Agenda and minutes

Corporate Governance and Standards Committee - Wednesday, 15th March, 2023 7.00 pm

Venue: Council Chamber, Millmead House, Millmead, Guildford, Surrey GU2 4BB. View directions

Contact: John Armstrong, Democratic Services and Elections Manager  Tel: (01483) 444102

Media

Items
No. Item

CGS58

Apologies for absence and notification of substitute members

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Apologies for absence were received from Maria Angel MBE.

 

 

CGS59

Local code of conduct - disclosure of interests

In accordance with the local Code of Conduct, a councillor is required to disclose at the meeting any disclosable pecuniary interest (DPI) that they may have in respect of any matter for consideration on this agenda.  Any councillor with a DPI must notparticipate in any discussion or vote regarding that matter and they must also withdraw from the meeting immediately before consideration of the matter.

 

If that DPI has not been registered, you must notify the Monitoring Officer of the details of the DPI within 28 days of the date of the meeting.

 

Councillors are further invited to disclose any non-pecuniary interest which may be relevant to any matter on this agenda, in the interests of transparency, and to confirm that it will not affect their objectivity in relation to that matter.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

There were no disclosures of interest.

 

CGS60

Minutes pdf icon PDF 166 KB

To confirm the minutes of the meeting of the Corporate Governance and Standards Committee held on 19 January 2023.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The minutes of the meeting of the Committee held on 19 January 2022 were approved as a correct record.

 

The Chairman signed the minutes.

 

CGS61

Decision and Action Tracker pdf icon PDF 77 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee noted that the decision and action tracker had been introduced to monitor progress against the decisions and actions that the Committee had agreed, which would be kept up to date for each meeting.  When decisions/actions were reported as being ‘completed’, the Committee would be asked to agree to remove these items from the tracker.

 

The Committee noted that the first item on the tracker had been outstanding for nine months due to a combination of staff sickness and staff turnover. The Committee felt that it should remain on the tracker.

 

Having noted the update set out on the Supplementary Information Sheet, the Committee

 

RESOLVED: That the decision and action tracker be noted and that the actions reported as being completed be removed from the table.

 

CGS62

Complaints Handling Audit Report Actions Update pdf icon PDF 75 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee considered an update report on progress being made against the management actions identified in the complaints handling audit report, which had been undertaken in August 2022.

 

The Committee noted that the nature of audits meant that the data that had been reviewed was retrospective and many of the issues identified and resulting actions in the audit report had already been identified by management prior to the audit and steps had begun to undertake improvements.

 

During the debate the following points were raised by the Committee:

 

·       Dismay at the number of complaints received

·       Concerns over the move towards an E complaints system, and the difficulties residents experience in communicating complaints to the Council, particularly those without access to a computer.  In response, the Executive Head of Communications and Customer Service, explained that there were other options for customers to log complaints with the Council, for example by telephone or letter.  Customer Services can also provide assistance to residents in submitting a complaint.

·       The Executive Head of Communications and Customer Service confirmed that complainants were not required to complete an official complaints form.  Complaints could also be logged over the telephone.  The information contained in the report on the number of complaints received represented the number of complaints logged on to the system.

·       Query regarding the extent to which matters raised with the Planning Enforcement team were “complaints”, and what actions could be taken in the context of performance indicators which would measure the extent to which such matters were satisfactorily addressed.  This would be referred to the Planning Enforcement Team for a response.

·       There needed to be mechanisms in place that informed residents that, if they were not satisfied with a response to a particular service-related enquiry, they could follow the Council’s complaints procedure. In response, the Executive Head of Communications and Customer Service confirmed that staff would be reminded to provide this information.

·       In response to a query as to the number of vexatious complaints received, the Executive Head of Communications and Customer Service confirmed that the Council had a vexatious, malicious and persistent complainants policy that would be put into place if required.  These cases were not reported publicly.

·       Request that progress be made to implement action 2.4 analyse complaints data periodically to draw out common complaint themes to be fed back to service areas. Where actions have been identified for improvement, they should be tracked to completion.”  In response, the Executive Head of Communications and Customer Service confirmed that it was very likely that there were common themes amongst some of the complaints received and gave assurance that the Council was learning from complaints and appropriate actions were being taken to make improvements as a consequence of receiving complaints. The audit action was quite specific around having a specific corporate mechanism by which this could be done. Officers were looking at upgrading the current system in order to assist with this.

 

The Committee

 

RESOLVED: That the update report be noted.

