City of York Council (Logo)

Meeting:

Children, Culture & Communities Scrutiny Committee

Meeting date:

5 December 2023

Report of:

Richard Hartle

Head of Children and Education Finance


2023/24 Finance and Performance Monitor 2


Subject of Report

 

1.           This report sets out the projected 2023/24 financial position and the performance position for the period covering 1 April 2023 to 30 September 2023. This is the second report of the financial year and assesses performance against budgets, including progress in delivering the Council’s savings programme.

 

2.           The previous monitor report outlined the Council’s serious financial position with a forecast overspend for 2023/24 of £11.4m. There has been a small improvement for Monitor 2, with a forecast overspend of £11.1m. However, further mitigation has been identified which has resulted in the net overspend reducing from £2m to £1.1m.

 

3.           This is still a significant overspend that is of serious concern and it remains very clear that the Council cannot afford to keep spending at this level. The general reserve is £6.9m and, whilst we have other earmarked reserves that we could call on if required, continued spending at this level would quickly see the Council exhaust its reserves.

 

4.           Given the scale of the forecast overspend, a series of actions was agreed previously to bring spending down to an affordable level, both within the current financial year and over the next 4 years, to safeguard the Council’s financial resilience and stability.

 

5.           At the time of writing this report (mid-October) there has only been a small reduction in the forecast overspend. However, this is because it has been a relatively short period between reports, and it is expected that progress will improve over the coming weeks. Members should note that, should officers not see the required reductions in spend, further mitigations will be needed, and more stringent cost control measures will be implemented. Executive will be kept updated on the forecast.

 

Benefits and Challenges

 

6.           This report is mainly to note the latest financial projections and current performance. The main challenge is delivering on agreed savings whilst also identifying further reductions in expenditure. The main benefit of approving the recommendations will be the ongoing financial stability of the Council.

 

Policy Basis for Decision

 

7.           This report is mainly to note the latest financial projections and current performance. The ongoing financial resilience and stability of the Council will be essential to ensuring that Council priorities can continue to be achieved.

 

Financial Strategy Implications

 

8.           This report sets out the projected financial position and identifies a range of actions that are necessary in order to reduce expenditure, both within the current financial year and over the next 4 years to safeguard the Council’s financial resilience and stability.

 

Recommendation and Reasons

 

9.           The Committee is asked to:

 

·             Note the finance and performance information.

 

Reason: to ensure expenditure is kept within the approved budget.

 

Background

 

Financial Summary and Mitigation Strategy

 

10.        The latest forecast is that there will be an overspend of £11m. This is despite action being taken by managers across the Council to try and reduce expenditure. If the Council continues to spend at the current level, and no action is taken, then we will continue to overspend and will exhaust our reserves and any other available funding. The current level of expenditure is unaffordable and therefore we must take immediate action to reduce expenditure. If we do not start to see an improvement in the forecast, there will need to be further measures implemented to ensure that the required impact is seen by the end of the financial year.

 

11.        As outlined in reports to Executive throughout the previous financial year, we have continued to see recurring overspends across both Adult and Children’s Social Care. However, the underspends and mitigations that have allowed us to balance the budget at year end have generally been one off. Whilst the use of reserves to fund an overspend is appropriate as a one-off measure, it does not remove the need to identify ongoing savings to ensure the overall position is balanced. The budget report considered by Executive in February 2023 also included an assessment of risks associated with the budget, which included the need to secure further savings and effectively manage cost pressures.

 

12.        Members will be aware that the financial position of local government is a national challenge and that the pressures being seen across both Adult and Children’s Social Care are not something that is unique to York. Many Councils are experiencing significant financial pressures and struggling to balance their budgets now, so it is vital that we take immediate action to reduce our expenditure down to a sustainable level both within the current financial year and over the medium term. Taking decisive action now will safeguard the Council’s financial resilience and stability and prevent York being in a position where it is unable to balance its budget in future years. This means that, in addition to the actions proposed in this report, there will be a need to continue to identify further mitigations and savings for future years.

 

13.        Given the scale of the financial challenge, and the expected impact on budgets in future years, it is vital that every effort is made to balance the overall position. It is recognised that this will require difficult decisions to be made to protect services for vulnerable residents.

