Archived decisions

 

Hampshire County Council

    I

Cabinet

Item 4

 

10 February 2003

 

Revenue Budget and Precept 2003/04

 

Report of the County Treasurer

Contact: Jon Pittam, ext 7400

PART A

1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

    Introduction

1.1 This report sets the scene for decisions on the 2003/04 revenue budget and council tax, based on the budget guidelines approved on 23 December 2002 and 6 January 2003.

1.2 Part A is the executive summary of the budget and is intended to be self-standing. More information can be found in Part B, the remainder of the report and Part C the appendices to the report (required for Council recommendations).

Summary of proposed budget

1.3 Budget guidelines were set within the agreed budget strategy, broadly providing for base budgets plus passported cash increases for schools and Social Services. The current budget proposals include £18m for other inescapable pressures and legislative requirements which results in:

    · a budget of £1,032.1m, which is 8.2% more than the 2002/03 budget

    · council tax of £844.56, which is 15% more than in 2002/03, or £2 per week per band D council tax payer

    · spending which is £37.5m, or 3.8% above Formula Spending Share (FSS), compared with 6.0% above Standard Spending Assessment (SSA) in 2002/03.

1.4 A council tax increase of up to 15% has been projected because of the changes in the Government grant formula which has redistributed grant away from the south east to more urban areas in the north and midlands. Government grant has increased in cash terms by £22.9m (3.8%) in 2003/04, which is just above the minimum level to allow a 3.2% increase in per pupil funding in 2003/04.

1.5 It is anticipated that in real terms the Council will lose £48m in Government grant in 2003/04 and successive years. It is estimated that the grant loss in 2003/04, compared with what it would have been before the formula changes, is £21.0m. That is equivalent to 6% on the council tax. Without that grant loss the council tax rise would have been around 9%, more in line with the council tax increase required for the Government's planned level of spending increase.

1.6 As grant support is fixed, no matter what the Council budgets, any increase above 3.8% all falls on the income provided by council tax. There is no Government grant support towards a substantial part of its 5.7% increase in formula funding share for the Council, other than for the schools budget. The Cabinet has agreed that it would be damaging to reduce its budget for all its other services, but will continue to seek efficiency savings and maximise income from charging for services where this is possible.

1.7 Additional flexibility was available within the projected 15% council tax increase to set aside more resources for inescapable pressures and legislative requirements. These include sustaining roads and footway maintenance and improving performance on domiciliary social care for older people (where resources have otherwise been constrained by the inescapable pressures on services for children, adults and residential care for older people).

1.8 The additional flexibility allowed in December compared with the November projection arose from the higher floor (3.8% compared with 2.5% initially projected - although that just defers some of the grant loss for one year) and differences in the assumed national council tax. Since December increases in net tax base and a higher collection fund surplus have occurred. The proposed budget now takes into account: all the pick-ups from tax base and council tax calculations; and the use of redeployment opportunities and passported cash increases which were previously unallocated within the budget guidelines set for Executive Members to prepare their budget proposals. Changes to Government support and FSS in the grant settlement could still have an effect, probably only marginal, on the council tax increase.

1.9 Despite all these changes provisional information suggests that the Council's budget increase will be below the median for county councils. Although the council tax rise will be above the median, it will be below most other counties in the south and south east which have lost grant because of changes in area cost adjustment and from resource equalisation. The resultant council tax will probably be lower than average, despite the impact of grant loss in 2003/04, and having the second lowest increase in SSA in 2002/03.

Original budget guidelines

1.10 Executive Members have put forward service budgets constructed in accordance with the budget strategy and budget guidelines agreed in December 2002 which results in:

    · a base budget of £996.8 m (an increase of 4.5%) which is the continuation of the current financial policies of the County Council

    · priority increases over the base budget of passported cash increases in line with the Government's FSS increase of

      - £9.6m for the Schools budget (5.9% FSS cash increase)

      - £6.6m for Social Services (£1m above 6.8% FSS cash increase)

      - £0.8m for the central share

    · schools will also receive a 19% increase in the schools standard grant, paid direct to schools

    · although there remains uncertainty about grant amounts Social Services will in addition utilise the £8.9m cash increase in specific grants for local pressures instead of being constrained by previous ring-fencing restrictions

    · no cuts in services, but an overall efficiency improvement of £3.4m (0.4%)

    · an annual review of income on all services with increases in most charges at least in line with inflation.

1.11 The budget guidelines were set at £1,013.2m, a 6.3% increase in spending over 2002/03. A council tax rise of up to 15% was projected which allowed for further budget flexibility subject to: final information on the grant floors for 2003/04 and 2004/05; council tax base and collection fund assumptions; final budget proposals; and use of balances and reserves.

1.12 It was agreed that the Council's priorities and the views of Executive Members on services in preparing their budgets within the proposed guidelines, could be taken into account when recommending the budget to the County Council at this meeting. The Council could still vary its spending and council tax decisions, and it cannot be subject to capping because of its excellent status in the Comprehensive Performance Assessment.

Final RSG settlement

1.13 Details of the final Revenue Support Grant (RSG) settlement are expected on 3 February 2003. Despite written representations (with no reply) and a meeting with the Minister as part of a south east counties delegation, no changes of substance other than the usual data corrections are expected.

    Uncertainties

1.14 The teachers' pay award for 2003/04 has yet to be settled. Provision for an award of 3.5% has been made in the passported cash increase for schools, and further cover is available not only from a sum of £1.4m unallocated for staffing cost pressures in the schools budget but also from within the 19% increase in the Government's schools standard grant direct to schools. No further corporate provision is necessary.

1.15 Similarly the firefighters' pay award remains unsettled and any additional cost over 4% not met by modernisation savings may require extra provision in balances, if the Hampshire Fire and Rescue Authority (HFRA) subsequently require a supplementary estimate after setting its levy for 2003/04. The County Council, Portsmouth and Southampton City Councils have all asked the HFRA not to increase its levy beyond its base budget, and its current budget recommendations are broadly in line with this, subject of course to the uncertainty of the pay award.

1.16 Final flood protection precepts as well as the Fire levy are awaited.

Proposed budget

1.17 Details of the use of passported cash increases added to the base budget, the use of specific grants and redeployment of resources are set out in the main report, but summarised in the following paragraphs.

1.18 Use of the passported cash increase of £9.6m for the schools block is mainly to

    · replace terminated standards fund grants and provide the LEA share for new standards fund grants devolved to schools.

    · provide for recruitment and retention of staff and other staff cost pressures

1.19 Education propose to redeploy a further £1.3m of savings to meet other standard fund changes, ICT and other pressures in the LEA block.

1.20 Social Services will use its increase of £6.6m in the passported cash amount and an additional £8.9m from removing the ring fence on specific grants principally to meet additional capacity and price pressures on

    · residential care for older people

    · intermediate care for older people

    · adoption and family support

    · childrens' places in care

    · transitional age cases for adult services

1.21 Policy and Resources will use its £0.8m central share of passported cash increase for Schools and Social Services to meet additional price inflation of £0.5m on repairs and maintenance of buildings, to provide for the new requirements on health scrutiny and to write off the accumulated overspend on Hampshire Training Solutions.

1.22 Environment will redeploy resources of £410,000 for the natural resources initiative and planning pressures. Policy and Resources will redeploy £161,000 towards some of its pressures. Recreation and Heritage will transfer £0.5m to capital for Library/Discovery Centre improvements and a further £1m to improve services and expand its user base

1.23 Redeployments therefore total £3.4m as shown below.

    Table 1: Redeployment of resources in 2003/04 budget

     

    £'000

       

    Education (LEA Block)

    1,320

    Environment

    410

    Policy and Resources

    161

    Recreation and Heritage

    1,543

     

    -------

    3,434

    -------

1.24 It is now proposed to add £18.4m (1.9%) above the budget guidelines and set a budget at £1,032.1m which is a total 8.2% budget increase. This will result in a 15% council tax rise as projected. The principal reasons for this further budget increase are inescapable pressures and legislative requirements as summarised in the next table and reported in detail in the main report.

