Agenda for City Council (Extraordinary) on Tuesday, 4th January, 2022, 5.00 pm

Agenda and minutes

Venue: Council Chamber - at the Council House. View directions

Contact: Jane Garrard, Senior Governance Officer  01158764315

Items
No. Item

1.

Apologies for absence

Minutes:

Councillor Hassan Ahmed - leave

Councillor Leslie Ayoola – personal

Councillor Cheryl Barnard – personal

Councillor Eunice Campbell-Clark – leave

Councillor Audrey Dinnall – leave

Councillor Sam Gardiner – leave

Councillor Rosemary Healy – personal

Councillor Nicola Heaton – personal

Councillor Patience Ifediora – Interest*

Councillor Phil Jackson – leave

Councillor Kirsty Jones – personal

Councillor Angela Kandola – leave

Councillor Jawaid Khalil – personal

Councillor Neghat Khan – Interest*

Councillor Zafran Khan - personal

Councillor Pavlos Kotsonis – personal

Councillor Rebecca Langton – personal

Councillor Jane Lakey – personal

Councillor Dave Liversidge – personal

Councillor AJ Matsiko –personal

Councillor Sajid Mohammed – leave

Councillor Anne Peach – Interest*

Councillor Georgia Power – Interest*

Councillor Ethan Radford – Interest*

Councillor Wendy Smith – personal

Councillor Sam Webster – leave

Councillor Cate Woodward – leave

Councillor Audra Wynter - leave

 

*Prior to the meeting, these councillors were advised by the Council’s Monitoring Officer that, because they are either a current or former member of the Nottingham City Homes Board they were likely to have an Other Registerable Interest in the single item on the agenda (Item 4 Consideration of and Response to Section 114 Report and Section 5 Report dated 15 December 2021) that would require them to withdraw from the meeting and therefore they did not attend. [JG1] 

 

 


 [JG1]Malcolm: are you happy with this approach to record this and the wording?

2.

Declarations of Interests

Minutes:

None

3.

To receive official communications and announcements from the Leader of the Council and/or the Chief Executive

Minutes:

The Chief Executive made an announcement about the recent publication of a Section 114 Notice and Section 5 Notice by the Council’s Chief Finance Officer/ Section 151 Officer and Monitoring Officer respectively.  He highlighted the following information:

a)  The Council has identified that it has acted unlawfully in relation to funds received for its Housing Revenue Account (HRA) being applied to the Council’s General Fund.  As a result, the Council’s statutory Chief Finance Officer, the Section 151 Officer, has served a Section 114 Notice and the Council’s Monitoring Officer has served a Section 5 Notice.  Those Notices required a Council meeting to be held within 21 days to consider the substance of those Notices, and therefore today’s meeting was called.

b)  Section 114 Notices and Section 5 Notices are extremely rare and usually served to prevent an unlawful act.  In this case, the Notices were served after the occurrence of the unlawful act. 

c)  The issuing of a Section 114 Notice or a Section 5 Notice are events which, of themselves, can be a trigger for statutory intervention and the appointment by Government of commissioners. 

d)  The Council’s current position is that, following completion of a Non-Statutory Review of the Council in November 2020, Government appointed an Improvement and Assurance Board to support the Council in delivery of a comprehensive improvement programme, with a particular emphasis on improving strategic financial management and governance, together with a number of other matters.  This was a positive alternative to a Best Value Inspection and the appointment of Commissioners. 

e)  In this context of seeking to demonstrate that significant improvement is being made in strategic financial management and governance, the identification in the CIPFA report, following concerns raised, of illegitimate payments from the HRA into the General Fund is a significant setback.  The issue, and the Council’s response to the issue represents a material consideration both for the Improvement and Assurance Board and the Department for Levelling Up, Communities and Housing (DLUCH) in considering whether further statutory intervention into Nottingham City Council is required. 

f)  Appropriate briefings on the matter have been provided to the Improvement and Assurance Board and senior civil servants at DLUCH, both of whom will be providing advice to Ministers. 

g)  My advice is that the best position for the Council to adopt in terms of the issue itself, and in managing important relationships with the Improvement and Assurance Board and the Government, is to demonstrate that the Council understands and owns the issue, and demonstrates that action will be taken at pace to resolve it, and to take steps to ensure that this cannot happen again. 

h)  I have commissioned an independent investigation through the Local Government Association to look into this matter and provide a report.  The Terms of Reference for this investigation have been circulated to councillors for information and any councillor who can add to the sum of knowledge on this matter should speak to the Independent Investigator. 

4.

Consideration of and Response to Section 114 Report and Section 5 Report dated 15th December 2021 pdf icon PDF 209 KB

Report of the Leader of the Council

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Leader of the Council, Councillor David Mellen, presented the report recommending that Council give due and proper consideration to the Section 114 report which was served by the Council’s Section 151 Officer on 15 December 2021; and that it endorses the views contained in the report, accepts the recommendations contained within the report from both the Section 151 Officer and those made by the Chartered Institute of Public Finance Accounting (CIPFA) and approves the proposed response.  He highlighted the following points:

a)  The issuing of a Section 114 notice and a Section 5 notice is a serious situation.

b)  The Chartered Institute of Public Finance Accountancy (CIPFA) has made a number of recommendations which it is proposed to accept in full.

c)  Immediate steps are being undertaken to cease the inappropriate action and refund the full amount to the Housing Revenue Account (HRA) from the Council’s General Fund reserves.  The repayment to the HRA requires approval from the Department for Levelling Up, Communities and Housing and officers have been asked to obtain this permission so that the money can be refunded as soon as possible.

d)  While councillors set strategic policy, officers manage the day-to-day running of the Council.  The Council’s accounts are also audited every year by external auditors.  However, it was not until 2021 that the Council’s current Chief Finance Officer/ Section 151 Officer alerted the Council to this issue and at that point external advice was sought from CIPFA to review the situation.

e)  The Council has now commissioned an investigation to understand how this situation occurred and to ensure that processes and systems are put in place to prevent this ever happening again.

 

The report was seconded by Councillor Sally Longford.

 

Councillors discussed the content of the report and proposed response.

 

Resolved to:

 

(1)  endorse the views contained within the Section 114 Notice;

 

(2)  approve the following actions:

 

a.  set aside £14,366,500 in the General Fund reserves to repay the Housing Revenue Account in respect of financial years 2014/15 – 2019/20 (net of 2b).  Interest to be added to bring the payment to 2021/22 prices and repayment made as soon as the sum for each individual year is validated following further detailed work.

 

b.  amend the Council’s draft published accounts for financial year 2020/21 by £1,492,000 to remove the ‘management fee rebate’ from being recognised within the General Fund and not raise an invoice.

 

c.  no ‘management fee rebate’ will be due from Nottingham City Homes and Nottingham City Homes’ management fee will be adjusted by a correspondence amount for financial year 2021/22.

 

d.  from financial year 2022/23 onwards, set the management fee at the correct level to deliver the Council’s required specification, and any small surplus made by Nottingham City Homes can be retained for investment in Housing Revenue Account services.  A genuine rebate will only be permissible retrospectively and if Nottingham City Homes does not perform a function for which it has been contracted and paid.  Such a rebate will be to the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 4.