Issue - meetings
Medium Term Financial Plan and 2022/23 Revenue Budget
Meeting: 16/02/2022 - Executive (Item 18)
18 Medium Term Financial Plan and 2022/23 Revenue Budget PDF 957 KB
Report of the Deputy Chief Executive and City Treasurer attached
Additional documents:
- Revenue Budget 2022-23 App1 Savings and Efficiency Proposals, item 18 PDF 330 KB
- Revenue Budget 2022-23 App2 Sales Fees and Charges, item 18 PDF 248 KB
- Revenue Budget 2022-23 App3 Legal background to setting the Revenue Budget and Council Tax, item 18 PDF 281 KB
- Revenue Budget 2022-23 App4 Reserve Schedule, item 18 PDF 374 KB
Minutes:
The Executive considered a report of the Deputy Chief Executive and City Treasurer, which set out the budget proposals for 2022/23 based on the outcome of the Final Local Government Finance Settlement, which had been released on 7 February 2022.
The budget report considered at the 17 November 2021 meeting of Executive set out the funding proposals for unavoidable cost pressures to cover the rising costs of inflation and specific service pressures that had been identified, resulting in £7.7m of efficiency measures required to deliver a balanced budget. Of these measures £4,017m relates to new savings proposed, these were listed at Appendix 1 of the report. A further £3.716m related to the following mitigations:
· The Adult Social care budget had been adjusted by £2m for the overestimated impact of the pandemic on care home places. There remained £9.3m to meet the estimated costs of ongoing COVID-19 related demand.
· Homelessness - It was not expected that the planned £1.7m per annum demand increase that was originally budgeted for 2022/23 would be required and this had now been removed from the budget assumptions, although the position would be kept under review. To manage risk in this area a £1.5m homelessness contingency reserve remained as well as the £7m which was added to the initial 2021/22 budget to reflect the additional impact of COVID-19 on demand for homelessness services, in anticipation of the impact of the removal of the universal credit uplift and the tenant eviction ban ending.
Whilst the Provisional Finance Settlement was at the positive end of expectations and enabled a balanced budget to be proposed, the funding for local government was ‘front loaded’ with all the funding announced as part of the spending review being received in 2022/23 with no further increases in line with inflation or demographic pressures for the following two years. This put further pressure on 2023/24 and 2024/25 financial years and significant budget cuts would need to be delivered over the Spending Review period to set a balanced budget:-
Impact of settlement announcements on budget gap |
|||
|
2022/23 |
2023/24 |
2024/25 |
|
£,000 |
£,000 |
£,000 |
Forecast Shortfall / (surplus) reported to Executive 17 November 21 |
(60) |
57,139 |
78,204 |
Net Changes following settlement |
(479) |
(16,209) |
(16,607) |
Application of additional smoothing |
|
(4,076) |
(4,000) |
Revised forecast Shortfall / (surplus) to Executive 17 January 22 |
(539) |
36,854 |
57,597 |
The report to 17 January 2022 Executive set out that the funding announced for 2022/23 made available £12m to fund additional pressures, emerging risks and new priorities, and that, in line with the previously agreed approach, this was used across a three-year period In addition, the draft budget position reflected a tighter estimated financial position and included £7.8m efficiencies and funding for unavoidable and specific budget pressures only. The following reflected these pressures, resident priorities and those in the updated Corporate Plan:-
Summary of proposed Investments |
|||
|
Total 22/23 |
Total 23/24 |
Total 24/25 |
|
£’000 |
£’000 |
£’000 |
Improving basic services and street cleaning |
700 |
1,700 |
1,700 |
Investment in Youth Provision |
500 |
500 |
500 |
Zero Carbon investment |