 

14.        Corporate control measures are being implemented but they will not deliver the scale of reduction needed within the year. Other savings proposals, including service reductions, are also needed. A full list of these was included in the monitor 1 report considered by Executive in September.

 

15.        Alongside these actions, officers will continue to carefully monitor spend, identify further mitigation, and review reserves and other funding to make every effort to reduce this forecast position. However, it is possible that it will not be reduced to the point that the outturn will be within the approved budget. The Council has £6.9m of general reserves that would need to be called on if this were the case. As outlined in previous reports, any use of the general reserve would require additional savings to be made in the following year to replenish the reserve and ensure it remains at the recommended minimum level.

 

16.        It must be a clear priority for all officers to focus on the delivery of savings plans during the year. Corporate Directors and Directors will keep Executive Members informed of progress on a regular basis.

 

Financial Analysis

 

17.        The Council’s net budget is £141m. Following on from previous years, the challenge of delivering savings continues with c£6m to be achieved to reach a balanced budget. The latest forecasts indicate the Council is facing net financial pressures of £11.1m and an overview of this forecast, on a directorate-by-directorate basis, is outlined in Table 1 below.

 

Service area

Net budget

2023/24

Gross Forecast Variation

Mitigation

2023/24 Forecast Variation after mitigation

 

£’000

£’000

£’000

£’000

Children & Education

25,083

4,637

-910

3,727

Adult Social Care & Integration

45,329

6,688

-3,281

3,407

Place

22,605

-1,223

-140

-1,363

Customers & Communities, Public Health & Corporate Services

26,437

2,000

-1,000

1,000

Central budgets

22,670

-1,000

 

-1,000

Sub Total

 

11,102

-5,331

5,771

Contingency

-500

 

-500

-500

Use of earmarked reserves

 

 

-4,250

 

Target for further mitigation

 

 

-1,021

-1,021

Total including contingency

141,624

11,102

-11,102

nil

 

Directorate Analysis

Children and Education

18.        The forecast directorate outturn position is an overspend totalling £4,637k and the table below summarises the latest forecasts by service area.

 

2023/24

Monitor 1

Variation

£000

 

2023/24 Latest

Approved Budget

2023/24

Projected

Outturn

Variation

Gross

Spend

£000

Income

£000

Net

Spend

£000

£000

%

 

Children & Education

 

 

 

 

 

 

+4,291

Children’s Safeguarding

24,036

2,727

21,309

+3,716

+17.4%

 

+782

Education & Skills

19,643

5,019

14,624

+800

+5.5%

 

-5

School Funding & Assets

170,894

178,536

-7,642

+82

+1.1%

 

+6

Director of C&E & Central Budgets

2,788

5,996

-3,208

+39

+1.2%

 

-500

Mitigations

 

 

 

-910

 

 

+4,574

C&E Directorate Total

217,361

192,278

25,083

+3,727

+14.9%

 

-34

Culture & Communities

14,761

7,091

7,670

-34

-0.4%

 

+4,540

CC&C Scrutiny Total

232,122

199,369

32,753

+3,693

+11.3%

 

+ indicates increased expenditure or reduced income / - indicates reduced expenditure or increased income

 

Mitigations to reduce forecast overspend

Direct Payments Review

-200

Removal of budget contingency held within service

-100

Use of unallocated budget growth

-50

Grant income received in excess of amounts accrued

-150

Use of Supporting Families Reserve

-100

Redirection of Unspent Grant Monies

-310

Revised position

3,727

 

19.        There has been significant progress made in reviewing and reducing the expenditure across Children & Education, with a substantial reduction in the use of agency staff and the cost of placements. This is extremely positive and is against the national trend of ever increasing overspends in Children’s Services. However, costs are increasing due to inflation, an increase in safeguarding activity reflecting greater complexity of needs and the challenges of a dysfunctional children’s social care market.

 

20.        As previously reported, the number of Children Looked After (CLA) in York has consistently been at a higher level than the budget was built to accommodate. The number at the beginning of the financial year was 267, at the end of September it was 256. Placement budgets are predicted to be overspent by a total of £3,010k, which is a significant improvement from the 2023/23 outturn which was £5,651k overspent. However, the pressure on this budget continues and is partly due to the limited market for children’s placements and the statutory requirements placed on local authorities to meet children’s needs, coupled with inflationary pressures which could worsen the position.