    Table 2: Inescapable pressures and legislative requirements

     

    £m

    care for older people to address delays in hospital discharges

    3.5

    home care for older people to meet performance targets

    3.5

    sustaining repairs of local roads and footways

    3.5

    other pressures across all services, including bus subsidies, refrigerators, Countryside and Right of Way Act , ICT and Enterprise project costs, HFRA levy etc

    3.6

    transfer to reserve for 2004/05 grant loss to avoid cuts in services and excessive council tax rise in 2004/05

    4.3

     

    -------

    18.4

    -------

1.25 The proposed total budget requirement can be summarised as below:

    Table 3: 2003/04 Budget Increase

     

    Total

     

    Increase

     

    £m

     

    %

    2002/03 budget

    920.5

       

    Adjustment for function and specific grant changes

    32.9

       
     

    --------

    953.4

       

    Inflation

    37.1

     

    3.9

    Base budget commitments

    6.3

     

    0.6

    Base budget

    --------

    996.8

     

    --------

    4.5

    Passporting for schools and FSS cash increase for social services

    16.9

     

    1.8

    Budget Guidelines

    --------

    1,013.7

     

    --------

    6.3

    Grant equalisation reserve

    4.4

     

    0.4

    Inescapable and legislative pressures

    14.0

     

    1.5

    2003/04 proposed budget

    --------

    1,032.1--------

     

    --------

    8.2

    --------

Council Tax

1.26 The total budget requirement can be met as below:

Table 4: Precept - met by council tax payers

     

    Total

     

    Increase

     

    £m

     

    %

    Budget requirement

    1032.1

     

    8.2

    Government grant support

    -628.0

     

    3.8

    Net surplus on collection funds

    -2.9

       

    Precept

    --------

    401.2

    --------

       
           

    Tax Band D equivalent dwellings

    475,062

       

    Council tax per Band D

    £844.56

     

    15%

    Risk Management

1.27 The principal risk in the budget remains the loss of grant in 2004/05 and 2005/06. A contribution to the new grant equalisation reserve is proposed which can be used to offset part of the expected grant loss in those years. In this respect the 2003/04 budget has to be a three year view because of the floor protection applied to grant loss in 2003/04. The alternative is either to plan service cuts for 2004/05 and 2005/06 or have a further excessive council tax rise in that year. The budget proposal aims to bring service stability back into 2004/05 despite the anticipated extra grant loss in that year.

    Balances

1.28 Projected balances at 31 March 2004 are £7.9m, £1.7m more than the normal minimum prudent level of 0.6%. This increase provides flexibility against the uncertain cost of the firefighters' pay award and other risks. The increase over the previous budgeted minimum is due to the adjustment made with the 2001/02 final accounts to the Fire pensions reserve, and £0.4m from additional interest on revenue balances. These additional resources were added to balances because of the anticipated grant loss in 2003/04.

Earmarked reserves

1.29 Earmarked reserves at 31 March 2004 are estimated at £62.0m, £22.0m more than budgeted at 31 March 2003 but £6.8m lower than total earmarked reserves at 31 March 2002. The main variations are the use of the capital reserve since 31 March 2002, and the creation of the grant equalisation and bed-blocking reserves.

    Budget Consultation

1.30 No further budget consultation has been carried out because of the fundamental changes caused by Government grant loss which were fully explained in the Hands off Hampshire campaign in projecting a 15% council tax rise. The Leader gave further consideration to the use of a community workshop and/or a representative public telephone survey and/or a letter inviting comments through the website. It was decided that there was insufficient time, given the lateness of the settlement and incomplete information, to carry out further surveys on the level of the council tax. Previous MORI surveys, use of the Citizen's Panel and the Hands off Hampshire campaign have provided enough consultation information on

    · the priorities between services,

    · areas where the public expect improvements in services, or for pressures or backlogs to be met

    · together with a view on the balance between cutting services to offset the Government grant loss or to raise the council tax instead

    Three year financial forecast

1.31 The budget report presents a very provisional forecast of budget and council tax rises in 2004/05 and 2005/06 compared with 2003/04. There are still many uncertainties, not least the level of the floor and potential further grant loss in 2004/05. Further changes in function or specific grants will affect this forecast. However this forecast forms a starting point for planning and public consultation on the budget strategy for 2004/05 and 2005/06.

    Recommendations

1.32 The recommendations on the budget and council tax to Council are contained in the summary decision sheet which precedes Part A of this report.

    Detailed report and appendices

1.33 Part B of the report follows and contains more information and appendices, which both support the recommendations.

    PART B

    DETAILED REPORT ON REVENUE BUDGET AND PRECEPT 2003/04

2. 2002/03 revised budget

2.1 There is no formal revised estimate review as budgets are monitored during the year and changes reported as they occur. All services are controlling estimates to their cash limits for 2002/03.

    Education

2.2 An underspending of £1.3m is predicted on Education mainly from savings on home to school transport, centrally held budgets, youth service, training and curriculum development and contingencies. This is after a transfer to capital of £0.7m for Education's contribution to the rebuilding costs of St Bedes and £190,000 for education otherwise than at school. The Council's policy is to allow 100% of planned savings to be carried forward, and 50% of any unplanned savings accrued at year end. Although these savings have been notified in advance, they cannot all be described as planned as contingencies are not fully required. Nevertheless the carry forward will considerably aid budget pressures on Education in 2003/04 and it is therefore recommended that the underspending be carried forward and redeployed to meet budget pressures in 2003/04 (£867,000) and 2004/05 (£417,000).

    Environment

2.3 Expenditure on Environment is expected to be contained within the cash limit other than £300,000 on bus subsidies, £90,000 on the disposal of abandoned vehicles and some £400,000 on the storage and disposal of fridges in excess of the funding made available. Nonetheless as a result of lower growth in waste volumes in 2002/03 it should be possible to contain the additional cost of fridges within the contingency allocation of £3m for the waste management contract. Subject to the overall final outturn on Environment, it is recommended that provision of £390,000 now be made against the extra balances set aside in the 2002/03 budget, and adjusted when the final accounts are reported to Cabinet.

    Policy and Resources

2.4 A small net overspending of £14,000 is currently projected, but is expected to be managed down to the cash limit, although pressure remains on certain budget heads within the overall cash limit.

Recreation and Heritage

2.5 Expenditure is expected to be within the cash limit except for Milestones. Although management action is being taken it is unlikely to deal with what will become an accumulated deficit of £480,000 by 31 March 2003. Assuming that Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council agree to write off its 50% share, possibly subject to improved performance during 2003/04, it would be prudent to deal with this in balances against a contingency set aside to carry forward the total overspend of £324,000 at the end of March 2002.

Social Services

2.6 Increased demand across all services, with the main pressure on children and families and adults services, led to identified pressures of up to £3m at the last review. These pressures are being managed down as usual to the cash limit and the £2m set aside by Cabinet at its last meeting towards bed blocking will at least help in residential care for older people. An overspend at this year end remains a possibility which will need to be carried forward and set against the large increase proposed in the 2003/04 cash limit. It would not be appropriate to consider any further write off of overspend for Social Services given the 2003/04 outlook, the additional £2m set aside for 2002/03 and the large cash budget increases and write offs over the last few years.

Savings

2.7 Adjustments to balances are dealt with later in this report. The carry-forward of savings for Education needs to be approved as follows:

    Table 5: Proposed savings from 2002/03 to be carried forward and used

      to meet additional pressures in 2003/04 and 2004/05

       

      £'000

      Education

      1284

2.8 Savings of £3.2m are projected on non-cash-limited budgets, as follows:

    Table 6: Savings on other budgets

£'000

Increase in business rates lower than projected in budget

-138

Increase in flood protection levies lower than forecast

-90

Savings against central provision for Dibden Bay inquiry costs

-61

Lower interest rates than budgeted

-1,643

More interest on higher than projected balances, net of higher capital financing costs

-1,179

Other net savings

-84

---------

-3,195

---------

2.9 It is proposed that the business rate savings be transferred to the invest to save reserve to fund revaluation appeal costs and the remainder be added to balances and then allocated to the proposed grant equalisation reserve to offset part of the likely grant loss in 2004/05 and 2005/06.

2.10 The overall variations in spending projected in 2002/03 are summarised in Appendix 1.

3. 2003/04 Local Government Finance Settlement

3.1 Representations on the provisional settlement were discussed by Cabinet on 6 January 2003 and a letter sent to the Minister, with a copy to Hampshire MP's. All Cabinet members received a copy of this letter. No reply has been received to date.

