Venue: Via Microsoft Teams / Hybrid in Council Chamber
Contact: Chloe Plowman
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Appointment of Chairperson Minutes:
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Appointment of Vice Chairperson Minutes:
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Chairpersons Announcements Minutes: The
Chairperson welcomed everyone to the meeting. |
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Declarations of Interests Minutes: The
following Declaration of Interest was receiving during the discussion of the
relevant agenda item:
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Audit Wales - Final Assurance and Risk Assessment Progress Update Letter PDF 376 KB Additional documents: Minutes: The Committee was provided with a progress update
from Audit Wales on the Council’s arrangements for responding to the
requirements of the Local Government and Elections (Wales) Act 2021. It was
explained that the work was undertaken earlier this year, and the findings from
that piece of work was included as an appendix to the circulated report. It was explained that the Local Government and
Elections (Wales) Act 2021 had brought significant change in terms of the
governance and performance requirements. Members were informed that the Council
had been making good progress over the last year, especially given that the
Council was still responding to the pandemic. Officers highlighted the following points in
regards to progress: -
All services had
developed their own service recovery plans, setting out their priorities for
the coming year; there were over 80 service recovery plans in place. -
Progress was being made
in developing the Council’s first corporate self-assessment; this was a new
requirement under the Act. It was added that Members will have sight of this in
a future meeting, as it was the role of the Governance and Audit Committee to
review the Council’s draft self-assessment. -
Progress was being made
in developing the Council’s Participation Strategy. Audit Wales clarified that they had carried out
this commentary work across all of the Councils in Wales, as part of their
ongoing assurance and risk assessment; they were pleased to hear the updates from
Officers, and would be checking in with Councils to understand how they were
moving forward with this work over the next year. In regards to the Participation Strategy, Audit
Wales noted that given the interest other Councils had shown in learning from
good practice from other Councils, they would be taking this interest back to
Audit Wales to see how and whether this learning could be facilitated.
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Audit Wales - Audit Plan 2022-2023 PDF 585 KB Additional documents: Minutes: Audit Wales
presented their Audit Plan which included the details of the work in which they
intended to undertake during 2022-23; in order to discharge their statutory
responsibilities, inform the Council when the work will be undertaken, how much
it will cost and who will undertake the work. The
responsibilities and financial statements were set out in paragraph eight of
the circulated Plan. The following was highlighted from the Audit Wales Plan
for Neath Port Talbot Council: -
Audit Wales were required to give an opinion
on the truth and fairness of the Council’s financial statements; and to assess
whether the narrative report and annual governance statement, prepared in line
with guidance, were consistent with the accounts and Audit Wales’ knowledge of
the Council. -
When auditing the accounts, Audit Wales
adopted a concept of materiality when carrying out their works; they looked at
misstatements that might result in the reader of the accounts being misled. -
Audit Wales reported the level of what they
judged to be misstatements, to be material to the Council, in their financial
statements. This was noted to be around £5.5million. -
The audit approach was based upon Audit
Wales’ assessment of the risks of material misstatement; at the planning stage of
the audit, they had identified three risks which were summarised in Exhibit One
in the circulated Plan. It was mentioned that this element also set out the
work Audit Wales planned to do to address those risks. A discussion
took place in relation to the performance audit work that had been undertaken;
the detail of this work could be found on page 21 of the circulated report. It
was explained that performance audit was based around the five ways of working
along with the three E’s, Economy, Efficiency and Effectiveness; Audit Wales
had a duty to base their work around these key areas. The Committee
was informed that during the pandemic, Audit Wales adopted a flexible approach
across their performance audits with Councils across Wales; they ensured they
were consulting with Councils, as they do every year, as well as informing
their work going forward. It was noted
that Audit Wales held annual workshops with Councils in order to discuss
initial thoughts in terms of the risks identified, and what Councils were
currently working on in terms of those risks; following this, Audit Wales
compiled a programme of audit work, which covered local, regional and national
elements. It was mentioned that the Plan set out those three levels of work for
Neath Port Talbot Council, with particular emphasis on the local performance
work, details of which could be found in Exhibit Two of the circulated Plan. Audit Wales highlighted the performance audit program for Neath Port Talbot for 2022-2023. The first noted element in the table was assurance and risk assessment; the identified areas for the Council to focus on were listed as financial position, capital programme management, governance, use of performance information with a focus on service user feedback and outcomes, ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
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Audit Wales - Work Programme and Timetable PDF 377 KB Additional documents: Minutes: Members were
informed of the work undertaken by Audit Wales up to the 30th June 2022. It was explained
that Audit Wales had being sharing their work programme and timetable updates with
the Council on a quarterly basis; the document was a summary of the work that
external regulators and inspectorates had undertaken. It was noted that the
Work Programme and Timetable updates include website links to the relevant
reports in order for the Committee to easily find and read information
regarding finalised pieces of work. Audit Wales
highlighted that the work for 2021/2022 was nearly completed, and they were
progressing with the 2022/2023 programme; the document also detailed the
national studies that were planned or in progress, as well as those that had
been published.
