Issue - decisions
MTFP
12/09/2023 - Medium Term Financial Strategy 2023/24 - 2027/28
In Councillor Mark Lowry’s absence, Councillor Chris Penberthy (Cabinet Member for Housing, Cooperative Development and Communities) introduced the item:
a)
The document
provided the strategic framework that linked the
Council’s revenue budget, capital program,
treasury management strategyand the capital
strategy for the following 5
years;
b)
The LGA, and
would all recommend that each administration took
such a plan to Council for approval, but the last one had been by
the previous Labour
administration in 2018;
c)
The plan considered that
the budget had already been set for 2023/24 and that the latter
years were provided for
illustrative purposes;
d)
The strategy set out the
financial principles and objectives, whilst working to deliver the
priorities of the corporate plan;
e)
The report showed a
forecasted £11.2 million funding gap for 2024/25 that would
need to be closed as part of the budget process, and over 5 years
there was a £185 million
gap;
f)
Inflation, increase fuel
costs and the cost of living crisis
were impacting the
council as well as additional
pressures in adult social care, children’s
social care and support for the homeless;
g)
It was unknown what
action Government would take to deliver reform to local government
funding as there had been a change in the majority
of funding no longer coming
from Government, but instead from local
taxation;
h)
The budget included an
additional £2.6 million to , as
well as £1.5 of one-off allocations
used to balance the 2023/24 budget which needed to be
covered;
i)
There was a need to find
new ways to provide services, to work with partners wherever
possible, to do things more efficiently, to make the most of the
Council’s assets, focus and clarity on
organisational purpose to reform the Children’s
directorate;
j)
The Place directorate
would continue to prioritise growth
to ensure the
k)
The People directorate
would continue to work on reducing demand for homelessness services
through early intervention and prevention as well as improvements
in access to health care and improvement of
outcomes for those leaving
hospital;
l)
Transformation and
Customer Support Services would continue to
play a key role in supporting demand-led services, with finance,
legal, procurement and HR all due to review
their own operating
models;
m) The plan containeda very clear ambition in the capital program to invest in and transform the city and thanked Councillor Lowry for his work on the plan.
David Northey (Interim Section 151 Officer) added:
n)
He had made a commitment
to create a medium-term financial plan at Audit and Governance
Committee, and it had been a recommendation from the last budget
scrutiny meetings;
o) The figures and information would change as the years progressed.
In
response to it was
explained:
p)
The plan should be reviewed in the mid-term of the
following financial year as it would inform and update the
plan;
q)
The council were trying
to deliver the same services
with less funding from Government, which is what was
primarily causing increases in council and this was being
picked up by national media, and similar
issues were being experienced across the country;
r)
David Northey would be
attending a DLUHC meeting later that
week where they wanted to understand more about what was
‘happening on the ground’ and the team always took the
opportunity to get local issues
across;
s)
There was a national
conversation to be had about how much funding local government got
to provide children’s
social care services, as it had become a big issue that could no
longer be solved locally;
t)
SIGOMA
had the
distribution of funding should return to being done based on levels
of deprivation, something the conservative government ceased in
2010, which had robbed local authorities of money they were using
to try and eliminate poverty or to deal with the consequences of deprivation.
The Cabinet agreed to recommend the Financial Strategy 2023/24 – 2027/28 to City Council for approval.