The Committee was provided with a report which
set out the Council’s budget proposals for the period 2023/24
to 2025/26. The Committees comments would be included in the Budget
and Business Planning report to Cabinet on 24 January 2023 and
would also be taken into consideration by Cabinet in setting out
the proposed revenue budget for 2023/24 and the Medium-Term
Financial Strategy (MTFS) to 2025/26.
Cllr Liz Leffman, Leader of the Council,
introduced the budget proposals for 2023/24 to 2025/26, outlining
and summarising the key aspects of report and presentation. The
Leader explained that all budget assumptions and work undertaken
for the MTFS were underpinned by the Administration’s nine
priorities and informed by budget engagement and public
consultations, including Oxfordshire Conversation events and a
representative residents’ survey.
The Leader also reminded that Committee that
it was due to consider the refreshed Strategic Plan – based
on feedback received from residents - for 2023/24 at its meeting on
19 January 2023.
Cllr Calum Miller, the Cabinet Member for
Finance, provided the Committee with an overview of the proposed
changes for the MTFS, new budget proposals for 2023/24 –
2025/26, and the updated position for 2023/24 compared to current
MTFS, all detailed in the report and presentation alongside
directorate-specific proposals.
Issues raised by
Members
·
The Committee asked several questions regarding the potential 4.99%
increase in council tax to support essential service delivery.
·
The Cabinet Member for Finance stated that the Autumn Statement
assumed that Local Authorities would raise higher council tax
levels and take advantage of all local funding available. If the
Council did not raise council tax, Government may be more reticent
to provide grant funding. There would also be an £8.7m
shortfall in the budget. Alternatives to meeting this shortfall
were twofold: find further savings in services expenditure, or
bridge costs for a single year by drawing on some of the services
and balances funds. The latter was advised against.
·
Members queried whether the Council would be applying for the 4.99%
council tax increase to alleviate the deficit. The Committee sought
reassurance that there were contingencies in place if Directorates
could not meet service demands within their robust budget
envelopes.
·
No decision had been made regarding the council tax increase for
the subsequent year. The Council used all its contingency allowance
in the current year to support inflationary pressures. It was
proposing to reinstate the contingency line for the 23/24 budget
and was noted as an item in the Council’s recurrent
expenditure.
·
Regarding demand estimates, Adult Social Care and Children’s
Services represented significant pressures. There was substantial
investment expected through the Oxfordshire Way approach and the
Council was working on early intervention to deal with cases
quicker, delay or prevent demand arising, reduce cost, and improve
outcomes for adults, children and
families.
·
A Member referred to the predicted in-year planned savings, the
£2.1m red-rated savings and the £14m overspend in
Children’s Services and asked how the Council would respond
to those pressures within the budget plan going forward.
·
The Cabinet Member explained that the pressures on Children’s
Services were factored into the Directorate’s budget. The
in-year pressures reflected demand and inflation. Therefore, the
budget presented did account for the underlying shift and pressures
on Children’s Services. Services were aware of areas in which
they did not deliver their savings in 22/23 and that would be
factored in going forward. The Council needed to ensure that the
savings projected were realistic in terms of balancing the budget
for the following year.
·
Members asked whether the Council was implementing a way of
forecasting the likelihood of Directorates achieving their planned
savings in future years.
·
In response, the Cabinet Member explained that the process of
testing the projected savings was already underway and the savings
presented in the report were calculated to be robust and
achievable. Some of the savings were an attempt to increase service
efficiency and deliver current services with less resource. There
were relatively modest expectations of savings from the
Children’s Services directorate, which faced significant
pressures. The Administration recognised the challenge to deliver
these savings targets and continued to lobby Government regarding
financial pressures. The first funding increase in 12 years for
Local Government was offset – partly - by the rise in
inflation, thus the Council still faced real term cuts. The Cabinet
Member assured the Committee that the impact of achieving these
savings on services would be monitored.
·
The Committee asked whether the Council benchmarked its demand
against other Local Authorities. The Cabinet Member confirmed that
service level was compared with its statistical neighbours.
- Members asked how the Council was
seeking and listening to the views of its residents, incorporating
those views and feedback received into the budget. The Committee
also emphasised the importance of engaging with service users.
- The Council had undertaken a
significant amount of engagement work during the budget process and
learnt a lot about how to most effectively
engage with its residents. The Council valued the
Oxfordshire Conversations and found that the main concern of the
resents engaged with was Highways. The Administration did, however,
want to refine how it achieved engagement with more service users
and a wider spread of a residents, particularly with regard to the
bigger budget items i.e. Adult Social
Care and Children’s Services. The Leader reiterated that the
Council would constantly refine its engagement methods and seek
more responses from residents.