3.2 The Leader was part of a delegation of south east counties which met the Minister.

3.3 Details of the final settlement were made available on 3 February 2003. Major changes were not expected. But in the event further losses in area cost adjustment were made.

3.4 The bar charts and maps presented to the Cabinet at the last meeting demonstrated how grant has been moved away from south east counties to urban areas in the north and midlands.

3.5 Without the effect of floors (and ceilings) this County Council would have lost grant in cash terms in 2003/04 as the bar chart demonstrates.

3.6 The Government has neither exemplified nor provided sufficient information to enable grant loss to be calculated precisely, let alone publicly stated the grant loss from the formula changes and resource equalisation for each authority.

3.7 The provisional estimate of grant loss was about £40-45m which was between the mid case (£35m) and worst case (£80m) grant losses exemplified from the earlier consultation exercise. The actual loss is now £48m following changes in final grant settlement.

.

3.8 If there was no floor (ie 3.5% increase) the County Council's grant for 2003/04 would have been £4,170,000 (0.7%) lower than in 2002/03. But with the floor there is a cash increase of £22.9m (3.8%) in grant (3.5% for floor; 0.3% for capital finance).

3.9 It is true for the Minister to say that the Council has not had a cash grant loss in 2003/04, but it is misleading as it is not enough in real terms to cover inflation across all services let alone the Government's increase in formula spending share (FSS).

3.10 The floor protects the Council by £27.1m from the extent of the total formula grant loss in cash terms in 2003/04. That amount is needed to cover the DfES commitment to ensure that there is a 3.2% increase in per pupil funding. There is nothing left for other services.

    Table 7: Cash grant increase in 2003/04

    2003/04

    £m

    Variation on 2002/03

    £m

    Adjusted grant received in 2002/03

    605.1

    Grant as calculated by main formula

    600.9

    - 4.2

    Extra grant received as result of Education and general grant floors

    27.1

    27.1

    Actual 2003/04 grant

    --------

    628.0

    --------

    --------

    22.9

    --------

3.11 The assumed loss of grant in the long term can therefore be calculated as shown in Table 8, and is £48.0m.

    Table 8: Total grant loss from formula changes

    £m

    Formula grant

    600.9

    Less grant based on county average increase in FSS and no resource equalisation

    648.9

    -------

    Calculated grant loss

    48.0

    -------

3.12 The loss of grant in 2003/04 is £20.9m as assessed next.

    Table 9: Loss of grant in 2003/04

    £m

    Actual grant

    628.0

    Less notional grant (as Table 3)

    648.9

    Grant loss in 2003/04

    --------

    20.9

    --------

3.13 If the floor is removed in 2004/05 the Council will lose the remaining £27.1m protection received in 2003/04. The position in 2004/05 may therefore look something like the following:

    Table 10: Grant position in 2004/05

Increase compared

with 2003/04

actual grant

    £m

    £m

    Underlying formula grant level for 2003/04

    600.9

    -27.1

    Forecast grant in 2004/05 with no floors

    631.0

    +3.0

    2.5% increase in actual grant support in 2004/05

    643.7

    +15.7

3.14 A 2.5% floor in 2004/05 would result in an extra £12.7m protection grant, compared with the underlying FSS increase of £3.0m, so that the total cash grant will go up by £15.7m in 2004/05 compared with the actual cash grant received in 2003/04. As protection grant in 2003/04 is £27.1m, the level of grant protection would be reduced by £14.4m. The longer term grant loss on these assumptions can be summarised as follows:

    Table 11: Summary of grant loss

Long-term grant loss

Grant loss during year

    £m

    £m

    2003/04

    48.0

    20.9

    2004/05

    48.0

    35.3

    2005/06

    48.0

    48.0

3.15 On this basis the further grant loss expected in 2004/05 is £14.4m, leaving £12.7m to be lost in 2005/06.

4. 2003/04 budget guidelines

4.1 The budget guidelines consisted of 23 recommendations agreed by the Cabinet at the last meeting. These are not repeated in the report, but the budget proposals submitted for consideration are fully compliant with the guidelines. Additions over the guidelines which have emerged in response to the inescapable pressures and legislative requirements, not previously contained within the tight definition of the starting point for the budget, are within the agreed budget strategy.

5. 2003/04 base budget

5.1 The adjusted base budget is £996.8m, an increase of 4.5% as shown in Table 12. This represents the continuation of the current financial policies of the County Council.

5.2 Details of the construction of the base budget, for services and for other budgets are set out in Appendix 2. The details of significant variations in service spending are contained in Annexes 1-5 of Appendix 2 as reported to Policy Review Committees and submitted by Executive Members to Cabinet within the budget guidelines.

5.3 Inflation and other assumptions were set out in the last Cabinet report.

5.4 The total base budget figure reported in December was £995.3m. The current assessment is £996.8m and the difference is explained by:

    · £1m added to base budget growth, but offset by an equivalent reduction in the extra cash increase in the passported amount for Social Services, in respect of the full year loss of income resulting from changes for non-residential care of older people.

    · other changes totally £0.5m, primarily an increase in capital financing charges based on updated assumptions about the use of credit approvals in 2002/03

5.5 the overall inflation increase is 3.9% which allows:

    · 4% for firefighters' pay in November 2002 and November 2003

    · projected 3.5% for teachers pay in April 2003

    · known 3.5% increase in other pay from April 2003

    · 2.5% on average for price changes (but supplemented later in passported cash increases for additional costs for purchasing social care, repairs and maintenance of buildings and in other inescapable pressures such as contract price increases in bus subsidies)

    · increase in employers' national insurance and pension contributions

5.6 The base budget is therefore as set out in Table 12

    Table 12: 2003/04 Base budget

December

February

Total

Total

Increase

£m

£m

%

920.5

2002/03 budget

920.5

32.9

Adjustment for function and specific grant changes in the settlement

32.9

--------

953.4

--------953.4

36.7

Inflation

37.1

3.9

5.2

Base budget commitments

6.3

0.6

---------

995.3

---------

Base budget, outturn prices

---------

996.8

---------

---------

4.5

---------

5.7 Inflation therefore adds just under 4% to the 2002/03 budget, and the base budget commitments mainly arise from the waste management contract costs, the full year effect of Fire budget growth in 2002/03 and the impact of additional credit approvals for capital financing of payments incurred in 2002/03.

5.8 The base budget can be summarised over services as follows:

    Table 13: 2003/04 base budget

Outturn prices

Cash

Increases over 2002/03

£m

%

Education

608.3

4.2

Environment

81.2

7.3

Policy and Resources

42.2

4.0

Recreation and Heritage

27.3

4.1

Social Services

222.1

3.8

Service cash limits

--------

981.1

--------

--------

4.4

--------

Revenue contributions to capital

26.1

2.5

Capital financing

29.7

10.4

Fire

40.8

4.7

Specific grants

-110.2

-

Other (central contingencies, flood protection, Magistrates' Courts, use of reserves)

29.3

6.4

Other budgets

--------

15.7

--------

5.9

Total base budget

--------

996.8

--------

--------

4.5

--------

6. Budget variations

6.1 In addition to the base budget, budget guidelines provided for

    · increases up to the Government's FSS cash increases for

      - passporting to Schools (£9.6m, or 5.9%)

      - Social Services (£6.6m, or 7.3%)

      - central share of both increases in Policy and Resources (£0.8m)

    · removal of the ring fence previously applied to £8.9m cash increase to specific grants for Social Services as well as existing grants (because of the excellent CPA status, but grants for schools still have ring fence constrictions)

    · Executive Members to report back on inescapable budget pressures and legislative requirements that cannot be absorbed within the budget guideline cash limits for services, with proposals for redeployment of resources to offset these costs

6.2 Total redeployments of £3.4m have been made as shown in Table 1, and details are set out in Appendix 3.

6.3 Additional inescapable pressures and legislative requirements have also been identified which add a further £18.4m to the budget guidelines, but within the original 15% projected council tax increase. These were summarised in Table 2.

6.4 It is now possible to summarise all these changes

    · from within the budget guidelines and

    · as additions to budget guidelines

    financed by

    · use of passported cash increases

    · redeployment of savings

    · the overall flexibility retained in the budget forecast

    in order to meet

    · pressing inescapable pressures

    · legislative requirements

    on top of the base budget.

