Agenda and minutes
Venue: Pittville Room, Municipal Offices, Promenade
Contact: Saira Malin, Democracy Officer
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Apologies Minutes: Apologies were received from Councillors MacDonald and R. Hay and Mark Sheldon (Director of Resources). |
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Declarations of interest Minutes: None declared. |
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23 March 2011 Minutes: The minutes of the last meeting had been circulated with the agenda.
Upon a vote it was unanimously
RESOLVED that the minutes of the meeting held on the 23 March 2011 be agreed and signed as an accurate record. |
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Public Questions These must be received no later than 10am on Wednesday 15 June Minutes: No public questions were received. |
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Annual governance statement PDF 40 KB Report of the Director of Resources Additional documents: Minutes: The Director of Commissioning introduced the report as circulated with the agenda, in the absence of the Director of Resources.
The Annual Governance Statement (AGS) was considered annually by the Audit committee and formed part of the annual statement of accounts. Whilst the accounts timetable had changed and the statement of accounts would be considered for approval in September, officers had felt it important to prepare the AGS in advance. The action plan identified control issues and set out how the weaknesses would be addressed.
The following responses were given by the Director of Commissioning, with assistance from the Policy Officer, to questions from members of the committee;
The action plan was scheduled for review by the Audit Committee in December.
Ian Pennington, the KPMG Auditor, assured members that KPMG were not overly concerned with the outstanding items, given that a large number were I.T. matters that would be addressed by the GO Programme. He accepted the stance of the Council, that it was hard to justify investment when various changes were planned for later in the year.
Upon a vote it was unanimously
RESOLVED that;
1. The annual governance statement be approved and recommended for adoption as part of the statement of accounts, and
2. The Leader and Chief Executive be recommended to sign the annual governance statement, and
3. An update report on progress against actions be scheduled on the Audit Committee work plan for December 2011. |
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The Bribery Act 2010 PDF 51 KB Report of the Policy Officer Minutes: The Policy Officer introduced the report as circulated with the agenda, which set out the impact of the Bribery Act 2010 which would come into force on 1 July 2011. As a result, internal controls and policies would need to be reviewed and updated where necessary to reflect the Act.
The following responses were given by the Policy Officer to questions from members of the committee;
The constitution was to be considered by Council in October and the Director of Commissioning suggested that the committee may like to consider making a recommendation to the relevant Cabinet Member to ensure that the requirements of the Bribery Act are taken into account.
Members requested confirmation that implementation was complete at the appropriate time.
Upon a vote it was unanimously
RESOLVED that the changes effected by the Bribery Act 2010 be taken account of by the committee, along with the proposal to review and update any necessary changes to the Council’s policies. |
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Annual Internal Audit Report PDF 65 KB Report of the Audit Partnership Manager Additional documents: Minutes: The Audit Partnership Manager introduced the report as circulated with the agenda, which was produced annually alongside the Opinion Statement and feeds into the Annual Governance Statement (AGS). He highlighted some key messages.
Item 3.2 of the covering report summarised the assurance opinion for 2010-11, which based on activities and systems examined and other assessment evidence, was ‘satisfactory’, with the four opinion options being high, satisfactory, limited or low assurance.
Having assessed the effectiveness of internal audit as part of the review, it was considered ‘fit or purpose’. Members were reminded that the service had benefited from the wider partnership of which it was now a part, which had improved the knowledge base and skill set of the service.
The Internal Audit Report itself highlighted three areas where a ‘limited assurance’ opinion had been deemed necessary and this was reflected in the AGS. ‘Street Scene Enforcement’ Management Controls and Performance Effectiveness, were reviewed after numerous delivery responsibilities were bought together under one enforcement group. Various improvements were identified and significant progress had already been made. A ‘Health Check’ audit identified that ‘Business Continuity Plans’ required full testing. Whilst desk-top testing had been undertaken throughout the year (2010-11), a full system test had not and as a result Internal Audit were actively monitoring this area.
Internal Audit were able to take assurances from other providers, including KPMG, so as to avoid duplication.
Appendix A detailed the range of Internal Audit activity and the assurances gained. Some areas were ongoing, those marked as ‘consultancy’ did not involve full reviews but as with the GO Programme, the Audit Partnership Manager sat on the Programme Board and was able to challenge the business case. Some activity had progressed in the last year and some had needed to be deferred as more urgent matters had arisen.
The following responses were given by the Audit Partnership Manager to questions from members of the committee;
Upon a vote it was unanimously
RESOLVED that the Annual Audit Opinion 2010-2011 be accepted by the committee.
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Interim Audit Report 2011/12 PDF 237 KB Report of KPMG Minutes: Ian Pennington, KPMG Auditor, introduced the report as circulated with the agenda. He and his colleague, Rachael Tonkin, highlighted some headline messages.
The report summarised the key findings arising from KPMG’s interim audit work at Cheltenham Borough Council in relation to the 2010-11 financial statements and work to support the KPMG 2010-11 value for money conclusion up to June 2011. The main body of work would be undertaken when the accounts were completed.
Page two of the report summarised some of the work done to date and the remainder of the report provided further details on specific areas.
Section three of the report related to higher level controls which gave KPMG an understanding of the Councils organisational control environment, which overall were considered to be effective.
Some aspects of the IT control environment were assessed at level 2 (amber) and this had much to do with the APTOS system and access to it. Improvements had proved difficult at present but would be increasingly important with the introduction of the Agresso system.
