Finance and General Purposes Committee Minutes 9 May 2024
Finance and General Purposes Committee Minutes 9 May 2024
Corporation and Committee Minutes- Finance and General Purposes Committee Minutes 9 May 2024
Minutes of a meeting of the board of Leicester Corporation: Finance and general purposes committee
Held on 9 May 2024
Present: Danielle Gillett (Chair), Chan Kataria, Lesley Giles, Verity Hancock, Lee Soden, Robert Radford
In attendance: Louise Hazel - Director of Governance and Policy, Shabir Ismail - Deputy Principal/CEO, Della Sewell* - Director of HR, Shaun Curtis - Director of Estates and Campus Services (item 5), Harshad Taylor* - Director of IT (item 4)
* Joined via Teams
Declaration of interest
1.1 There were no declarations of interest.
Apologies for absence
2.1 There were no apologies for absence.
Minutes of previous meetings and matter arising
3.1 The minutes of the meeting held on 7 March 2024 were received and
agreed.
3.2 The confidential minutes of the meeting held on 7 March 2024 were received and agreed.
Digital strategy review
4.1 The Director of IT presented a report on progress with the Digital Strategy. The
following points were highlighted.
4.1.1 An update on the KPIs in the strategy was given. More IT suites had
been created than originally planned; a range of capital funding
sources had enabled this.
4.1.2 There had not yet been movement on the number of MIEEs because
of staffing changes in the Quality team but this was now being
progressed.
4.1.3 The uptake of Boxphish (cyber security) training had not been as high
as planned. This was an important part of the College’s cyber security
controls and so it would be made mandatory for staff. The cyber
security attack on the City Council would be cited as an example of the
risks.
4.1.4 Smoothwall had been implemented and enabled the rapid notifications
of any concerning issues with different levels of notification according
to the seriousness of the incident. This was working well.
4.1.5 The SLA target had not been met largely due to staffing issues in the
IT team earlier in the year but the team was now almost at full
complement and so it was expected this could be met. There had
been positive feedback in the staff survey and all tickets were
resolved.
4.1.6 In terms of accessibility tools, the College would be asking JISC to
review the tools used from a student and staff point of view; feedback
from staff and students would also be sought.
4.1.7 Capital investment was still needed. There were now many devices,
bought during the pandemic which were coming to end of life and/or
would not work with Windows 11 and needed replacing in order to
comply with Cyber Essentials (CE) requirements. The cost of replacing
them was estimated at £524k. The server infrastructure was out of
support and also needed replacing at a cost of £350k. Capital grants
would be used wherever possible to fund the new equipment.
4.1.8 A capital budget was being developed which would include the server
costs. The College was required to hold or be working towards CE but
the requirements for this and CE+ were now much harder to meet. It
might be necessary to fund the replacements over two years in order
to meet CE but achieving CE+ was unlikely to be possible.
4.2 Governors asked a number of questions including:
4.2.1 The new IT rooms looked great but how were they being
promoted to students so they knew when they could use them?
Feedback was that they were locked. The rooms had been created
in response to curriculum need, they were not intended as open
access and were kept locked to ensure equipment was safe. Students
could use the libraries which had open access.
4.2.2 How much were they being used? There was high demand and the
rooms would be fully timetabled for 2024/25 and so utilisation could be
monitored.
4.2.3 Could spend against the £524k replacement costs be prioritised
to reduce the costs in 2024/25? This would be done; some spend
might be pushed into 2025/26.
4.2.4 When would surveys be completed to get views on the
accessibility tools? A date for this had not been agreed.
4.2.5 What was the worst outcome of delaying the MIEE rollout? This
did not have any great risk; it was more about enhancing existing skills
and improving productivity.
4.2.6 At what stage would non-completion of cyber security training be
escalated? As with other mandatory training, this would be taken up
the management chain and could ultimately result in disciplinary
action. This approach was working well with other training. Not all staff
would be using computers regularly and so it might not be appropriate
for them to be required to undertake the modules.
4.2.7 What had been the outcome of the internal audit of IT disaster
recovery? This had been an advisory review. No major concerns
were raised and the minor recommendations were being actioned
4.2.8 CE was an important and helpful defence but there was a balance
to be struck between the costs and benefits of CE+. Agreed, few
colleges had CE+. The College would not compromise on any
vulnerabilities but needed to balance the investment required with the
value of having CE+.
4.2.9 What was the impact of not having CE+? There was no major
impact although the College needed to be at least working towards CE
to meet its ESFA contract.
4.2.10 Did the KPIs sufficiently capture progress and manage risks, for
example the staffing issues? The staffing issues had been
addressed by working with the HR team to introduce market
supplements which was proving effective.
4.2.11 What performance management and tracking took place? KPI
monitoring had resulted in interventions. The Digital Strategy
Committee monitored progress with key priorities and actions and
reviewed whether additional resources were needed. The ticketing
system also enabled a triangulation and identification of any potential
issues for the student or staff experience.
4.2.12 Who was on the Digital Strategy Committee? The Deputy Principal
and Directors of IT, HR, Governance and Policy and Quality.
Membership would be extended to include curriculum.
4.2.13 Did the team employ any apprentices? One apprentice would
shortly be joining the information analysts team.
4.3 Members noted the report on progress with the Digital Strategy and
requested an update in a year’s time.