 

21.        In addition, there is a predicted overspend in the Corporate Parenting Staffing Teams of £131k as the staffing budgets make no provision for the extra costs of agency staff. Nearly all the agency staff have now left.

 

22.        An overspend in Disabled Children’s Services of £578k is mainly overspends on direct payments. A specific project for reviewing historic direct payments is being investigated, which will clawback some of previous payments made and reduce ongoing costs.

 

23.        Home to School Transport shows a forecast overspend of £644k. This continuing overspend is due to an increase in numbers for post 16/19 plus the provision of more specialist education provision locally. This is a much more cost-effective alternative to expensive out-of-city provision but has a consequent effect on this budget as we have had to provide more transport to establishments such as York College, Askham Bryan, Choose 2 and Blueberry Academy. The change in legislation to allow EHCPs up to the age of 25, resulting in significantly more students accessing this option, has also significantly increased our transport spend.

 

24.        Staff resourcing issues and turnover in the SEND Statutory Services Team, and the need to resource this work to progress the Safety Valve targets has resulted in a small number of agency staff being appointed into this team over the period under consideration, resulting in a projected overspend of £118k (a significant improvement on the £405k overspend in 2022/23). The Educational Psychologists Service is predicted to underspend by £60k mainly due to vacancies in the team.

 

25.        The Effectiveness and Achievement Service is predicted to overspend by £104k, mainly due to one-off unexpected expenditure, and also a delay in the implementation of a saving.

 

26.        An overall underspend of £82k is predicted to be achieved within the Virtual School and Inclusion service, due to one-off savings in non-staffing expenditure.

 

27.        The Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) is currently projected to be on track to meet the targets set out in the Safety Valve recovery plan agreed with the DfE.

 

28.        The main pressure continues to be experienced within the High Needs Block and is due to the continuing increase in High Needs numbers, and increasing complexity, requiring expensive provision, especially in Post 16 and Post 19 provision and the education element of Out of Authority placements.

 

29.        The brought forward balance on the DSG as at 1 April 2022 was a deficit of £5,843k, following the first payment of additional funding under the Safety Valve agreement in March 2022. The net position in 2022/23 would have been an overspend of £1,380k, however a further £4,500k of additional DSG was paid during the year as the LA successfully met the targets set out in year one of the agreed management plan. The result is a revised cumulative deficit of £2,723k to carry forward to 2023/24.

 

30.        The Safety Valve agreement commits the local authority to bring the DSG into an in-year balanced position by 2025/26. Further payments are conditional on the local authority meeting the targets set out in the Management Plan, and reporting quarterly to the DfE on progress, with the eventual aim of eliminating the in-year deficit by the target date, with additional payments by the DfE eliminating the historic deficit at that point.

 

Performance – Service Delivery

 

31.        This performance report is based upon the city outcome and council delivery indicators included in the Performance Framework for the Council Plan (2023-2027) which was launched in September 2023. This report only includes indicators where new data has become available, with a number of indicators that support the Council plan being developed. Wider or historic strategic and operational performance information is published quarterly on the Council’s open data platform; www.yorkopendata.org.uk

 

32.        The Executive for the Council Plan (2023-2027) agreed a core set of indicators to help monitor the Council priorities and these provide the structure for performance updates in this report. Some indicators are not measured on a quarterly basis and the DoT (Direction of Travel) is calculated on the latest three results whether they are annual or quarterly.

 

33.        A summary of the city outcome and council delivery indicators by council plan theme, based on new data released since the last report, are shown below.

 

 

 

Performance - Health and Wellbeing: A health generating city

 

34.        % of adults that are physically active – The latest data from the Adult Active Lives Survey for the period from mid-November 2021 to mid-November 2022 was published in April 2023. In York, 497 people aged 16-and-over took part in the survey, and they reported higher levels of physical activity, and lower levels of physical inactivity, compared with the national and regional averages. Positively:

 

a)       70% of people in York did more than 150 minutes of physical activity per week compared with 63% nationally and 65% regionally. There has been no significant change in the York value from that 12 months earlier.

