includes the Member Development Plan for 2024-25.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The report of the Director of Strategy and Resources presented the proposed work programme for the Corporate Governance and Audit Committee for the 2024-25 municipal year, setting out future business for the Committee’s agenda, together with details of when items will be presented. The report also included the Member Development Plan for 2024-25 to provide all Members with core areas of knowledge in line with the guidance as detailed in the CIPFA Audit Committee – Practical Guidance for Local Authorities and Police 2022.

 

It was noted that the first meeting in the next municipal year would be in June. There would be the usual assurance update reports and also an opportunity to look at the Council’s approach to transformation, firstly looking at the core business transformation.

 

The development programme for Members was attached to the report and would support the work programme.

 

Members were informed that the cycle of internal control and the way it is used in the annual assurance reports should enable Members to identify what has changed or is new. It was suggested that officers could be directed to detail changes in the 'refine and review' section of the report, enabling Members to focus their attention and questioning whilst still providing meaningful assurance that the system is working as it should be. Consideration would be given to reporting by exception.

 

RESOLVED – To:

a) Approve the work programme and meeting dates at Appendix A; and

b) Endorse the Member proposed development plan at Appendix B

82.

Date and Time of Next Meeting

To note the next meeting of Corporate Governance and Audit Committee will be on Monday 24th June 2024, at 10.30am.

Minutes:

RESOLVED – To note the next meeting of Corporate Governance and Audit Committee will be on Monday 24th June 2024, at 10.30am.

Chairs closing comments

The Chair thanked the Committee and wish everyone best wishes for the rest of the municipal year.

 

Meeting concluded at 11:20.