    Table 14: Summary of inescapable pressures and legislative requirements

Increase over base budget met within guidelines

Net addition to guidelines

£'000

£'000

Education

Schools Block

replacement of terminated standards fund grants

3,910

    ·

other changes in standards fund grants requiring increased Council contribution

1,150

recruitment and retention

1,885

early years and childcare

165

behaviour intervention services

200

portage service

100

additional provision for staff cost pressures

1,420

other changes (MLD provision, cash protection for sixth forms and former grant maintained schools)

760

9,590

met by passported cash increase in budget guidelines

-9,590

---------

-

---------

LEA Block

standards fund changes

585

ICT

400

other

335

---------

1,320

met by carry forward of 2002/03 projected underspend

-867

reduction in budgeted contingencies

-453

---------

-

---------

Increase over base budget met within guidelines

Net addition to guidelines

£'000

£'000

Environment

Hampshire Natural Resources Initiative

150

150

minerals and waste local plan

100

strategic planning and local sustainability initiatives

160

410

met by savings

-410

---------

-

---------

bus subsidies, additional contract costs

500

cost of refrigerator storage and disposal, added to waste contingency

700

one-off increase in revenue contributions to capital for highway structural maintenance to sustain condition of non-principal road and footways maintenance

3500

Total Environment

---------

4,850

---------

Policy and Resources

Chief Executive

health scrutiny

100

Personnel and Training

write off of accumulated deficit on Hampshire Training Solutions (one-off)

150

Property, Business and Regulatory Services

repairs and maintenance of buildings; increased contract prices in excess of 2.5%

500

Additional costs of support services for schools above inflation factor

50

---------

800

Increase over base budget met within guidelines

Net addition to guidelines

£'000

£'000

Met by central share of passported cash increase for Schools and Social Services

-800

---------

-

---------

Chief Executive

policy unit research assistant to support the Leader

50

Personnel and Training

uplift in long-service award

27

Grants to voluntary organisations

34

Property, Business and Regulatory Services

additional coroners costs

50

---------

161

Met by redeployment from savings, including audit fee, deletion of extra cash for Dibden Bay inquiry and by reinstatement of emergency planning grant

-161

---------

-

---------

Chief Executive

Provision for research and consultation costs associated with the Regional Assemblies Preparation Bill, corporate performance work and set up of New Milton Information Centre

97

Personnel and Training

Leadership programme

100

Pay and benefits additional consultancy costs (one-off)

50

County Treasurers

Volumes, external changes in financial requirements and systems changes which cannot be absorbed in addition to benefits realisation from SAP.

300

Property, Business and Regulatory Services

office accommodation, additional pressures

100

county farms

40

regulatory services - new legislation

60

Total Policy and Resources

---------

747

---------

Increase over base budget met within guidelines

Net addition to guidelines

£'000

£'000

Recreation and Heritage

expanding user base

353

innovation and quality

209

market development

202

staff development

82

other, including Staunton Country Park and additional support for Milestones

197

revenue contributions to capital for library/discovery centre

500

Met by redeployment, including £0.5m from book fund

---------

1,543

-1,543

---------

-

---------

second phase of implementing the Countryside and Rights of Way Act, to improve access for recreational use

185

fair pay issues for appropriately qualified and experienced staff

200

expanded ICT use to meet e-government targets and user access to services

250

Total Recreation and Heritage

---------

635

---------

Social Services

extra capacity for older people

2300

revenue cost of intermediate care development

500

adoption and family support

600

children's placement pressures

2400

adults transitional age cases

1000

price increases over 2.5%

8000

other

700

---------

15,500

Increase over base budget met within guidelines

Net addition to guidelines

£'000

£'000

Met by cash increase in budget guidelines

-6,559

use of specific grants

-8,941

---------

-

---------

contingency for capacity, pricing and bed blocking for residential care of older people

3,500

extra provision to restore domiciliary home care services for older people to meet performance targets

3,500

Total Social Services

---------

7,000

---------

Enterprise Project

county-wide support costs for all

780

corporate business systems (procurement, finance, human resources) after the capitalised development period ends

Increase in HFRA levy

120

Grant equalisation reserve

contribution to reserve to equalise part of the grant loss in future years

4,257

Total increase in budget

---------

18,389

---------

    Efficiency improvements

6.5 No cuts in services have been made but an overall efficiency improvement of £3.4m (0.4%) is proposed. Details as shown in Appendix 4 and summarised below:

    Table 15: Efficiency improvements

£'000

Education

1687

Environment

493

Policy and Resources

496

Recreation and Heritage

352

Social Services

327

--------

3355

--------

    Annual review of income

6.6 Fees and charges have been raised at least in line with the non-pay inflation assumption, where there is scope to do so. Social Services has been constrained by the new Government guidelines on charging for non-residential services. This caused a £2m full year drop in income; of which 50% was offset by increased charges. This change has resulted in a substantial increase in the number of clients receiving free services and an estimated loss of income of around £1m per annum.

6.7 Details of income reviews and charges made are set out in Appendix 5 and in summary below:

    Table 16: Summary of income from fees and charges

Mandatory

Discretionary

Total

Charges

Charges

£'000

£'000

£'000

Education

1,943

933

2,876

Environment

103

5,381

5,484

Policy and Resources

83

5,752

5,835

Recreation and Heritage

-

5,960

5,960

Social Services

38,036

8,464

46,500

--------

40,165

--------

--------

26,490

--------

--------

66,655

--------

    1% and 1.5% savings

6.8 The Education and Social Care Executive Members were asked to report back on the implications of 1% and 1.5% reductions in the passported cash amount for the Schools block and Social Services; other Executive Members were asked to identify the scope for further savings and reductions in services.

6.9 The scope of these are identified in detail in Appendix 12 but no savings have been included in the proposed budget, apart from the redeployment of resources of £3.4m summarised in Table 1.

    Schools budget

6.10 The passported cash amount for schools, plus the schools standards grant results in an overall 6.1% increase, slightly above the increase in the FSS for schools.

    Table 17: Schools budget

Total

Increase

£'000

£m

%

Schools FSS

516.6

--------

28.5

--------

5.9

--------

County Council funded

    Schools Block

521.3

30.5

6.2

Government funded

    Schools Standard Grant forecast

18.5

3.5

23.3

    Standards fund and other forecast grants

35.1

-0.7

-2.0

Total increase in Schools

--------

574.9

--------

--------

33.3

--------

--------

6.1

--------

6.11 The proposed schools' budget has been agreed by the new Schools Forum and forwarded by the Education Executive Member to the Secretary of State by 31 January 2003 deadline.

6.12 Both the Education and Social Care Executive Members have reported back on the use of specific grants and the extent to which pressures can be absorbed.

7. Performance management

7.1 As part of the process of linking budgets more closely with performance management, proposals for additional spending should indicate measurable improvements in performance anticipated and any significant savings proposals should include a plan of how the proposal will be implemented.

7.2 This is a key feature of future assessment by District Audit and in updating the Comprehensive Performance Assessment. It is therefore necessary for all Executive Members to review their plans and monitor achievement against them during 2003/04 for all the proposed redeployment of resources set out in Table 14.

7.3 It is also recommended that business plans for the use of additional resources set aside for

    · care for older people to address delays in hospital discharges (£3.5m)

    · home care for older people to meet performance targets (£3.5m)

    · sustaining repairs of local roads and footways (£3.5m)

    be brought to the next Cabinet meeting and performance be tracked during 2003/04, with a performance review against outcomes before the amounts are rolled forward into the 2004/05 budget.

8. Fire

8.1 The Cabinet recommended that the Hampshire Fire and Rescue Authority should, in the light of its budget growth over the last two years and the uncertainty surrounding the settlement of the firefighters' pay award, be asked to

    · prepare its budget on the roll forward of current policies only, with no additional cost from new growth items

8.2 The Authority meets on 5 February 2003 and its current budget proposal is broadly consistent with this Council's request (and the similar requests from Portsmouth and Southampton).

8.3 The Authority proposes to give the constituent authorities notice that levies may be increased during 2003/04 for the amount of:

    · any underspend achieved by the Authority in 2002/03

    · the extra cost of the firefighters' pay awards which exceed the budgeted assumptions of 4% in each of November 2002 and November 2003 (if that cost is not covered by transitional funding or savings realisable in 2003/04)

8.4 Each 1% in pay costs the Authority £250,000 in a full year. A pay award costing 11% in 2003/04 would require a further levy of about £1m from the County Council over current assumptions.