- In answer to a query regarding
uncertainties surrounding inflation and demand, the Cabinet Member
for Finance explained that the Statutory Override was only
guaranteed to run until April 2023. Thus, the high costs forecast
for the High Needs block could present a problem for the budget if
the Council needed to use its reserves that were earmarked for
future purposes. However, it was unlikely that the Government would
remove the Override and the Council awaited further guidance whilst
continuing its work with Government on delivering the Better Value
Programme.
- The full package of Adult Social
Care reforms was postponed for two years, including the Trailblazer
scheme. There were other elements of the reform that were due be
enacted and the Council needed to position itself to respond
positively and meet the standards required for a successful
bid.
- Members were concerned that the
prioritisation of frontline services meant that no additional funds
were available to reinvest into the Council’s other priority
areas.
- The Cabinet Member for Finance
agreed to provide the Committee with a written response outlining
how the Committee’s comments and recommendations from the
previous year’s budget scrutiny had been incorporated into
budget management over the previous 12 months.
- Asked about why the capital budget
was less detailed, the Cabinet Member explained that Authorities
were incentivised to focus on revenue budgeting due to its link
with council tax i.e., how the Council raises and spends its money.
Significant amounts of the capital budget were the consequence of
grant bids and therefore less flexible and required implementation
management rather than budget setting. The Council had established
capital governance monitoring arrangements to facilitate a higher
degree of accountability for all schemes. However, it was
recognised that the Administration needed to hone its focus on the
capital budget. Capital schemes were due to be discussed in further
detail at the January 2023 meeting of the Committee.
- Given the proportion of red and
amber RAG rated savings, the Committee received reassurance that
the Council had always had adequate contingencies and balances in
place. Notwithstanding, the Committee reiterated the multiple risks
and uncertainties regarding demand and inflation and enquired how
the Administration modelled demand and inflation and worst- to
best- case scenarios.
- The Cabinet Member explained that
the budget presented the central case – it was not possible
to tweak a model budget based on a set of assumptions. The Council
could draw on its contingencies and general balances when
necessary.
- In response, Members asked whether
the Council should produce budget confidence intervals in greater
detail. The Cabinet Member suggested that the Committee could
explore this Directorate by Directorate and restated that the
Authority always maintained robust contingency balances to cope
with uncertainties.
- The Authority had been working hard
under considerable pressure to maintain services and was
identifying ways for early intervention to improve services for
residents at lower cost to deliver its substantial savings.
- A Member suggested the development
of a risk register for the clear presentation of risk
hierarchy.
ENVIRONMENT AND
PLACE
- The Corporate Director for
Environment and Place summarised the Directorate’s budget
proposals.
- The Supported Transport budget was
under significant pressure and the Directorate was struggling to
meet savings in that area. It was making changes to Home to School
Transport and the decarbonisation agenda to help meet its
£1.2m red and amber RAG rated savings for
2022/23.
- Following a long process of testing,
the Director was confident that the Directorate could achieve its
proposed savings for 23/24, particularly within income areas.
- In the instance that the £1.2m
savings for 22/23 were not realised, there would need to be a wider
conversation about how the Directorate would account for the
shortfall and the addition of further savings targets to
23/24.
- Members requested further
information on the Climate Impact Review, but this was difficult to
quantify owing to the mainstreaming of climate action across the
whole Council and difficulty in accounting for individual actions.
The Cabinet Member did agree that the Directorate could change the
degree to which it reported the impact of revenue proposals on the
climate impact. There were other reports which better detailed
progress on climate action from a non-financial perspective, and
the work being undertaken jointly with Districts and Boroughs.
Referring to the recommendation made at the Committee’s
budget meeting the year previous, Members re-emphasised the
importance of providing an effective narrative of how the Council
was embedding climate action across the whole organisation to get a
sense of how the Council’s budget allocations met this
corporate priority.
- Members noted the absence of some
schemes from the capital programme that were related to the
Council’s nine priority areas.
- The Corporate Director explained
that many of the Council’s expenditures were statutory
duties, and it was not in a strong position to make discretionary
investments in capital schemes. It was however looking for
opportunities to release more capital to support these
priorities.
- Overall, the Director and Cabinet
Members were confident that planned savings would not impact the
ability of the climate change team to respond to the climate
crisis.
CORPORATE
SERVICES
- The Cabinet Member for Corporate
Services summarised the overarching themes for Corporate Services
in the draft budget proposals.
- A Member asked how the budget was
impacted by the termination of the Section 113 shared services
agreement with Cherwell District Council. The Head of Financial
Strategy agreed to provide the Committee with an analysis of the
impact of that decision on the proposed budget, following the
meeting.