Capital update
5.1 The Director of Estates and Campus Services presented an update on the
capital programme. The following points were highlighted.
5.1.1 An update on current capital projects was provided. The majority were
on track and on budget.
5.1.2 The Office for Students (OfS) funded aeronautical project (£5.58
million) was in progress, planning was expected to be finalised on 20
May and tenders would be issues on 13 May with a five week
deadline. Current cost estimates were indicating a potential overspend
but it was hard to predict where tenders would come in.
5.1.3 The fabrication and welding project would complete next week.
Timelines had slipped because the original contractor had gone bust.
5.1.4 The T level electro technical project was due for planning in May.
5.1.5 The APC boundary fence had been delayed in planning for a long time
but was expected to be completed over the summer
5.2 Governors asked a number of questions including:
5.2.1 Had a new venue for painting and decorating been agreed? It had.
5.2.2 What was the market intelligence about where quotes would
come in? It was really hard to tell. The OfS project was the one the
College was most nervous about because of the cost and scale but
once tenders were in, the position would be clearer. If necessary, the
OfS might need to be asked for additional funding or the other capital
commitments might need to be reviewed.
5.2.3 Was the OfS likely to agree this? It was unknown at this stage.
There was a process which would need to be gone through.
5.3 Members noted the capital update.
Holiday pay update - CONFIDENTIAL
Finance report (Period 8)
7.1 The Deputy Principal presented the finance report (period 8). The following
points were highlighted.
7.1.1 The year to date result was an operating deficit after restructuring
costs of £1,506k compared to the budgeted deficit of £1,390k.
7.1.2 16-18 learner student numbers were above allocation by 214 students,
and the College would receive additional in year funding for this. Set
against this would be a clawback for the shortfall in T level students.
7.1.3 Indications were that the College would achieve its AEB target and
should even exceed it. The data return showed an increase of 13%
compared to the same point last year.
7.1.4 Apprenticeship income was currently in line with the revised target but
EPA completion was still uncertain.
7.1.5 HE income overall was expected to fall short of the autumn reforecast
target following the second census date.
7.1.6 A spring reforecast was undertaken in which the expected Total
Comprehensive Income after restructuring costs decreased by £156k,
from a deficit of £946k to a deficit of £1,102k.
7.1.7 Financial health remained ‘requires improvement’. The spring
reforecast resulted in a breach of one of the bank covenants, although
an email had now been received confirming that the bank would either
waive the test for the DSC covenant again for 2024, returning to 1.5%
thereafter or reduce the testing threshold to 110%, depending on the
College’s preference. The implications of this were being modelled but
it was likely that the College would choose the waiver.
7.2 Governors asked a number of questions including:
7.2.1 Was the position still a million down? It was although this was
planned and the EDITDA was positive so the College was generating
cash and would move to a more positive position for 2024/25.
7.2.2 Would the waiver be a temporary suspension for this year only? It
would; it was unlikely the bank would agree it for another year.
7.2.3 It was hard to relate the commentary on capital expenditure with
the capital update report. Was there confidence that all
expenditure was captured. The report included projects that ran
across multiple years whereas the management accounts showed this
year only. Spend was monitored in year and minor adjustments
approved by ELT; any material changes would be brought to F&GP.
There was confidence that all projects were on track.
7.2.4 What was the reason for variance in non-pay? It had been
assumed that in-year savings would need to be made. Some savings
had been achieved but there were additional non-pay costs notably
exam fees.
7.2.5 Was the position likely to improve between now and year end? It
was unlikely although there would be some movements. The AEB
remained hard to predict.
Members noted the Period 8 finance report.
Tuition fees 2024/25
9.1 The Deputy Principal presented the Tuition Fees Policy for 2024/25. The
following points were highlighted.
9.1.1 The policy was consistent with the ESFA funding guidance for
2024/25.
9.1.2 Changes proposed included a move to calculating course fees by
qualifications rather than hourly rate, as required by the EBS
transformation project.
9.1.3 Fees for unfunded students would be set at the ESFA methodology full
funded rate.
9.1.4 As part of the EBS changes, instalment plans could not be started at
enrolment. In order to be able to collect the fee one month before the
student finished their course, the number of instalments needed to be
reduced so for students whose fees were greater than £895 they
would pay over nine instalments, rather than ten.
9.1.5 For unauthorised absence at functional skills, ESOL and skills for life
exams, students would be charged a £5 non-attendance fee to
encourage better attendance at exams.
9.2 Members approved the Tuition Fee Policy for 2024/25
Bad debt write off
10.1 The Deputy Principal presented a paper requesting authority to write-off debts
that were considered uncollectable. The following points were highlighted:
10.1.1 It was proposed that one debt of £1,483 was written off.
10.1.2 The debts had been chased as far as possible and were now
considered to be uncollectable.
10.1.3 During the academic year to date, from 1 August 2023, there had been
write offs of £14,057. With this recommendation, the cumulative total
for the year would be £15,540
10.2 Members considered the paper and agreed to approve the write-off of
uncollectable debt of £1,483.
Any other business - CONFIDENTIAL
Waivers of financial regulations
12.1 Members received and noted the report on waivers of financial regulations
College financial handbook
13.1 Members received and noted the College Financial handbook.
ESFA Financial dashboard
14.1 Members received and noted the ESFA Financial dashboard.
Dates of next meetings
27 June 2024