9. Risk management

9.1 The single biggest risk remains the anticipated grant loss in 2004/05 and 2005/06. This is why a three year view needs to be taken in setting the 2003/04 budget to provide stability in the Council's finances. Around £15m is expected to be lost in grant in 2004/05 (see paragraph 3.15) on top of the assessed grant loss of £20.9m in 2003/04, together with a further £12m in 2005/06.

9.2 It appears unlikely that the floor for 2004/05 will be announced with the final grant settlement for 2003/04. This does not help forward financial planning, but an assumption can be made that this could be 2.5% in line with the Government's inflation assumption.

9.3 Grant loss of £27m is equivalent to a council tax rise of nearly 8%. As the forward financial forecast (paragraph 14) shows, a council tax rise, before grant loss, of around 6-7% might be expected in 2004/05 and 2005/06. This is based on the continuation of the County Council's existing budget strategy of passporting schools and Social Services FSS increases and allowing for base budget growth, but no other new service development or pressures. Council tax increases averaging around 10% would therefore result in 2004/05 and 2005/06 if plans are not made now for council tax rises more in line with budget increases.

9.4 Grant loss could therefore be dealt with in 2004/05 by a combination of :

    · making planned cuts in services of £27m either in schools budgets by restricting the budget increase to the passported increase, or in other services to enable above passported increases to schools budgets. This would produce cuts on a scale that the Council would not find acceptable in terms of maintaining services, or

    · an additional council tax rise in each year taking the increase to 10% or more, or

    · use of reserves and balances to make good the anticipated grant loss and continue service provision

9.5 The budget is prepared on the basis that the grant loss will be dealt over a three year period and reserves utilised to provide greater financial stability in 2004/05 and 2005/06 by taking the financial consequences of a substantial share of the grant loss in 2003/04 by the 15% council tax rise. This is dealt with further in paragraph 12.

9.6 When the budget for 2003/04 was prepared, potential liabilities of some £10m were identified. An additional contribution of £3.6m to balances was made to provide some protection against these liabilities, and also against what looked like at that time a very uncertain financial situation in 2003/04 from the proposed changes in the Government's funding system.

9.7 The extra contribution in 2002/03 has been used to meet additional liabilities on storage and disposal of fridges, bus subsidies, assistance to Recreation and Heritage for loss of income and deficit on Milestones, together with additional resources to assist Social Services on bed blocking. The balance of £2.2m has been transferred to a grant equalisation reserve.

9.8 Of the other risks identified last year

    · £2m for remedial works at landfill sites has been covered by a supplementary credit approval for the most pressing works at Efford

    · the £2m dispute with Customs and Excise and Hampshire Waste Service over the liability for VAT of inert material used to line landfill sites now seems to have receded

    · the current planned pension increases from the last actuarial valuation and the financing gap in the capital programme have been dealt with

9.9 Unfortunately the concern about potential loss of grant in 2003/04 has been multiplied by far more than assessed a year ago. Decisions taken a year ago have however helped to provide some protection into 2003/04, both in balances and in meeting inescapable commitments.

9.10 Apart from grant loss, risks looking forward include

    · teachers pay award being more than the 3.5% provided, but as set out in paragraph 1.14 other resources are available (at an opportunity cost) to cover this

    · fire-fighters' pay award - for which about £1m might be needed (paragraph 8.4)

    · usual variations in insurance claims, weather conditions

    · potential legal claims

    · further pressures even beyond those provided for in Social Services, especially on children's services, bed-blocking and capacity/pricing issues in residential care, together still with a potential risk of an overspend in 2002/03.

    · uncertainty generated by a possible war in Iraq and its effect upon oil prices and interest rates

    · collapse of the stock market which is increasing even further the risk of a much higher employers' contribution to the pension fund at the next actuarial valuation in March 2004 to take effect in 2005/06. The current rate of around double the employers' rate would need to be around treble - a full year cost increase of around £8m if conditions do not improve

    · the Fire Authority becoming a precepting authority with a potential call on part of the Council's balances

9.11 Against this background balances and reserves remain under pressure and there is no scope to reduce these significantly during 2003/04 given the outlook for 2004/05 and 2005/06 and the risks inherent during 2003/04.

10. Proposed 2003/04 budget

10.1 Adding the inescapable pressures and commitments to the budget guidelines results in the total proposed budget, compared with 2002/03, as set out in Table 3.

10.2 Of the total budget growth of 8.2%

    · 3.9% is the result of inflation (but assuming only 2.5% for price increases)

    · 0.6% is from base budget commitments from 2002/03

    · the base budget is therefore £996.8m, 4.5% more than 2002/03

    · 1.8% from the extra passported cash increase for schools and Social Services over the base budget (contract price increases over 2.5% for social care and buildings maintenance are extra inflation pressures met from the passported increases)

    · budget at the guidelines is therefore £1,013.7m, a 6.3% increase

    · additional inescapable pressures and legislative requirements which were excluded from the tight budget guidelines definition produces a further £18.4m (1.9%) taking the budget to £1,032.1m

10.3 The council tax increase, after the adjustments for floor, assumed national council tax, tax base and surplus on collection funds would be 15%.

10.4 Adding the additional growth to the budget guidelines results in proposed cash limits for each service in 2003/04 as follows:

    Table 18: Service budgets

    Total

    £'000

    Education

    618,736

    Environment

    81,846

    Policy and Resources

    44,615

    Recreation and Heritage

    27,431

    Social Services

    232,191

    ----------

    Service cash-limited budgets

    1,004,819

    ----------

10.5 Other budgets can be summarised as follows:

    Table 19: Other budgets

    Total

    £'000

    Fire levy

    40,900

    Mandatory student awards

    1,689

    Flood protection levies

    5,429

    Magistrates' Courts

    10,944

    Capital financing charges

    29,741

    Revenue contributions to capital

    29,864

    Specific grants

    -110,222

    Inflation, reserves and contingencies

    18,941

    Other budgets

    ---------

    27,286

    ---------

10.6 Bringing all the budgets together, results in an overall budget requirement as follows:

    Table 20: Budget requirement

    Total

    £'000

    Service cash-limited budgets

    1,004,819

    Other budgets

    27,286

    ------------

    1,032,105

    ------------

10.7 The 2003/04 budget requirement is £78.7m or 8.2% higher than the 2002/03 budget which can be summarised as follows:

    Table 21: Increase in budget requirement

    Increase

    £m

    %

    Services

    Education - Schools

    29.9

    6.3

        - LEA

    1.8

    3.3

    Environment

    7.0

    9.1

    Policy and Resources

    3.9

    9.8

    Recreation and Heritage

    1.7

    6.7

    Social Services

    20.5

    11.6

    ------

    ------

    64.8

    7.6

    Fire levy

    2.0

    5.0

    Flood protection levies

    0.4

    7.4

    Magistrates' Courts

    0.1

    9.9

    Capital financing charges

    2.9

    10.4

    Revenue contributions to capital

    4.1

    16.1

    Inflation, and balances, contingencies, reserves

    4.4

    76.8

    -------

    78.7

    -------

    ------

    8.2

    ------

10.8 The budget requirement will be met as follows:

    Table 22: Precept

    Total

    Increase

    £'000

    £'000

    Revenue support grant

    295,397

    24,848

    National non-domestic rates

    332,574

    -108

    Net surplus on collection funds

    2,915

    -845

    Precept

    401,219

    54,763

    ----------

    --------

    Budget requirement

    1,032,105

    78,658

    ----------

    --------

10.9 Based on a taxbase of 475,062 Band D equivalent dwellings (compared with 471,581 in 2002/03) this would result in a council tax of £844.56, 15% more than 2002/03.

10.10 The overall budget can be compared with FSS blocks as set out in table 23, accepting the usual warnings about the dangers of such comparisons, and the approximate allocation of central support services and revenue contributions to capital and contributions to reserves and balances, which have still to be finalised. Table 23 shows the comparison after resource equalisation and then before resource equalisation - which is the underlying position for the County Council's budget trends and the base recognised by the Government in fixing grant support.