KPMG evaluated the financial systems of the Council to ensure that the system was likely to produce reliable figures for inclusion in the financial statements. This was generally sound. The last four systems would be assessed at the final audit visit as part of the year end process and would be reported to the committee in September.
Whilst the Council had implemented a number of the recommendations from the prior years report, KPMG had bought forward a high level recommendation ‘testing of back-ups’. Formal testing of back-ups was in progress but had not yet been completed.
IFRS accounts would look very different to previous years and the Finance Team had approached the conversion very well.
The Council had made good progress in addressing the key risk areas that KPMG had identified, however, there remained some significant challenges that required focus and these areas would be revisited in the year end report in September.
Section five credited the Council for its positive response to the Public Interest Report, its handling of which had impressed the KPMG Auditor. He did wonder whether the Council may like to consider what difference it had made at some point.
Councillor Massey welcomed the positive report from KPMG and commended Internal Audit for their role in this achievement. He was also pleased to note that a number of the issues highlighted in the report related to the ICT infrastructure of the Council and would ‘shine a light’ on the matter.
In response to a question from a member of the committee, the Director of Commissioning explained that the issue of password control had been raised with ICT and HR. They felt that the technical complexity of implementing increased password controls far outweighed the benefits of doing so.
Councillor Wheeldon raised an issue about member password expiration, which the Director of Commissioning would highlight to IT and HR.
The Interim Audit Report 2011-12 was formerly noted by the Audit Committee. |
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Audit fee letter 2011-2012 PDF 1 MB Report of KPMG Minutes: Ian Pennington, the KPMG Auditor, introduced the Audit fee letter 2011-12 as circulated with the agenda. The letter gave an indication of the fee being proposed by KPMG for the 2011-12 financial year.
Audit Commission advice had been for KPMG to deduct 5% of the 2010-11 fee, which did not include the £5k for the follow up of the Public Interest Report. He appreciated the Councils disappointment at not having received the IFRS reimbursement from the Audit Commission.
In response to a question from a member of the committee the KPMG Auditor advised that despite the level of Internal Audit undertaken by the Council, there was not a downward trend in the KPMG fee. The Council were however, at the low end of the scale of fees. This was largely based on the high quality of accounts produced by the Council.
The Audit fee letter 2011-12 was formerly noted by the Audit Committee. |
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Report of the Audit Partnership Manager Additional documents:
Minutes: The Audit Partnership Manager introduced the report as circulated with the agenda.
The DCLG consultation paper (Appendix A), was a cumbersome document, but one that he felt important for members of the committee to see. The table of draft responses (Appendix B) had been formulated by the Audit Partnership Manager and the Corporate Governance Group.
The Audit Partnership Manager had two main items to raise with the committee. Firstly, having assessed the ‘design principles’ of what DCLG want to achieve, he didn’t feel it covered all of the elements that he would have liked to have seen, for it to include external auditors and other assurance providers. Secondly, the introduction of independent Chair and Vice Chair as a minimum could be counter productive whereby the Audit Committee members have been elected by the public and have a fundamental duty to the public. Another issue was how they would be vetted and remuneration.
Members made the following comments;
Ian Pennington, KPMG Auditor, observed a range of Audit Committees and felt that this committee had improved over the last four years, in the way in which it considered and talked about risk. He suggested that the committee consider a self assessment of effectiveness which hadn’t been done for some time and could provide some perspective on whether things were done as well as they could be.
Upon a vote it was unanimously
RESOLVED that the comments of the committee be considered by the Audit Partnership Manager and updated as necessary. |
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Commissioning - update on current commissioning exercises PDF 37 KB Discussion paper of the Director of Commissioning Additional documents: Minutes: The Director of Commissioning introduced the paper as circulated with the agenda, which had been produced at the request of the committee at their last meeting. Appendix A, set out the different delivery and governance options available, which would be used at the start of all commissioning exercises. She hastened to add that this was a working draft, the document would evolve and therefore member comments were welcome.
Experience gained through the GO Programme and the Council’s relationship with CBH, were useful, but this was a learning curve for all involved.
Ultimately, if externalising services, the Audit Committee needed to be satisfied, as with services delivered internally, that governance arrangements were being delivered, as in some cases the service would remain a statutory function of the authority. The two commissioning reviews, leisure & culture and built environment were in the very early stages.
Members of the committee made the following comments;
Members were assured that an optional appraisal would form part of each commissioning review, which would automatically discount some models. Some delivery options would be subject to more governance by their very nature and it could be that the Council was not able to influence this.
Ian Pennington, KPMG Auditor, reminded members that they would be commissioning external auditors in four years time. His colleague, Rachael Tonkin, highlighted the need to consider how commissioning may impact on the Council’s accounts. Would the accounts be consolidated as with CBH or would different delivery options have different impacts on the accounting process.
The Director of Commissioning told how discussions were ongoing in relation to the GO Programme and extra accounting.
The Director of Commissioning reiterated that Appendix A was a working progress and thanked members for their comments, which would help to inform development of the document. |
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Minutes: The Chairman referred members to the work plan as circulated with the agenda.
The following items were to be added to the work plan;
21 September 2011
11 January 2012
20 June 2012
The Internal Audit monitoring report would be considered at each meeting as a standing item.
Under the ‘items to be added at a later date’ the changes to the appointment process for external auditors would not be reported by KPMG and an Audit Committee self assessment would be added. |
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Any other item the chairman determines to be urgent and requires a decision Minutes: There were no urgent items for discussion. |
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Date of next meeting 21 September 2011 Minutes: The next meeting was scheduled for the 21 September 2011, for which Councillor Massey tendered his apologies. |