 

Reason:

To respond  ...  view the full minutes text for item CGS62

CGS63

Gender Pay Gap Report 2023 pdf icon PDF 69 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee was informed that the Equality Act 2010 (Gender Pay Gap Information) Regulations 2017 imposed obligations on employers with 250 or more employees to publish information annually relating to the gender pay gap in their organisation.  In particular, employers were required to publish, amongst other information, the difference between the average hourly rate of pay paid to male and female employees; and the relative proportions of male and female employees in each quartile pay band of the workforce.

 

The Committee therefore considered Guildford’s Gender Pay Gap Report for 2023, which would be published on the Council’s website and on a publicly accessible Government website and retained for a period of three years.

 

The figures in the Report, which were based on hourly rates of pay, showed that:

 

·       the Council’s female employees had an average hourly rate that was 7% higher than male employees’ hourly rate; and

·       at the mid-point within the range of hourly earnings that the Council paid its employees, female employees had an hourly rate that was 12% higher than male employees’ hourly rate.

 

The main reason for this gender pay gap was an imbalance of male and female colleagues across the services as there was a much higher proportion of men working in the Waste Operations and Parks & Street scene Services.  Many of the roles within those services fell within the lower pay bands. 

 

The report was provided to the Committee for information purposes only.  In reviewing governance processes, it was proposed that in future this report was not submitted to the Committee, but instead shared with its members through a link to the document on the Council’s website each year.

 

During the debate the following points were raised:

 

·       It was suggested that committee members be sent copies of future years’ reports by email.

·       The Committee had previously requested comparative data in future years’ Gender Pay Gap Reports, of how Guildford had performed nationally in respect of the gender pay gap, which had not been provided in this year’s Report. 

 

The Committee

 

RESOLVED:

 

(1)   That the Gender Pay Gap Report for the year 2023, attached at Appendix 1 to the report submitted to the Committee, be noted.

 

(2)   That, in future, the Gender Pay Gap Report is no longer submitted to the Committee and instead is emailed to all committee members for information.

 

Reasons:

(1)   To provide the Committee with information on the Council’s Gender Pay Gap.

(2)   To streamline the governance process for the report.

Action:

Officer to action:

·       To email future Gender Pay Gap Reports to all committee members and to no longer submit the Reports to the Committee.

·       To ensure that comparative data is provided in future years’ Gender Pay Gap Reports of how Guildford had performed nationally in respect of the gender pay gap

 

Lead Specialist (Human Resources)

 

 

CGS64

Internal Audit Progress Report (April 2022 to March 2023) pdf icon PDF 71 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee considered a report on progress made by the Council’s internal audit manager (KPMG) on their internal audit plan for 2022-23 for the period April 2022 to March 2023, which included a summary of the work that they had concluded since the previous report to Committee. 

 

The report had reviewed the design and effectiveness of:

 

(a)   budgetary controls for which KPMG had provided ‘partial assurance with improvements required’ (amber/red rating) in that regard;

 

(b)   controls over the general ledger for which KPMG had provided ‘significant assurance with minor improvement opportunities’ (amber/green rating);

 

(c)   controls over receipt and expenditure of s.106 contributions for which KPMG had provided ‘significant assurance with minor improvement opportunities’ (amber/green rating); and

 

(d)   controls around the preparation and posting of journals for which KPMG had provided ‘significant assurance with minor improvement opportunities’ (amber/green rating);

 

An additional review of the payroll budget discrepancy against the expected control environment had also been undertaken and KPMG had provided ‘partial assurance with improvements required’ (amber/red rating).

 

As part of their 2022-23 internal audit plan, KPMG had also followed up actions in previously audited areas and had prioritised looking at the 2021-22 reviews which had received ‘no assurance’ or ‘partial assurance with improvements required’, alongside a sample of reviews which received ‘significant assurance with minor improvement opportunities.

 

Following completion of all the programmed activities in the internal audit plan for 2022-23, KPMG had also produced their Head of Internal Audit Opinion for 2022-23, for which significant assurance with minor improvement opportunities had been given on the overall adequacy and effectiveness of the Council’s framework of governance, risk management and control.

 

In debating this item, the Committee raised the following points:

 

·       Concern over the auditor’s finding of a lack of clarity of the total number of employees across the Council, and the apparent lack of progress to resolve the issue.