    Table 23: 2003/04 budget comparison with FSS

    A: Uplifted (after resource equalisation)

    FSS

    Budget

    Variation

    £m

    £m

    £m

    %

    Education

    580.1

    589.4

    9.3

    1.6

    Social Services

    203.6

    205.9

    2.3

    1.1

    Fire

    39.4

    41.2

    1.8

    4.6

    Highway maintenance

    44.6

    50.2

    5.6

    12.6

    Environmental, protective and cultural services

    85.1

    113.8

    28.7

    33.7

    Capital financing

    41.8

    31.6

    -10.2

    -24.4

    -------

    -------

    ------

    -----

    Total

    994.6

    1,032.1

    37.5

    3.8

    -------

    -------

    ------

    -----

    B: FSS unadjusted (resource equalisation stripped out)

    FSS

    Budget

    Variation

    £m

    £m

    £m

    %

    Education

    580.1

    589.4

    9.3

    1.6

    Social Services

    186.7

    205.9

    19.2

    10.3

    Fire

    35.1

    41.2

    6.1

    17.4

    Highway maintenance

    45.5

    50.2

    4.7

    10.3

    Environmental, protective and cultural services

    61.4

    113.8

    52.4

    85.3

    Capital financing

    42.4

    31.6

    -10.8

    -25.5

    Resource equalisation uplift

    43.4

    -

    -43.4

    -100.0

    -------

    -------

    ------

    -----

    Total

    994.6

    1,032.1

    37.5

    3.8

    -------

    -------

    ------

    -----

10.11 The increase in cash budgets (including contribution to reserves) compared with FSS are as follows:

    Table 24 - 2003/04 budget increase compared with FSS

National

Hampshire

County Council

FSS

FSS

Budget

%

%

%

Education

6.5

5.9

6.5

Social Services

5.6

6.8

11.6

Fire

3.6

3.2

5.3

Highway maintenance

2.6

-1.6

11.0

EPCS

4.3

2.4

10.6

Capital Financing

15.0

14.9

11.3

County Council Services

--------

5.9

--------

--------

5.7

--------

--------

8.2

--------

10.12 The overall comparison between budget growth and FSS and grant support is illustrated in the next table.

    Table 25: 2003/04 budget levels compared with grant & FSS

Total

Increase

£m

£m

%

Government grant support

628.0

22.9

3.8

Formula spending share

994.6

53.3

5.7

County Council budget levels

    · base budget

996.8

43.4

4.5

    · budget guidelines

1,013.7

60.3

6.3

    · proposed budget

1,032.1

78.7

8.2

11. Balances

11.1 The 2002/03 budget forecast balances of £6.1m at 31 March 2004, assuming that the budgeted addition to balances of £3.6m would be used during 2002/03 and 2003/04.

11.2 Actual balances at 31 March 2002 were £8.4m which included an addition to balances of £0.8m on closing the 2001/02 accounts, together with the transfer from the Fire earmarked pensions reserve (£1.4m). It was anticipated that £3.5m would be added to balances by the budgeted contribution during 2003/04, and that £0.4m would be used to recover overspendings, write offs and contingencies during 2002/03, leaving projected balances of £11.5m at 31 March 2003.

11.3 Of this £11.5m it was anticipated that £5.4m would be withdrawn during 2003/04 because of the anticipated pressures and grant changes, leaving £6.1m as the projected balance for 31 March 2004, which is set at the Council's minimum prudent level of 0.6%.

11.4 The extra contribution of £3.6m to balances in 2002/03 can be used as set out as follows:

    Table 26: Use of contribution to balances in 2002/03

    ·

    ·

£'000

Write off of potential over commitments and deficits in 2002/03, subject to final accounts report

    · bus subsidies

    · abandoned cars

    · Milestones deficit

300

90

156

-------

546

Transfer to the delayed hospital discharge reserve, agreed at December Cabinet

900

Balance of planned £3.6m contribution transferred to grant equalisation reserve in respect of grant loss over period 2003/04 - 2005/06

2154

Total use of balances

--------

3600

--------

11.5 The 2003/04 costs of bus subsidies has been met by a budget addition; abandoned cars by a base budget increase recognising additional Government grant support; and an increase in support for Milestones has been absorbed within Recreation and Heritage's budget cash limit.

11.6 The forecast use of balances from 1 April 2002 to 31 March 2004 can therefore be summarised as follows:

    Table 27: Forecast use of balances by 31 March 2004

£m

Balances at 31 March 2002

8.4

Additions to balances in 2002/03 budget

3.5

Write offs, contingencies agreed with closure of 2001/02 accounts

-0.4

-------

Projected balances at 31 March 2003

11.5

Proposed write off of over commitments and deficits at 31 March 2003

-0.5

Transfer to reserves

-3.1

-------

Revised balances at 31 March 2003

7.9

Possible use during 2003/04 for firefighters' pay award and other pressures during the year

-1.7

Potential balances at 31 March 2004

-------

6.2

-------

12. Earmarked reserves

12.1 The budget strategy in 2002/03 was in preparation for an uncertain grant settlement in 2003/04. In practice this was far worse than anticipated and prudent use of reserves and balances included in the 2002/03 budget helps protect the 2003/04 and future years financial standing of the Council.

12.2 The 2003/04 budget needs to be prepared to take account of the two or three year budget view to offset the impact of the loss of grant of £27m still expected in 2004/05 and 2005/06. The 2003/04 budget strategy is designed to make maximum use of reserves to enable this three year view to be taken, so that services are maintained without cuts and to avoid an excessive council tax rise of 13-15% in 2004/05.

12.3 Earmarked reserves at 31 March 2004 are estimated at £62.0m. This is £22.0m more than budgeted for at 31 March 2003, but £6.8m lower than actual earmarked reserves at 31 March 2002.

12.4 The principal earmarked reserve is the schools reserve, which is expected to be around £28.5m at 31 March 2004 compared with £30.9m at 31 March 2002. This represents the balances on schools' delegated budgets which are ring-fenced and carried forward for use in future years.

12.5 The main reduction of reserves will be the use of the capital reserve which is projected to reduce from £23.7m at 31 March 2002 to £6.8m at 31 March 2004 as it is used to finance the capital programme over that period. This equalises revenue contributions against other capital financing resources and capital payments over the four year capital programme.

12.6 The largest increase in reserves is the proposed creation of the grant equalisation reserve to sustain services and council tax increases in 2004/05 and 2005/06. It is proposed to set up a reserve of £13.1m by 31 March 2004 from the following sources:

    Table 28: Grant equalisation reserve

£m

Contributions to reserve from:

· Use of projected saving in 2002/03, principally from interest on revenue balances (paragraph 2 )

3.1

· Balance of budgeted contribution to balances in 2002/03 (Table 26)

2.1

· Budgeted contribution to balances in 2003/04 from 2002/03 budget strategy

3.6

· Grant equalisation budget in 2003/04

4.3

-------

13.1

-------

12.7 This earmarked reserve will be used in 2004/05 and 2005/06 to offset in part the remaining anticipated loss of grant of £27m.

12.8 The insurance reserve is the next largest reserve and appears adequate to meet known and anticipated liabilities over the budget period, reducing slightly from £5m at 31 March 2002 to £4.6m at 31 March 2004, but is projected to fall to £2.5m by 31 March 2006 following reinstatement of fire damage at schools.

12.9 The risk management assessment determines the need, scale and scope for all earmarked reserves, both in the continuation of the 2002/03 budget strategy and for new reserves and liabilities as well as the reserves referred to in paragraphs 12.4-12.6 and 12.8. Earmarked reserves are maintained to provide for other future risks and liabilities as follows:

    · carry forward of agreed savings from one year to the next

    · trading units activities between years and to create cover against future deficits or investment decisions within their agreed business plans.