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Statement of Accounts PDF 149 KB Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee
was provided with an update with regard to the Council’s Statement of Accounts
for 2021/2022. The Councils
Chief Finance Officer stated that the audit was substantially complete, however
Audit Wales were unable to sign off at present due to an ongoing national issue
in relation to accounting for infrastructure assets; on the basis that the
issue would be resolved shortly, Officers were hoping to bring the final
version of the accounts back to the Committee in November, along with an
accompanying ordered report to sign off the accounts.
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Internal Audit - Annual Report 2021-2022 PDF 550 KB Minutes: Officers
presented the Head of Internal Audit’s Annual Opinion on the internal controls,
governance and risk management arrangements operating within the Council during
the financial year 2021/22. The main headline
of the report was noted to be the work undertaken by internal audit and
external regulators; following this work, Officers were in a position to
provide reasonable assurance that there were no significant weaknesses in the
overall control environment operating across the Council. However, it was noted
that the current risk management policy was not fully adhered to during the
previous financial year. Members were assured that risks were managed in the
usual way, and that the issues were around the reporting and updating of the
risks; there was currently work ongoing to revise the policy, which will be
taken to the appropriate Committees in due course. Officers
stressed that in giving the annual opinion, at no time can they provide
absolute assurance; every system that operated within the authority could not
be tested every year, therefore Officers could only provide reasonable
assurance to the Committee based on the work undertaken. Reference was
made to Appendix One contained within the circulated report, which provided
details of the achievement against the internal audit plan; as stated in the
body of the report, a considerable number of days were lost last year due to
sickness within the team. It was noted that a revised plan was brought to a
previous meeting of the Committee, which removed some of the lower risk areas,
which allowed Officers to concentrate on the higher risk areas. It was mentioned
that Appendix 2 of the circulated report provided details of the Internal Audit
Team’s ongoing quality assurance and improvement plan. Members asked for
further information in regards to the risk management policy not being fully
adhered to. Officers explained that the policy was due to be reviewed on a 3
year basis, with the review date set for 2021; that review was
delayed slightly, however there was now good progress being made on the review.
It was noted that there were delays in the reporting of the risks and updated
position to the appropriate Committee; Officers weren’t able to adhere to the
reporting frequency due to a number of reasons including a change in
administration and a delay in meetings taking place. Members were informed that
the Council had strengthened the personnel dealing with the risk management
policy, which should equate to a significant improvement going forward. Reference was made
to the CRM (Customer Relationship Management) system solution that had
previously been discussed in the Governance and Audit Committee training
session. It was asked if progress had been made in implementing the digital
solution. Officers highlighted that work had been undertaken to move the
strategic risk register onto a Microsoft Excel based solution; it was ready to
be implemented, following discussions in the Corporate Directors Group and a
future meeting of the Governance and Audit Committee. Following on from the above, it was queried if some elements ... view the full minutes text for item 9. |
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Internal Audit - Strategy and Risk Based Plan for 2022-2023 PDF 784 KB Minutes: Details of the
Draft Internal Audit Strategy and Risk Based Plan for the period 1st April 2022
to 31st March 2023 and the current Internal Charter, were presented to the
Committee. Officers highlighted
that the Draft Internal Audit Strategy, contained within Appendix One of the
circulated report, provided details of the following: ·
A definition and purpose of internal audit ·
The current staffing structure ·
The legal requirements ·
How the Plan was developed ·
Details of the available resources ·
How the Plan will be delivered The Draft
Internal Audit Plan, contained within Appendix Two of the circulated report,
was discussed. It was stated that the Committee would usually be asked to
consider approving the Plan earlier on in the financial year; however, due to
the recent Local Government Election and the changes within the Authority, this
was the first meeting of the Committee. It was noted that whilst the plan was
presented to the Committee in draft form and required approval, Officers have
had to make a start on the some of the items contained within it. Reference was
made to the risk rating column contained within the Plan; the risk rating was produced by
a formula, taking the following variables in account: ·
The size of the activity being
audited based on the annual income, expenditure or the size of the budget, the
number of employees involved, the potential impact on the Authority of
something going wrong within that service, the frequency of transactions, or
interactions with service users ·
The controls within that service
operating, including the impact of management and staff, third party
sensitivity (if there was a failure within that service, will it impact
elsewhere within the Authority or externally), the standards of internal
control and the likelihood of something going wrong ·
The detection of any issues including
