Nottingham Council hoping to have 37 'quick fixes' for finances in place by September

The director of finance at Nottingham Council says the authority should have about 37 improvements in place by September after an auditor found its financial management was “not fit for purpose”.
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Accounting firm Ernst & Young had been asked to review the authority’s finances and in June concluded it had “very serious concerns” over how money is handled and controlled.

The review, which has not been made public, came after it was found millions of pounds meant for council housing and tenants had been unlawfully transferred from the housing revenue account to the council’s general fund.

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The council has since commissioned EY again for a three-month plan to fix the financial control weaknesses as part of a broader financial improvement plan.

Nottingham City Council is hoping to have 'quick fixes' in place soon for its financial issues. Photo: SubmittedNottingham City Council is hoping to have 'quick fixes' in place soon for its financial issues. Photo: Submitted
Nottingham City Council is hoping to have 'quick fixes' in place soon for its financial issues. Photo: Submitted

During the latest council audit committee meeting, Shabana Kausar, who started work as the council’s director of finance in June, said 37 improvements were expected to be implemented by September.

She said: “A good amount of progress has been made. The project started on June 12 and is very much on track.”

The 37 improvements, or ‘controls’, will help the council strengthen its financial leadership, design a robust system of internal financial controls and embed professional accounting practice.

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So far 31 have been agreed but not implemented, one has been implemented and five are yet to be designed.

Ms Kausar described them as “quick fixes” which need to be done immediately to keep the Government-appointed Improvement and Assurances Board happy.

The five improvements yet to be drawn up are expected to be finished over the next couple of weeks.

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Coun Andrew Rule asked if the improved controls would be assessed to see if they were working.

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He said: “Within the remediation period, is there anything built in to it to gauge the effectiveness of the controls once they have been implemented?

“The beginning of September is when we are saying we hope to have everything implemented, but is there anything to make sure what is being implemented is actually being effective?”

Ms Kausar said: “As some of them are being implemented earlier we will have the time to see the effect of them, but some of them have got a bit of a longer time to get them implemented.

“We will be monitoring it and I am hoping, and I can’t guarantee it until I’ve had this conversation with EY, to have some kind of a health check on these things.”

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Coun Rule then questioned if it was therefore likely EY’s contract may have to be extended to do this.

Councillors were told any extension will be judged on how successful the improvements have been once the controls have been implemented.

At the beginning of July the authority said it was anticipating a £26 million budget gap over the coming financial year due to internal and external pressures.

It is predicting this gap will widen to £50.9m in the 2024-25 financial year and £58.7m over the next four years.

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During the meeting councillors were told officers are ‘fairly assured’ the anticipated budget gaps are accurate.

However, Ms Kausar said: “What we know is it might vary by a couple of million. We are making it on a best estimate of where we think we are going to be.”

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