    · the statutory ring-fencing of on street parking charges accrued principally in the two city areas before local government reorganisation, to be re-invested in new car parking facilities (this reserve is planned to be reduced by £3.3m for new investment during 2003/04)

    · outcome of pay and benefits strategy, both in terms of pay, recruitment and retention costs as well as transitional costs resulting from job evaluation

    · delayed hospital discharges - to meet performance targets and avoid bed blocking fines during 2003/04

12.10 The summary of reserves and estimated movements during 2003/04 are set out in Appendix 9.

13. Council tax 2003/04

13.1 The trends in FSS (SSA), budgets and council tax are as follows:

    Table 29: Trends in council tax

     

    Government

    County Council

     

    SSA/FSS

    Grant

    Budget

    Council Tax

             

      1998/99

    2.7

    -0.1

    3.9

    10.0

      1999/00

    3.9

    2.8

    5.2

    9.4

      2000/01

    5.2

    4.7

    5.3

    5.8

      2001/02

    5.8

    5.6

    5.9

    5.5

      2002/03

    5.4

    5.1

    6.9

    7.9

             

      2003/04

    5.7

    3.8

    8.2

    15.0

13.2 Provisional information suggest that for county councils:

    · south east counties will have the largest council tax increases, at around 16%, because of the loss of grant compared with an overall average of about 13% across all regions

    · Hampshire County Council's budget increase will be below average, despite the additional inescapable pressures and legislative commitments

    · but its council tax rise will be above average but below most of the south east counties losing grant

    · and its actual level of council tax, despite the grant loss will remain lower than average

13.3 The increase in the Council's budget, beyond the transitional grant support increase of 3.8% for 2003/04, all falls on the council tax.

    Table 30: Explanation of council tax increase

£m

%

Council tax increase to match rise in FSS

30.4

7.9

Spending over level supported by grant increase

of which

· base budget level

-11.8

-3.4

· passported cash increase to schools and Social Services

16.9

4.9

· inescapable pressures and legislative requirements

18.4

5.3

· Lower collection fund surplus

0.9

0.3

·

--------

54.8

--------

--------

15.0

--------

14. Forward financial forecast

14.1 It is necessary to produce a forward three year forecast, not only to illustrate the effect of further loss of grant, but also to provide some stability in financial planning taking the 2-3 year budget view and to identify the scope for the continued budget strategy of passporting the schools budget.

14.2 This forecast can only be very provisional and will change. Apart from the usual uncertainties, assumptions have to be made about the rate of grant loss in 2004/05 by forecasting both a floor for 2004/05 and the effect on this of maintaining the DfES commitment to passport real terms per pupil funding increases to schools.

14.3 The Government's published spending plans for 2004/05 form the base, together with the information made available about planned transfers of specific grant into formula grant. But there will inevitably be further changes both in specific grant (amounts, distribution) and in function.

14.4 However the grant formula will not change again for the remainder of the SR2002 period, although data changes will continue to work through.

14.5 The 2004/05 forecast is based on:

    · the same inflation assumptions as in 2003/04

    · allowance for base budget changes, in particular for the anticipated impact of new waste infrastructure, volumes and landfill tax increases

    · continued passporting of the Education and Social Services FSS increases

    · possible future function changes have been ignored in both the FSS and budget projection other than the proposed transfers already notified relating to Education and Social Services, which have been taken into account in forecasting the underlying increase in FSS.

    · no other service developments have been allowed for, or any additional costs

    · neutral assumption that Hampshire's FSS increase will match the national increases in both years and that the real terms guarantee to schools and general grant floor will be set at 2.5%

    · spending is shown net of specific grants because information for future years is incomplete.

14.6 The main changes in spending are summarised in Appendix 8.

14.7 The financial forecast can be summarised as follows:

    Table 31: 2004/05 - 2005/06 projection (outturn prices)

2004/05

2005/06

£m

£m

Education

573.6

596.8

Environment, including waste

89.7

95.3

Policy and Resources

46.7

49.7

Recreation and Heritage

28.5

29.6

Social Services

210.2

221.3

--------

--------

948.7

992.7

Fire levy

42.9

44.3

Capital financing

34.4

37.4

Revenue contributions to capital

30.6

31.4

Flood protection

6.1

6.3

Other

1.8

1.8

--------

--------

1,064.5

1,113.9

Use of reserves and balances

10.0

10.4

--------

--------

Total

1,074.5

1,124.3

--------

--------

Budget increases (%)

(4.1)

(4.6)

FSS

1029.7

1074.2

Council tax, Band D for spending at projected level

898.11

953.28

Council tax increases (%)

(6.3)

(6.7)

14.8 The main issues that emerge from the forecasts concern the implications of the withdrawal of the damping of £24.9m within the 2003/04 Education FSS during 2004/05 and 2005/06 and of the Government's plans to withdraw a number of existing Education and Social Services specific grants in 2004/05 and 2005/06 without increasing the FSS control totals.

14.9 It is anticipated that the Schools Block FSS increase in 2004/05 will be around £4m less than the amount required to underwrite inflation, while at the same time Standards Fund grants of up to £7m could be withdrawn. This emphasises the importance of taking action in 2003/04 to enable this position to be dealt with without either requiring substantial reduction in spending on services or further unacceptably high council tax increases.

14.10 The forecasts in Table 31 imply council tax increases of 6.3% in 2004/05 and 6.7% in 2005/06 on the basis of the restrictive assumptions set out in paragraph 14.5, so that allowing for some inescapable pressures on services other than Schools and Social Services, increases of around 7% are anticipated without providing any additional protection for schools budgets from projected grant losses in 2004/05 and 2005/06.

14.11 For Social Services, grant for children's services and preserved rights are due to be phased out in 2004/05 and 2005/06, so that the underlying FSS increases forecast at 6.5% and 5.3% respectively are significantly lower than the headline increases announced in 2004/05 and 2005/06. This leaves limited room for manoeuvre with the demand and market pressures facing social services.

15. Budget consultation

15.1 No additional budget consultation has been carried out this year. The reasons are given in paragraph 1.30

15.2 The usual round of consultation meetings with business, council tax payers and residents' associations, voluntary organisations and the workforce will be held before the Cabinet meeting, and their views reported before the recommendation made to full Council which will determine the budget and council tax at its meeting on 20 February 2003.

15.3 It is proposed to hold community workshops during summer 2003 to start the budget consultation process on services and council tax for 2004/05, when financial stability has been restored and further changes in the grant system will not occur (except for the continued anticipated grant loss from changes this year).

16. Treasury Management

16.1 The County Council is required to adopt a treasury management strategy for 2003/04 and this is set out in Appendix 11 for approval. The Appendix

    · outlines a proposed strategy for the management of the Council's long-term debt portfolio in the light of forecast trends in long and short-term interest rates over the next year and beyond

    · recommends limits on total external borrowing, temporary borrowing and the proportion of interest payable at rates variable by the lender, to be submitted for approval by the Council as required by section 45 of the Local Government and Housing Act 1989

    · summarises the arrangements for the investment of the Council's surplus funds

16.2 A new code on treasury management also has to be complied with, so this too is set out in Appendix 11. It is recommended that the new code be adopted when financial regulations are next reviewed, and an updated treasury policy statement be approved by the Council.

17. Conclusions

17.1 There are still some uncertainties in the budget:

    · final grant settlement, though significant changes are not expected

    · teachers and firefighters pay award

    · final levies for fire and flood protection

17.2 A two to three year budget view has been taken because of the continuing loss of grant into 2004/05 and 2005/06. Prudential financial use of reserves and balances should mitigate the effect of grant loss on services and council tax in 2004/05 and 2005/06.

17.3 The Cabinet has determined that the scale of cuts required to reduce the council tax rise to offset the grant loss of £20.9m in 2003/04 is impossible to achieve across all services. Therefore the grant loss and the cost of inescapable pressures and legislative commitments cannot be avoided in 2003/04 which results in a 15% council tax rise as projected. Having provided for financial stability in 2003/04, it should be possible to offset the worst effects of further grant loss in 2004/05 and 2005/06.

18. Recommendation

18.1 The recommendations are set out in the decision sheet summary which precedes Part A of the report.

Section 100 D - Local Government Act 1972 - background papers

The following documents disclose facts or matters on which this report, or an important part of it, is based and has been relied upon to a material extent in the preparation of this report.

NB the list excludes:

Published works.

Documents which disclose exempt or confidential information as defined in the Act.