- The £2.7m proposed savings in
the Directorate equated to 4.5% of the entire budget. Cultural
Services posed the greatest area of concern, in particular the
Library Strategy. The reliance on agency staff represented a
further risk and required investment into new strategic resourcing
capability to deliver the transformation to a more permanent
workforce.
- Parts of Corporate Services had been
hollowed out and therefore it was difficult to find further savings
in those areas. The Directorate’s budget also reflected the
end of the Council’s long-term partnership with Hampshire
IBC. There were also challenges and demand on the Law and
Governance team and the budget represented an investment in those
areas.
- When asked about the level of
confidence the Service had regarding its contract with Hampshire
reducing costs, the Director stated that the Oxfordshire County
Council (OCC) was working closely with Hampshire and hoping to
implement a new applicant tracking system to alleviate the previous
recruitment failings of the IBC. The existing contract with
Hampshire was under review and the Council was looking to retain
some of the former’s services, such as Payroll. The Director
and Cabinet Member were confident that the restructuring of teams
and greater proportion of permanent staff would improve figures.
The Service was maximising the use of its Apprenticeship Levy and
was committed to improving staff retention and developing staff
internally.
- Members wanted to see evidence of a
clear cross-Directorate effort to tackle recruitment and agency
staffing costs.
- In acknowledgement, the Director
stated that there were good organisational strategies in place to
meet workforce issues and that each Directorate needed a robust
workforce plan.
- Members noted the increased funding
for Democratic Services staff and questioned whether this was due
to a restructure or an increase in services.
- The Cabinet Member explained that
Legal Services had a high level of interim agency staff and
permanent and additional staff were needed to support demand. The
Interim Chief Executive added that there were several external
factors impacting Law and Governance, including increased Scrutiny.
Greater Legal capacity was needed to meet demand and the
Service’s responsibilities around Information Governance had
also increased. More investment was needed in these areas over a
two-year period.
- A Member asked how the Council
determined the level of savings from each Directorate. The Interim
Chief Executive explained that the budget setting process began in
the summer and there had been a number
of iterations on savings. More pressure was put on areas
that were further along their transformation programmes.
CHILDREN’S
SOCIAL CARE
- Children’s Services was
receiving the most significant cash increase of all the
directorates however the effect of inflation meant a real-terms
budget contraction of 2.8%.
- The Chair asked how confident the
Directorate was that it could realise its £3.35m of proposed
savings.
- The Director explained that the two
drivers for spend were staffing and placements. Regarding the
former, a large number of health staff
reassigned during the Covid-19 pandemic coupled with an
insufficient Early Help strategy put pressure on Children’s
Social Care. The Council was supporting its partners in the
community to deliver Early Help, as part of the collective
undertaking approach to Children’s Social Care. Caseloads
were falling-post Covid and were on
target to decrease to a level commensurate with OCC’s
statistical neighbours.
- The latter overspend was a
consequence of high caseloads and the high number of Looked After
Children (LAC). The number of LAC was on a declining trajectory
which was expected to continue and level with the Council’s
statistical neighbours the following year, meaning budgets to
support that activity could reduce.
- Asked to explain the “noted
service efficiencies”, the Director described them as modest
efficiencies, largely around where vacancies were held in
non-statutory posts. There was also a new IT system in the
Education Directorate which improved efficiency.
- There was high demand on Special
Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) and Children’s
Social Care. Work was underway on the Social Care Academy and the
delivery of the SEND strategy to improve outcomes for children. The
Education Commission was due to independently review the services
and make recommendations to Council, that the People Overview and
Scrutiny Committee would subsequently consider. The Cabinet Member
for Children, Education and Young People’s Services asked
that Members acknowledge the pressure their excellent staff were
under to support and keep children safe. The Cabinet Member stated
that the way in which Children’s Social Care and SEND was
funded was unsustainable.
- Historically, Oxfordshire had more
LAC than its comparable counties. The Service was undertaking a lot
of work to move support to edge of care/crisis point to deliver
more support to children in their homes and avoid downstream costs.
With cultural change and a permanent workforce, better decisions
and outcomes for children could be achieved. The Committee
emphasised the importance of responding to demand notwithstanding
the cost pressures.
- A Member referred to the “Grow
Your Own” Strategy and asked what level of confidence the
Directorate had that this would generate long-term savings and
reduce reliance on agency staff.
- The Director for Children’s
Services responded that since the new academy structure had been
established, only one newly qualified social worker out of 15 had
left, indicating the positive impact that investment and support
had on the retention of newly qualified workers. The Step Up programme aimed to provide opportunities for
people working with/for the Council to take a social work
qualification.
- A Member asked whether there would
be a cost saving following review of the Council’s
partnership working with ICB. The Director explained that the
review presented an opportunity to re-set expectations and the
division of responsibility. The Council could use its existing
resources more efficiently and make better investment
upstream.
