By RD on Wednesday, 10 August 2022
Category: NALC blog

A parish council's failings — A cautionary tale from the Smaller Authorities' Audit Appointments

AUTHOR: MIKE ATTENBOROUGH-COX, CHAIR OF THE SMALLER AUTHORTIES' AUDIT APPOINTMENTS


A complaint was received by the external auditor from a parish council in the southwest that had received a Public Interest Report and invoice for associated charges for 2020/21. The parish council levied a precept of £10k for the past two years.

However, the previous clerk had left in January 2021, and the email address which contained the parish council name was a bt.internet account personal to the clerk, which, when the clerk departed, became dormant. The telephone number was also the personal mobile for the previous clerk, which was no longer in use.

The council website had not been updated since 2018/19 and still advertised the email and telephone number of the previous clerk. A new clerk was appointed in March 2022, although whilst the new clerk set up another email in the council's name, it was not published anywhere and was again linked to a personal Gmail account accessed only by the clerk.

Apparently and surprisingly, neither the new clerk nor the council realised they were required to complete, approve, submit and publish an Annual Governance and Accountability Report (AGAR). After no contact from the council at all for the audit year 2020/21, a Public Interest Report was issued in December 2021. No minutes appear to have been taken or published between January 2021 and March 2022, no AGAR has ever been published on the website, and the auditor's invoice for 2019/20 also remained unpaid.

Eventually, contact was made with the chair, who then complained about the Public Interest Report, although admitted no AGAR or accounts had been prepared or approved by the council. It was claimed the clerk had been under pressure, and the chair objected to the issue of a Public Interest Report and associated charges, which are now payable.

What went wrong

  1. The council did not have a generic email address despite numerous reminders by NALC, SLCC and SAAA that all smaller bodies should have a generic email address which can be accessed by council members other than the clerk.
  2. The council, surprisingly, did not complete and publish an AGAR.
  3. The council appears not to be aware of its legal responsibilities and failed to be accountable to the community it represents.
  4. Notice of Public Rights: the internal auditors' Annual Report, Governance Statement and Accounting Statements were not published hence electors' rights were frustrated.
  5. It would appear that the council's internal auditor failed in their duty (assuming the council had appointed an internal auditor) to complete the internal auditors' Annual Report, included within the AGAR, and report to the council. The internal auditors' report includes:

Consequences

  1. The council must pay outstanding invoices for reminder letters and the Public Interest Report, £280 plus VAT. As a result, the council will be required to have a Limited Assurance Review in 2021/22, costing £200 plus VAT, all of which could have been avoided.
  2. If the council fails to pay the outstanding invoices and statutory fees, legal action will be taken to collect the debt, and the council will incur additional charges.
  3. The community will now be aware of the council's failure, given the Public Interest Report has to be published. 
  4. A copy of the Public Interest Report will be sent to the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.