constraints of the effectiveness of the audit, the duration of the audit work
and the last time an audit was undertaken, and the effectiveness of any other
assurance providers or previous orders It
was noted that the relevant information was entered into a spreadsheet; the
formula would then produce a figure based on the information received. The
figures and their risk ratings were stated as follows: ·
High risk – 50+ ·
Medium risk – 21 to 49 ·
Low risk – up to 20 Officers
highlighted the range of risk ratings detailed in the current Plan; which
included adequate coverage across all of the Council’s business areas. Members
were informed that the Plan was put together with reference to the Council’s
risk register, discussions with each of the Corporate Senior Management Teams,
the experience from Officers who work within the Audit Teams, and anything that
came through on any other regulatory reports. The Committee was provided with a brief overview of the Internal Audit Charter, contained within Appendix Three of the circulated report. It was stated that the purpose of the Charter was to inform what internal audit is, what internal audit does and what clients can expect from internal audit; it was a requirement ... view the full minutes text for item 10. |
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Internal Audit - Update Report PDF 988 KB Minutes: Officers presented the
Internal Audit Update Report which contained details of the work undertaken
since the last Governance & Audit Committee meeting; this was a quarterly
report which informed Members of the current position and what had been completed
since the last meeting, including details of the audits that had been
undertaken and their assurance ratings. One of the main points
highlighted was in relation to staffing issues; since the last Committee,
the Team had been impacted again by a very high level of sickness, with two
staff on long term sickness. However, it was mentioned that the sickness was
being managed in line with the Council’s policies and procedures. Another
staffing matter raised was the long standing issue with regards to Assistant Auditor
posts. It was noted that these posts were traditionally very difficult to
recruit to, even when someone was recruited, they invariably left after a year
or so to work in accounts or elsewhere within the Council; this was part of a
wider issue across recruitment in Audit Teams in various Councils. Due to this
issue, Officers explained that they undertook a review of the staffing
structure; it was agreed to delete the Assistant Auditor post and replace it
with an Auditor Post. It was confirmed that this had been completed, and the
vacancy was currently being advertised on the Councils vacancy bulletin, with
the closing date of 6th of October 2022. Members were informed
one member of staff had recently completed parts one and two of their
professional qualification, and another member of staff had completed part one
and was due to sit part 2 of the examination in early October. The Committee passed on
their thanks to the two members of staff for
undertaking their professional qualification examinations. A discussion took place
in relation to the impact on resource due to staff illness, particularly in
terms of the delivery of the Internal Audit Plan. Officers explained that focus
was on completing the high risk areas, and the high risk areas that weren’t
undertaken were brought forward into the current year; conversations then took
place with the Senior Management Teams to determine if the areas that weren’t
covered, still needed to be covered, or if the Team needed to be directing
their resource to other areas. Officers stated that
Appendix One of the circulated report provided details of the published
reports, and the assurance ratings applied at the end of the audit.
It was noted that the assurance rating was received by way of a calculation;
taking into account the number of recommendations made within the report, the
likelihood that a failure to action the recommendations within six months could
lead to a significant system failure, and the impact of a significant system
failure. It was confirmed that this information was then entered into a
spreadsheet, a formula would be applied, and one of the following categories
would be applied to the report: · Category One, Substantial Assurance - testing found good controls to be operating and generally ... view the full minutes text for item 11. |
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Urgent Items Minutes: There
were no urgent items received. |
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Forward Work Programme PDF 536 KB Minutes: It
was confirmed that a special meeting of the Governance and Audit Committee
would be arranged for 25 November 2022, in order for Members to consider time
sensitive reports. The
Forward Work Programme for the Governance and Audit Committee was noted. |
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Access to Meetings That
pursuant to Section 100A(4) and (5) of the Local Government Act 1972, the
public be excluded for the following items of business which involved the
likely disclosure of exempt information as defined in Paragraph 12 and 15 of
Part 4 of Schedule 12A of the above Act. Minutes: RESOLVED: That pursuant to Section 100A(4) and (5) of the Local Government Act
1972, the public be excluded for the following items of business which involved
the likely disclosure of exempt information as defined in Paragraphs 12, 13 and
14 of Part 4 of Schedule 12A to the above Act. |
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Internal Audit - Special Investigations Minutes: Officers
provided an update on all special investigations reports issued since the last
meeting; including details of all current special investigations. The
Committee asked to be informed of the progress and conclusions of the special
investigations that were discussed.
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