ADULT SOCIAL
CARE
- Adult Social Care (ASC) presented
the Council’s biggest spend thus was the largest area of
budget cuts across the organisation.
- The Corporate Director for Adults
and Housing explained that the opportunities from the investments
in the Oxfordshire Way transformation were fundamental to achieving
the proposed savings and the programme already creating better
outcomes for residents.
- The Chair referred to the 22/23 red
and amber RAG rated savings and asked what proportion related to
ASC. The Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care explained that 39% of
the Council’s red and amber savings were held within ASC,
8.5% of which were amber. A high proportion of savings were
achieved by preventative activities and the Service was intervening
early with small amounts of seed funding to abate more expensive
care downstream. If the existing transformation trend continued,
the Directorate was confident that it would deliver on its savings.
Inflation did of course present a risk.
- The majority of ASC budget was
pooled with health budgets and a Member
queried whether the Directorate looked at potential savings across
the whole pathway of care.
- The Cabinet Member responded that
the Service’s contribution to the pool budget had been
scrutinised. They were also working with the IBC to ensure that
this joint working saved money and provided better experience and
outcomes for residents.
- A Member queried the role of
in-house provision within the Oxfordshire Way and whether analysis
had been undertaken regarding ongoing costs and potential services
being outsourced to partners.
- The Corporate Director explained
that the Council’s only in-house services were community
support services, which focused on investing in communities and
upstream prevention work. Partnership work was crucial in the
delivery of services; the Corporate Director referred to the
Council’s partnership with AgeUK,
which was delivering better outcomes for residents and reducing
reliance on statutory services, as an example.
- The Chief Executive added that the
Council was the system leader of the Oxfordshire Way and this approach reduced the need for funded
support whilst delivering potential reductions of 3-5% in
commission spend and achieving better outcomes.
Cllr Mallon left the
meeting at 12:27pm.
Business was adjourned for
five minutes and resumed at 12:36 pm.
PUBLIC HEALTH
- Members struggled to get a sense of
how the Council’s budget was tackling inequality in
Oxfordshire and asked whether Cabinet had taken on board the
Committee’s comments at the previous year’s Budget
meeting regarding the systematic mainstreaming of equality from the
outset of budget development and early intervention.
- The Cabinet Member for Community
Services and Safety agreed that equality needed to systematically
underpin the budget development. A more detailed Equality Impact
Assessment was undertaken in reflection of the budget, but the
Cabinet Member acknowledged that equality needed to be considered
earlier in the budget setting stage. The Director assured the
Committee that Public Health took a strong system view of tackling
inequality.
- In response, Members queried whether
the Directorate was looking at the outcomes and outputs
with regard to Public Health and working
collaboratively within a whole-system approach to Public
Health.
- The Leader agreed that the Council
needed to look at how its policies impacted on the overall health
and wellbeing of the population of Oxfordshire. The Cabinet would
be thoroughly reviewing how it presented health and wellbeing data
in the future. The Leader acknowledged that all work undertaken by
the Council had a bearing on people’s health and
wellbeing.
- The annual contribution to the
Community Safety reserve had been cancelled for 2023/24 and the
Cabinet Member agreed to provide the Committee with the current
balance of that reserve following the meeting.
- Referring to the overall joined-up
working across the Council, a Member
queried whether Public Health had resource for its joined-up
working to achieve improved outcomes.
- The Director explained that the
impact of Covid-19 would be increasingly apparent over the ensuing
5-10 years. Public Health had some leverage through the
cost of living crisis to enable to look
beyond organisational silos and boundaries and work across the
Council to take an upstream approach.
- The Chair explained that the
Committee expected to make formal recommendations following the
budget consultation proposals. The Chair summarised observations
made by the Committee during the discussion and thanked Directors
and Cabinet Members for attending the meeting.
RESOLVED
(1)
That revenue budget proposals for 2023/24 to 2025/26 by
directorate, the proposed changes to fees and charges and the high
priority capital schemes subject to business cases be
noted.
(2)
That a report on the Committee’s consideration of the
budget proposals and subsequent observations be brought before the
next meeting of the Committee for agreement, prior to submission to
Cabinet for consideration.
(3)
That the Cabinet Member for Finance write to the Committee
outlining how the Committee’s comments and recommendations
from the previous year’s budget scrutiny had been
incorporated into budget management over the previous 12
months.
(4)
That the Head of Financial Strategy provide the Committee with
an analysis of how the termination of the Section 113 agreement
impacted the proposed budget.
(5)
That the Cabinet Member for Community Services and Safety
provide the Committee with the balance of the Community Safety
Reserve, following cancellation of the Service’s annual
contribution to that fund.
Cllr Ford left the meeting
at 13:39 pm