 

·       Concern as to how the audit of Financial Controls: Payroll in October 2022, which received significant assurance contrasted with the additional audit review of Payroll Budget Discrepancy which received only partial assurance.  In response, Mr Crouch of KPMG confirmed that the two reviews were two separate pieces of work with very different scopes.  The Executive Head of Finance confirmed that the payroll discrepancy was on the budget not on the payroll itself. The scope of the October 2022 audit on payroll had focused entirely on the accuracy of the payroll which was reported as being compliant. The payroll discrepancy referred to the way numbers were budgeted for.  During the Future Guildford process, the piece of work undertaken to identify the savings and to reshape services took 2019-20 as the base budget, and working from that going forward, savings were identified and indicative budgets for services were established. At that point, there was a “broad-brush” approach to budgeting, rather than budgets being costed at individual member of staff level. In the meantime, the payroll itself increased in line with agreed pay increments, and cost of living pay awards.  The payroll discrepancy was first  ...  view the full minutes text for item CGS64

CGS65

Internal Audit Charter 2023-24 pdf icon PDF 84 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee considered a report from the Council’s new Internal Auditors (Southern Internal Audit Partnership) on the proposed Internal Audit Charter, which was a formal document that defined the internal audit activity’s purpose, authority and responsibility consistent with the Definition of Internal Auditing, the Code of Ethics and the Public Sector Internal Audit Standards.  Those Standards required the Charter to be reviewed and approved annually.

 

The Standards (attribute standard 1000) also required that all internal audit activities maintain an ‘internal audit charter’. The internal audit charter established internal audit’s position within the organisation including:

 

·       Recognising the mandatory nature of the Public Sector Internal Audit Standards

·       Defining the scope of internal audit responsibilities.

·       Establishing the organisational independence of internal audit.

·       Establishing accountability and reporting lines (functional and administrative).

·       Arrangements that exist with regard to anti-fraud and anti-corruption.

·       Establishing internal audit rights of access.

·       Defining the terms ‘board’ and ‘senior management’ for the purpose of internal audit.

 

A draft copy of the Internal Audit Charter 2023-24 was appended to the report for review and comment.

 

The Committee

 

RESOLVED: That the Internal Audit Charter for 2023-24, attached as Appendix 1 to the report submitted to the Committee, be approved

 

Reason:

The Committee has a responsibility to approve the Internal Audit Charter in accordance with the Public Sector Internal Audit Standards.

 

CGS66

Internal Audit Annual Plan 2023-24 pdf icon PDF 113 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee considered a report on the proposed Internal Audit Plan for 2023-24 submitted by Southern Internal Audit Partnership, the aim of which was to provide independent and objective assurance to management, in relation to the business activities; systems or processes under review that:

 

·       the framework of internal control, risk management and governance is appropriate and operating effectively; and

·       risks to the achievement of the Council’s objectives are identified, assessed and managed to a defined acceptable level.

The Internal Audit Plan provided the mechanism through which the Chief Internal Auditor could ensure most appropriate use of internal audit resources to provide a clear statement of assurance on risk management, internal control and governance arrangements.

 

It was noted that internal audit focus should remain proportionate and appropriately aligned to key areas of organisational risk.

 

All auditable areas of review remained within the audit ‘universe’ and were subject to ongoing assessment. The audit plan would remain fluid to ensure that internal audit was able to react to the changing needs of the Council.

 

Other reviews, based on criteria other than risk, could also be built into the work plan. These might include ‘mandatory’ audits or reviews requested or commissioned by management. Any commissioned review must be able to clearly demonstrate a contribution to the audit opinion on risk management, control and governance.

 

A copy of the draft Internal Audit Plan 2023-24 was appended to the report for review and comment by the Committee.

 

During the debate, the Committee made the following comments:

 

·       Assurance was requested, and given, that the new internal auditors pick up the areas that KPMG had flagged us as having partial assurance with improvements required, and that there would be a handover process with KPMG. 

·       Assurance was requested, and given, that the Audit Plan would include financial controls on major projects. 

 

The Committee

 

RESOLVED: That the Internal Audit Plan for 2023-24, attached as Appendix 1 to the report submitted to the Committee, be approved.

 

Reason:

To ensure good governance arrangements and internal control by undertaking an adequate level of audit coverage.

 

CGS67

Annual report of the Monitoring Officer regarding misconduct allegations pdf icon PDF 119 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee received and noted the Monitoring Officer’s annual report about decisions taken on standards allegations against borough and parish councillors for the 12-month period ending 31 December 2022.

 

Throughout thisperiod, therehad been a total of four complaints received - two relating to borough councillors, and two relating to parish councillors. There were also three complaints which had started in 2021.

 

The two complaints against borough councillors referred to above were rejectedat stage1 fornot providingany substantiating information. Two of the three complaints from 2021 had proceeded to stage 6, Hearings Sub-Committee.

 

As at the end of December 2022, there were three ongoing complaints (two against parish councillors, and one against a borough councillor).

 

The origin of the complaints(whether from members ofthe public, officers, or elected members of the authority) was set out in Appendix 1 to the report. Thetime takenfor consideration anddetermination of acomplaint was also setout in Appendix 1.

