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Apologies Minutes: Apologies were received from Cllr Bick. |
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Declarations of Interest Minutes:
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Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 17 November 2025 were approved as a correct record and signed by the Chair. |
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Public Questions Minutes: There were no public questions. |
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Annual Governance Statement 2024/25 Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee received a report presenting the Annual
Governance Statement (AGS) for 2024/2025, and the Local Code of Corporate
Governance, for consideration by the Committee. The report detailed the annual
review of effectiveness, provided updates on the progress from the previous
year, communicated any new governance issues, and provided an update of the
Local Code of Corporate Governance. In response to members’ questions, the Chief Audit Executive
said: i.
The proposed Development Corporation could be
reflected in the next version of the AGS. ii.
With regard to delays
in the timing of the Statement of Accounts, backstop arrangements had been put
in place to help all councils recover. iii.
The AGS was published as draft in June 2025 and
is continuously updated until final approval. iv. Recognised
the importance of training on governance for new and existing staff members.
Training was regularly promoted and officers could suggest items for inclusion
in the Council’s learning and development programme. Training budgets did cover
external courses. v.
There had been challenges in compiling the
document with regard to the change in governance
arrangements at the Council during the year. The document reflected what was in
place during the year and the change to a Cabinet model had not been included
in the Role and Responsibilities section. The change is included later as a
significant event, as it was also captured in the Review of Effectiveness
section. vi. The
Chief Audit Executive would get back to members with specific dates of the
Engagement Survey referenced in the document, but confirmed it was within
2024/25. He would also engage with the People Team for any available data on
survey completions. vii. Updates
since June 2025 were included as tracked changes in the report for members. A
final version without the tracking would be uploaded to the Council’s website. viii.
There was an opportunity in the lead up to the
next AGS to review how the effectiveness of partnerships with Cambridge
Investment Partnership and The Cambridge City Housing Company is best captured
in the document. ix. Clarified
that Cambridge Live was included as it was dormant in the last set of accounts
but had now been fully dissolved. Resolved
(unanimously) to: i.
Approve the Annual Governance Statement (AGS) in
advance of the Statement of Accounts. ii.
Note the arrangements for compiling, reporting
on and approving the AGS; and the review of
effectiveness. iii.
Note the amendments to the updated Local Code of
Corporate Governance. |
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Statement of Accounts 2024/25 Additional documents:
Minutes: The committee received a report from the Head of Finance regarding
the external audit conclusions and approval of the statement of accounts. In response to members’ questions the Chief Finance Officer,
Head of Finance and a Director from EY said the following: i.
The National Audit Office (NAO) indicative
target date for an Unqualified Opinion was 2026/27, however this may extend to
2028/29. The NAO timetable was based on a Council whose assurance buildback
began in 2023/24, but audit work actually began a year later, so the Council
had always been a year behind. The Council was committed to do everything
possible in working with auditors to achieve the unqualified opinion in
2027/28. ii.
Addressing concerns about the impact of Local
Government Reorganisation (LGR) on the team’s workload, the Chief Finance
Officer confirmed that £2.5million had been allocated to LGR costs in the draft
budget which would be taken to Full Council on 26 February 2026 and that a
proportion of this would be used to bring in resource to focus on LGR or to
backfill for permanent staff. iii.
Controls were in place over the journals to
allow the accounts to be produced, but it had been difficult to submit evidence
on sample transactions in the format required by the auditors within the
required timeframes. iv. Statutory
recommendations under Schedule 7 had been considered, but the Council was on a
journey of improvement and the increasing strength of the finance team could
lead to the removal of consideration of recommendations in future. v.
The Head of Finance would investigate a query
regarding the number of houses listed on page 100 of the report and would get
back to members. vi. Information
relating to the buying out of leaseholders would be shown within the narrative
report under the relevant portfolio holder. vii. With
regard to comparisons with other authorities, EY plan to produce a report once
analysis of sets of audits had taken place, however delays did start around
Covid-19 and they exist on both sides of the audit spectrum. Cambridge City
Council was not alone in this journey. viii.
Officers confirmed sector-wide issues around
audit backlog and that EY had rated preparation of accounts and quality of
accounts as green, however acknowledged that some of the audit readiness was
not where officers would like it to be. ix. The
WGA assurance statement would be submitted to the NAO; however the NAO could
request additional procedures to be performed on the consolidation schedule,
which is why the audit could not be formally closed. x.
The ‘right of use’ assets related to situations
where the Council had leased assets over a period of more than 12 months,
therefore a valuation of the assets must be included on the balance sheet. This
was the first year of inclusion of this accounting standard. xi. The report is considered by Civic Affairs and Audit Committee before Cabinet as it is the responsible committee for governance of the audit process. Acknowledged tight timeframes to get ... view the full minutes text for item 26/6/Civ |
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Civic Protocols and Updates Additional documents:
Minutes: The committee received a report from the Democratic Services
Manager regarding civic functions at Cambridge City Council. Councillors made the following comments in response to the
report: i.
Noted the importance of digitising civic
information that currently exists only in printed format prior to Local
Government Reorganisation (LGR). ii.
Holding the Office of Mayor was a privilege that
would be difficult without a Mayoress, therefore the role of Mayoress/Consort
should be officially recognised. A suggestion was made that a lapel pin be
given to any Mayoress or Consort at the end of their term. iii.
Suggested that the term ‘City’ should be
included in the name of any future local authority for Cambridge. iv.
There had been a strong link between the Council
and No.104 (City of Cambridge) Squadron Royal Air Force Air Cadets for many
years and now would be the opportune time to formally recognise this link. v.
Would it be possible to request civic visits in
future from members of the royal family and some celebrities? The Democratic Services Manager said the following in
response to Members’ questions: i.
Acknowledged member comments on the importance
of recognising the contribution of the Mayoress or Mayor’s Consort and agreed
to bring a proposal back to committee on this, which would include
clarification on backdating the recognition. ii.
Acknowledged the uncertainty around LGR and the
name of any future authority. iii.
Confirmed that under proposal B, which the
Council had submitted to government, the structural change orders would include
the Mayoralty and Civic Regalia. iv. Explained
that royal visits are the protocol of the Lord Lieutenant’s Office and are
tabled years in advance. v.
Agreed that requests for special guests could be
taken on a case-by-case basis, taking into account relevance to Cambridge City.
Councillor Bennett proposed an amendment to the
recommendations to include that
the Committee should re-affirm the Council’s desire that the Mayoralty continue
to exist in a new authority following LGR. This
amendment was carried unanimously. Resolved
(unanimously) to: i.
Comment on the Civic functions of Cambridge City
Council and provide feedback to support their current development. ii.
Note the current flag flying protocol and provide
any comment to officers. iii.
Note that further reports on the Council’s Civic
functions, particularly in light of Local Government Reorganisation, will be
presented to the committee at an appropriate time. iv. Recommend
to Full Council that the City’s Coat of Arms can be used by No.104 (City of
Cambridge) Squadron Royal Air Force Air Cadets. v. Support
the honouring of the Mayoress or Consort moving forward for their work in
supporting the Mayor during their year in office. vi. Re-affirm the Council’s desire that
the Mayoralty continue to exist in a new authority following local government
reorganisation. |
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Additional documents: Minutes: The Committee reviewed the work plan and suggested that ongoing work
around statutory accounts should be added for future meetings. |