Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Dorchester, DT1 1XJ. View directions
Contact: John Miles Email: john.miles@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk
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Apologies To receive any apologies for absence. Minutes: An apology for absence was received from Cllr Trite. |
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To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 15th January 2024. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 15th January 2024 were confirmed and signed. |
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Declarations of Interest To disclose any pecuniary, other registrable or non-registrable interest as set out in the adopted Code of Conduct. In making their decision councillors are asked to state the agenda item, the nature of the interest and any action they propose to take as part of their declaration. If required, further advice should be sought from the Monitoring Officer in advance of the meeting. Minutes: No declarations of disclosable pecuniary interests were made at the meeting. |
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Public Participation Representatives of town or parish councils and members of the public who live, work, or represent an organisation within the Dorset Council area are welcome to submit either 1 question or 1 statement for each meeting. You are welcome to attend the meeting in person or via MS Teams to read out your question and to receive the response. If you submit a statement for the committee this will be circulated to all members of the committee in advance of the meeting as a supplement to the agenda and appended to the minutes for the formal record but will not be read out at the meeting. The first 8 questions and the first 8 statements received from members of the public or organisations for each meeting will be accepted on a first come first served basis in accordance with the deadline set out below. All submissions must be emailed in full to john.miles@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk by 8.30 am on 20th March 2024. When submitting your question or statement please note that: · You can submit 1 question or 1 statement. · A question may include a short pre-amble to set the context. · It must be a single question and any sub-divided questions will not be permitted. · Each question will consist of no more than 450 words, and you will be given up to 3 minutes to present your question. · When submitting a question please indicate who the question is for (e.g., the name of the committee or Portfolio Holder) · Include your name, address, and contact details. Only your name will be published but we may need your other details to contact you about your question or statement in advance of the meeting. · Questions and statements received in line with the council’s rules for public participation will be published as a supplement to the agenda. · All questions, statements and responses will be published in full within the minutes of the meeting. Minutes: There was no public participation. |
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Minutes of the Audit & Governance Sub-committee PDF 149 KB To note the minutes of the Audit & Governance Hearing Sub-committee (if any meetings have been held). Additional documents: Minutes: The Audit and Governance Sub-Committee minutes for 11th Jan 2024 and 22nd Feb 2024 were noted by the committee. Cllr Christopher questioned the financial cost of Audit and Governance Sub-Committees hearings and investigations and how much they had cost Dorset Council particularly in respect to officer time, legal services, democratic services, and the wider cost of the hearings. The Executive Director for Corporate Development confirmed that he would create indicative costings for the committee to aid understanding. Cllr Biggs highlighted that the sub-committees quite often cancelled at the last minute due to illness. Which was a burden for members that had to read lengthy reports only for the date to be cancelled.
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Planning Report to the Audit and Governance Committee for the Year Ending 31 March 2022 PDF 3 MB To receive a report by Ian Howse, Deloitte Audit and Assurance. Minutes: Ian Howse
presented and covered the highlights of the report on the 2021-22 Audit. Since
the committee first met the 2020-21 Audit was signed off. The planning report
set out the significant risks that were identified in relation to the Audit of
financial statements. There was no significant risk of fraud in relation to
revenue recognition grant income. An additional fraud risk was identified for
21/22 in relation to the capitalisation of infrastructure assets and assets
under construction, given the level of judgement required to correctly identify
capital spend. For value for money, work was on-going as there was a national
movement to report on all years of audit that had not been reported on in one
report which would be issued this summer. It would cover value for money in the
years 2021, 21-22, 22-23 and would be the auditors annual report. He went
through the potential impacts of Covid-19 and felt that for this year’s audit
there would be less of an impact. In response to
questions from the committee, Ian Howse informed that the audit was tailored to
the organisation and although he understood the points being made around
timeliness due to national issues that led to delays. Significant progress had
been made on the Audit as most of the detail testing would be finished by the
end of the month and then move onto the review process of the work over April