 

By way of comparison and to put the statistical information on the number of complaints received into context, the Committee noted that the number of misconduct allegations received by the Monitoring Officer over the past three years was as follows: 

 

Year

Total received

Borough Councillors

Parish

Councillors

2022

4

2

2

2021

14

14

0

2020

17

9

8

 

The report had also set out details of the consideration by the Corporate Governance Task Group of a review of the extent to which outcomes of misconduct complaints against councillors should be published.

 

The Council’s current Arrangementsprovide that the identity of all councillors against whom a misconduct complaint has been made remains anonymous, except for those whose complaint is referred to the Hearings Sub-Committee for determination.  A copy of the current Arrangements is attached, for information, at Appendix 2.

 

Following a request last year by the then Chairman of this Committee, Councillor George Potter, the Corporate Governance Task Group, at its meeting on 20 February 2023, considered a report on the extent to which outcomes of misconduct complaints against councillors should be published.

 

The Task Group noted the various stages of a misconduct complaint, as set out in the Arrangements, where there could be an “outcome”, which were as follows:

 

·        The Monitoring Officer (MO) could discontinue a complaint or terminate an investigation in certain circumstances (see paras 5.1 and 5.2 of the Arrangements).

 

·        The complaint may fail the initial jurisdiction test (Stage 1) – section 6 of the Arrangements.

 

·        The complaint may, following initial assessment (Stage 2), be subject to an Informal Resolution (Stage 3) – sections 7 and 8 of the Arrangements.

 

·        The complaint may, following formal investigation, be terminated because the Investigating Officer finds no breach of the Code (Stages 4 and 5) - sections 9 and 10 of the Arrangements.

 

·        The Investigating Officer may, during formal investigation of the complaint, identify criminal conduct by the subject member (the councillor against whom the complaint was made) (see paras 19 and 20 of Appendix 2  ...  view the full minutes text for item CGS67

CGS68

Financial Monitoring 2022-23 pdf icon PDF 135 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee considered a report which summarised the projected outturn position for the Council’s General Fund (GF) revenue account and Housing Revenue Account, based on the latest financial data to January 2023.

 

There was a projected net overspend on the General Fund revenue account of £3.2million resulting primarily from utility price inflation and the payroll budget correction. Due to the relatively short-term inflation pressures and an establishment budget adjustment, it was more appropriate to resolve the deficit through the use of revenue reserve rather than putting additional pressure on the already stressed service delivery capacity by cutting back on expenditure to save money.

 

The surplus on the Housing Revenue Account would enable a projected transfer of £7.1 million to the new build reserve and meet the forecasted £2.5 million to the reserve for future capital at year-end. 

 

Progress against significant capital projects on the approved programme as outlined in section 7 of the report was underway.  The Committee noted that the Council was expected to spend £39 million on its capital schemes by the end of the financial year. 

During the debate, the Committee made the following comments:

 

·       Concerns over the accuracy of some of the information in the table showing the Approved Capital Programme (e.g. Scheme ED27 – North Street Development)

·       Request for clarification as to whether the Council would be entitled to funding announced by the Government in the Budget for supporting swimming pools.

·       In response to a request for clarification as to the nature of the correction to the Town Centre Management budget in the table on Fees and charges budget variances, the Executive Head of Finance confirmed that this was merely a budget income correction.

·       In relation to the variances to budget in Appendices 1A (salaries) and 1B (non- staff expenditure), clarification was sought as to why waste and refuse appeared as a considerable overspend in both areas, what was being done to address it, and whether it would impact adversely on the service.  The Executive Head of Finance confirmed in respect of waste that this was how the services had operated up until now, but that changes were being put in place that would set budgets to correctly reflect the true cost of operating those services. No assurance could be given at this stage that there would be no adverse impact on the service.  The Committee was reminded that £3.2m would need to be found in 2023-24 and that the Council in July would be asked to consider options as to how that deficit could be addressed. The Medium-Term Financial Plan had also identified the need to find a further £8m in the following financial year, and £6m in the financial year after that.

 

Having considered the report, the Committee

 

RESOLVED: That the Council’s financial forecast outturn for the financial year 2022-23 be noted, together with the comments and observations referred to above.

 

Reason:

To allow the Committee to undertake its role in relation to scrutinising the Council’s finances.

 

CGS69

Work programme pdf icon PDF 59 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee

 

RESOLVED: That the updated 12 month rolling work programme, as set out in Appendix 1 to the report submitted to the Committee, be approved.

 

Reason:

To allow the Committee to maintain and update its work programme.