257 Budget 2023/24 and Medium Term Financial Plan 2023/24 - 2027/28 PDF 325 KB
Report to follow.
Additional documents:
Decision:
(A) Agree that the proposed budget should make use of the
flexibility from Government to increase Council Tax by 3%, which
will increase Council Tax revenue by £33,813 a year and will
result in a Band D Council Tax increase of £5.53 which is 53
pence a year more than the planned £5 increase included in
the Medium Term Financial Plan;
(B) Agree that Leadership Team proceed with the savings plan for
2023/24 for changes under delegated authority and that do not
directly impact residents or all of
local businesses;
(C) Request Audit & Governance Committee to consider the savings items reserved for Member decision and to advise Executive of any significant adverse impact on the district of recommending to Council these savings are implemented;
(D) Agree that in order to smooth the delivery of the substantial
savings targets over the Medium Term Financial Plan that the
General Reserve and the Interest Equalisation Reserve are used as reported;
(E) Agree that a
temporary use of £400k of the New Homes Priority Spend
Reserve, repayable in 2027/28 and 2028/29, may be used to assist
with smoothing the delivery of savings as reported;
(F) Agree the pausing of non-essential capital schemes to prioritise completion of the major projects; provide essential capital financing for the purchase of food waste caddies and changes to Buntingford Depot as part of the new contract fuel and energy strategy;
(G) Note that the pausing of the £9.6 million of capital spend will
reduce revenue costs of Minimum Revenue Provision and
interest by £719k per annum on rebased capital financing
charges using current interest rates;
(H) Note that the savings requirements, that will need to be
delivered to balance the budget in the Medium Term, the
delivery profile of which has been smoothed using earmarked
reserves, are:
2023/24 £822k
2024/25 £2,170k
2025/26 £2,192k
2026/27 £2,053k
2027/28 £567k.
(I) Delegate to the Head of Strategic Finance & Property, in
consultation with the Deputy Leader and Executive Member for Financial Sustainability, the ability to amend the budget and Medium-Term Financial Plan to reflect the Local Government Finance Settlement and other emerging information, so that Audit & Governance Committee can consider the must complete and up to date information when they scrutinise the budget at their meeting on 24 January 2023; and
(J) Note that the level of budget reductions required to balance the budget in the medium term is beyond further efficiency
measures alone and instructs Leadership Team to commence
preparations for the Reconciling Policy, Performance and
Resources exercise that the new Council, elected in May 2023, will need to undertake alongside the new Corporate Plan, to balance the budget over the medium term.
Minutes:
The Executive Member for Financial Sustainability presented the Budget and Medium Term Financial Plan. He said that the Executive were previously asked to endorse recommendations and assumptions to provide a base for Officers to work on the budget. He said that the revised report took into account the revised position on the council’s forecasts and implications of the Autumn Statement.
Councillor Williamson said that the Executive had agreed to increase Council Tax to the highest threshold without triggering a referendum which was the highest of £5 or 2%. However, he said the Chancellor had allowed greater flexibility for councils to increase their council tax rates up to 3% which meant an increase of £5.53 on a Band D property raising £33,000 revenue.
Councillor Williamson said that the budget gap had been revised to £822,000 and £866,000 savings had been identified and were listed at paragraph 1.20 which delivered a balanced budget for 2023/24. He said the situation for years past 2024 was extremely difficult with a further £6.4m needing to be saved between 2024 – 2027.
Councillor Williamson said the report proposed using the reserves to fund the largest budget gaps. He said he was cautious about using the reserves and they would be paid back towards the end of the Medium Term Financial Plan when the savings targets had been eased.
Councillor Williamson said that the capital programme had been looked at and any lower priority capital spending had been moved into approved but not committed category so do not need to allow for the financing of these items in the Medium Term Financial Plan and provided a further saving.
Councillor Buckmaster said that he felt the recommendations were sensible and was pleased to see a judicious use of reserves. He said that many councils would be increasing their Council Tax to the maximum threshold and he was also pleased to see that the council could continue to help its communities through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.
Councillor Haysey said that the report noted that the council’s IT outage had meant the finance team lost six days in producing the budget. She thanked the Head of Strategic Finance and Property and his team for putting the report together. She said that the council had to legally produce a balanced budget or it would be declared bankrupt. She said that the council still had the ability to find savings from within its Transformation Programme and still provide residents with quality services but said that there would be difficult decisions to take in future years.
Councillor Curtis referred to recommendation (D) in the report. He asked for clarification on the term ‘smooth the delivery’.
Councillor Williamson said that the Medium Term Financial Plan savings were loaded towards 2024/25/26 so it was proposed that the council use money from reserves so the savings target was reduced. He said that the money would be paid back into reserves so the net position would be unchanged.
Councillor Curtis asked if the Executive Member could ... view the full minutes text for item 257