and early May. Cllr Grey
requested that the reports be written in plainer English to aid better
understanding. He recommended that the Scrutiny Committee should review car
parks within the next few years to look at the value of car parks. Cllr Christopher
informed that residents were concerned about the value of misstatements
identified in the previous year. The Executive Director for Corporate
Development responded that £1.4 million misstatements had been identified in
the previous year and to put this into context of Dorset Council’s £370 million
of net budget, the £4 billion pension fund and over 1000 assets. Given the
scale of the organisation, he informed that this was a reasonable result. In response to
Cllr Cocking’s question regarding what controls were in place so that Dorset
Council did not incur any fees for the next Audit. Ian Howse responded that the
process in place was, if the scope of the work changes, then there would be
additional fees. The additional fees were proposed to the finance team, and
they would then put their view on whether it was a valid fee. If there was no
agreement then the PSAA would review the fees, the extra work conducted and
give their opinion. The continuous improvement process and control environment
helped to reduce fees. The Executive Director Corporate Development added that
the fee regime was set by PSAA a national body, and performance, funding, and
milestones, so there was little room for Dorset Council to set rates as part of
a national agreement. Cllr Christopher requested that the contract letter between Deloitte and PSAA ... view the full minutes text for item 69. |
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Report to the Audit and Governance Committee on the 2020/21 Audit PDF 3 MB To receive a report by Ian Howse, Deloitte Audit and Assurance. Minutes: The Executive Director for Corporate Development in response to questions regarding the dedicated school grant and whether the negotiations with the department of education would be concluded and what would be the outcome. Informed that the latest conversation was a joint inspection with Ofsted and QCQ inspecting special educational needs services. It had been agreed with the department to wait so that plans could be adapted accordingly and be factored into financial modelling. The latest proposal was towards the end of June. Cllr Richard Biggs and Mr Roach raised concerns around IT privileged access and the controls that were in place, whether they were robust and requested that a piece of work come to the committee. Ian Howse responded to Cllr Christopher’s previous question pertaining to the County Farms Valuation. The Council was required to value all its assets over a 5-year sequel basis. It was up to the council to choose how it obtained the valuation and whether it went out to an external valuer or used an in-house valuer. Deloitte then brings in its own property valuation specialist to challenge the valuation, hence the issues raised with the car park valuation. Noted. |
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Quarter 3 Financial Management Report 2023/24 PDF 731 KB To receive a report by Sean Cremer, Corporate Director Finance & Commercial. Minutes: Cllr Biggs introduced the report, he informed that the report had been through Cabinet and was a part of the budget setting process.
Cllr Grey enquired about the process of writing off debts. He also looked for reassurance for the next Council in terms of the Capital Program, to build in contingencies. The Corporate Director for Finance and Commercial responded that there was £7.66 million allocated to contingency funds to deal with raising prices, changing priorities and unanticipated new projects. For time and alternative planning, when identified we would look at plan B, C, D, some of the slippage related to the COVID pandemic in which, a number of construction players went out of business, rapid inflation and this caused the council to look for alternative suppliers or delivery routes for projects. For larger projects, the service looked at competitive procurement exercise and alternative routes to market to attract people to deliver. The Executive Director for Corporate Development added that there were two dimensions, the cost of some of the projects overrunning like increasing costs and not fully spending capital budget due to capacity constraints. Cllr Biggs raised concerns about overspend and wanted to be reassured that spot-checking was taking place for projects under £2 million. In response to questions from the committee, the Corporate Director for Finance and Commercial informed that as part of the monthly finance report, he was liaising with project managers to get latest forecasts and status updates. Noted.
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Constitutional Update To receive a constitutional update from Jonathan Mair, Director Legal and Democratic. Minutes: The Director Legal and Democratic was unable to attend the meeting and sent his apologies. |
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To consider the work programme for the Committee. |
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Urgent items To consider any items of business which the Chairman has had prior notification and considers to be urgent pursuant to section 100B (4) b) of the Local Government Act 1972. The reason for the urgency shall be recorded in the minutes. Minutes: There were no urgent items. |
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Exempt Business There are no exempt items scheduled for this meeting. Minutes: There
was no exempt business. |