 

b)       20% of people in York did fewer than 30 minutes per week compared with 26% nationally and 23% regionally. There has been no significant change in the York value from that 12 months earlier.

 

35.        Children and young people in care per 10k, excluding short breaks – At the end of September 2023, 254 children and young people were in York’s care. As a rate per 10k population, this is level with the national average. Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children (UASC), a sub-group of children in care, are expected to increase in number in York. At the end of September, 16 of York’s children in care were UASC, compared to only 8 in March 2022. The National Transfer Scheme now mandates that “the Home Office will not transfer UASC to an authority that is already looking after UASC in line with, or greater than, 0.1% of their child population”. For York, this is equivalent to approximately 36 young people meaning this sub-group of children in care has the scope to more than double.

 

36.        Children subject to a Child Protection Plan - 126 children were the subject of a Child Protection Plan at the end of September 2023. Whilst the number of children has increased since last quarter, this is within York's expected range (111-141 child protection plans) and the range of comparator averages.

 

 

 

Performance - Education and Skills: High quality skills and learning for all

 

37.        % of working age population qualified - In 2021-22, 87.9% of the working age population in York were qualified to at least L2 and above (GCSE grades 9-4), which is higher than the national and regional figures (78.2% and 76.4% respectively). This result ranks the city of York first regionally. The 2021-22 figure has increased from 2020-21 (83.4%). Achieving level 2 is valuable in itself: full level 2 qualification on average results in a 9% increase in earnings.

 

38.        In 2021-22, 59.3% of the working age population in York were qualified to at least L4 and above (certificate of higher education or equivalent), which is higher than the national and regional figures (43.5% and 38.0% respectively). This result ranks the city of York first regionally. The 2021-22 figure is a big increase from 2020-21 (46.4%).

 

 

Performance - Housing: Increasing the supply of affordable housing

 

39.        Number of homeless households with dependent children in temporary accommodation - The latest available data shows that the number of households with dependent children in temporary accommodation has increased during 2022-23 from 22 at Q1 to 35 at Q4, which is 51% of total households in temporary accommodation. Generally, the households with children rise and fall in line with the total households and there was a peak at the end of 2021-22 where 57% were households with children. Numbers reduced during the height of the pandemic but have since been increasing and are now just above levels seen in the years before the pandemic.

 

40.        The increase in numbers of households in temporary accommodation can also be seen nationally for 2022-23, and when looking at the total number of households in temporary accommodation per households in area (000s), York continues to perform positively compared to benchmarks (0.78 in York compared to 4.35 Nationally, 1.1 Regionally and 16.54 in London). It should be noted that these figures are snapshot figures and therefore may fluctuate between the snapshot dates.

 

 

Performance - Sustainability: Cutting carbon, enhancing the environment for our future

 

41.        % of Talkabout panel satisfied with their local area as a place to live - The first biannual resident satisfaction survey taken by the Talkabout panel took place during Q1 2023-24. Results from the Q1 2023-24 Talkabout survey showed that 83% of the panel were satisfied with York as a place to live, and 81% were satisfied with their local area, both consistent with results from Q3 2022-23. A slight decline in satisfaction with the local area can be seen over recent years but York continues to perform well against the latest national figure of 76% (Community Life Survey 2021-22).

 

42.        % of Talkabout panel who give unpaid help to any group, club or organisation - Results from the Q1 2023-24 Talkabout survey found that 62% of panellists had given unpaid help to any group, club or organisation within the last 12 months. This is a slight increase from Q3 2022-23 (61%), and higher than the latest national figure of 55% taken from the government's Community Life Survey 2021-22.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contact details

 

For further information please contact the authors of this Decision Report.

 

Author

 

Name:

Richard Hartle

Job Title:

Head of Children and Education Finance

Service Area:

Finance

Telephone:

Ext 4225

Report approved:

Yes

Date:

3 November 2023


Co-author

 

Name:

Ian Cunningham

Job Title:

Head of Business Intelligence

Service Area:

Governance

Telephone:

Ext 5749

Report approved:

Yes

Date:

3 November 2023


Annexes

 

Annex A: Children, Culture and Communities Scrutiny Committee Scorecard Q2