TITLE FILE

None

19. PART C - APPENDICES

    Changes in final settlement have only effected two pages of appendices which are attached

Appendix

Colour

1

Revised estimates 2002/03

Salmon

2

Construction of base budget 2003/04

Pink

3

Proposals for additional spending pressures and redeployment of resources 2003/04

Yellow

4

Proposals for efficiency improvements in 2003/04

Blue

5

Review of income 2003/04

White

6

Budget 2003/04 - detailed analysis

Green

7

Workforce statement

Blue

8

Forward financial forecast 2004/05 - 2005/06

Pink

20. Amended page attached

9

Summary of reserves and balances at 31 March 2003

Green

21. Amended page attached

10

Past trends

Salmon

11

Treasury Management

Yellow

12

1% and 1.5% savings in 2003/04

Blue

Appendix 1

Revised budget 2002/03

1 2002/03 cash limit

£'000

2002/03 budget requirement

920,514

Less contribution to balances

-3,472

2002/03 budget before contribution to balances

917,042

Adjustment to cash limits resulting from decisions on 2001/02 final accounts

-30

Contribution from balances towards establishment of £2m earmarked reserve for delayed hospital discharges

900

Proposed write-off of Hampshire Training Solutions deficit from Social Services passported increase

150

Adjusted 2002/03 cash limit

918,062

2 Comparison of revised budget with cash limit

Cash limit

Revised budget

Variation

£'000

£'000

£'000

Service cash limited expenditure:

Education

589,470

588,186

-1,284

Environment

77,198

77,588

390

Policy and Resources

33,471

33,471

-

Recreation and Heritage

25,723

26,203

480

Social Services

210,520

210,520

-

936,382

935,968

-414

Non cash-limited expenditure

HFRA levy

38,940

38,940

-

Mandatory awards

422

1,971

1,549

Flood protection levies

5,429

5,429

-

Magistrates' Courts

9,912

9,551

-361

Capital financing charges

26,321

25,142

-1,179

Revenue contributions to capital

25,517

25,517

-

Specific grants

-131,320

-132,561

-1,241

Inflation and central contingencies

4,037

2,069

-1,968

Transfers to/(from) earmarked reserves:

As per adjusted budget

2,422

2,422

-

Transfer to grant

Equalisation reserve

-

3,057

3,057

Transfer of business rate saving to Invest to Save reserve

-

138

138

Transfer to service underspending reserves:

Education

-

1,284

1,284

Magistrates' Courts

-

5

5

918,062

918,932

870

Further contribution to grant equalisation reserve after meeting service overspendings from balances

3,024

2,154

-870

921,086

921,086

-

3 Analysis of main variations

    £'000

Planned underspending on Education

-1,284

Earmarking of planned underspending to be carried forward to 2003/04

1,284

Increased cost of mandatory awards to students

1,549

Matched by increased specific grant

-1,549

Lower cash limit set by Lord Chancellor's department for Magistrates' Courts Committee and planned carried forward to 2003/04

-361

Lower Magistrates' Courts grant and earmarking of County Council contribution to be carried forward to 2003/04

313

Higher capital financing costs as a result of additional credit approvals in 2001/02

71

Increased interest on balances due to higher reserves and balances and improved cash flow

-1,250

Lower interest rates

-1,643

Lower forecast call on contingency sum for Dibden Bay inquiry

-61

Reduced call on inflation contingency for other non-cash limited budgets, primarily flood protection levies

-126

Lower business rates

-138

Business rate saving transferred to invest to save reserve

138

-3,057

Transfer of net underspending to grant equalisation reserve

3,057

Further contribution to grant equalisation reserve

2,154

In place of planned contribution to balances

* -2,154

-

£'000

*

Original planned contribution

3,600

Sum earmarked from 2001/02 underspending to cover Milestones deficit in 2001/02

324

3,924

Less additional spending in 2002/03 supported from balances:

Environment

-390

- bus subsidies and abandoned vehicles

Recreation and Heritage

- Milestones

-480

Transfer to delayed hospital discharges reserve

-900

2,154

Appendix 2

Revenue Budget 2003/04

2003/04 Base Budget

22. Service base budgets (981.1m)

22.1 At the last meeting of the Cabinet, provisional service base budgets were reported, totalling £971.0m. The final calculation of the base budget totals £981.1m an increase of £10.1m. The major change is to allow for a net increase in expenditure financed by specific grant of £8.9m, as a result of additional Social Services grants allocated by the Department of Health. The base budget has also been increased by £1m for the effect of the recently introduced Government guidance on charging for non-residential services.

    Inflation to November 2002 prices

22.2 In preparing the base budget at November 2002 prices, allowance has been made for the full year effect of pay awards in 2002/03 and for inflation on the waste management contract, but has been otherwise restricted to the allocations made in 2002/03. In total allowance of £45.1m, has been made for inflation between November 2001 and November 2002 made up as follows:

Table 1

   
 

£m

£m

     

Allocations included in 2002/03's original service budgets

 

26.0

Further allocations made in 2002/03 from the central contingency for waste management, pay and recruitment cost and business rates

4.7

 

Full year effect of 2002/03 pay awards, waste management contract and business rate price variations

2.0

 

Adjustment for transfer of responsibility from central government for pensions increase element of teachers' pensions

12.4

19.1

   

45.1

     

22.3 Actual inflation is estimated at £46.6m, or £20.6m, more than allowed for in the original 2002/03 budget. After allowing for the additional allocation of £19.1m in the base budget, the excess cost of £1.5m has been absorbed in the base budget.

22.4 The excess cost of £1.5m (0.5%) relates to non-pay budgets for which a general allowance of 2.5% was included in the 2002/03 budget in line with the Government's inflation target, together with a further allocation of £2.5m for Social Care contract increases.

Table 2

   
 

Cost in 2003/04

 

%

£000

     

Electricity

-8.9

-242

Gas

-2.4

-59

Fuel oil

4.0

44

Maintenance of grounds

4.3

199

Car allowances

-2.7

-164

Home to school transport

1.8

283

Routine highway maintenance

-1.0

-197

Bus subsidy contracts

8.7

400

Repair and maintenance of buildings

5.1

566

Office rents

8.7

108

Postage

-1.8

-18

Domiciliary purchasing

4.6

391 *

Older person nursing purchasing

3.8

     

* After allowance for additional allocation of £2.5m

 

    Other variations

22.5 Variations other than inflation add £10.6m to the base budget and can be categorised as follows:

Table 3

 
 

£m

   

Net reduction in Social Services budget to reflect planned introduction of free nursing care (-£5.9m), additional cost of ending of residential allowance (£2.3m) and higher National Care Standards Commission fees (£0.2m)

-3.4

Adjustment to 2002/03 EPCS formula spending share for impact of End of Life vehicle directive reflected in Environment base budget

0.4

Increased spending financed by Government specific grants, mainly on Social Services (£9.0m) and Education (£2.8m)

12.1

Expenditure in 2002/03 financed by planned underspendings in 2001/02

-1.3

Adjustment for virement between capital and revenue

0.5

Provision for additional waste volumes and for the introduction of new infrastructure for which contingency provision made in 2002/03

2.9

Transfer from Education (-£7.3m) to Policy and Resources (£7.3m) of budgets delegated to schools, but determined by Policy and Resources

-

Absorption of excess cost of inflation in 2002/03

-1.5

Other allowable variations in the base budget:

 

Pupil numbers

-0.4

    Changes in number of school days in the financial year

-0.1

    Reduced income resulting from new
    guidelines for charging for non-residential care

1.0

    Revenue effect of the capital programme

0.4

    Increased share of cost arising from tapering
    arrangements with health authorities

0.1

    Deletion of non recurring items approved in
    2002/03 budget

-0.1

 

10.6

22.6 Details for each service of the most significant variations compared with the repriced budget for 2002/03 are set out in the annex to this appendix.

    Allocation for future inflation

22.7 Included within service base budgets is a provision for future inflation, so that the budget is presented on a cash limited basis, based on the following assumptions agreed by the Cabinet in December:

    Table 4

     
     

    £m

       

    Pay awards at 3.5%

    21.0

    Non-pay at 2.5%

    12.0

    Allowance for income to increase in line with the average increase in expenditure

    -8.4

    An increase in the employers' contribution to the teachers' pension scheme from 13.1% to 13.5% and to the local government pension scheme from 12.3% to 12.9% from 1 April 2003

    2.1

    A 1% increase in employers' national insurance contributions from 1 April 2003

    4.0

     

    30.7

22.8 Provision has been retained centrally for increases in business rates and for higher costs arising from the waste management contract.

23. Summary of service budgets

23.1 A summary of service budgets is set out below:

Table 5

             
 

2002/03 original budget

Variation in inflation to Nov 2002 prices

Other variations

Allocation for future inflation

2003/04 base budget

 

£'000

£'000

%

£'000

%

£'000

£'000

               

Education

578,911

14,002

2.4

-5,695

-1.0

21,061

608,279

Environment

75,029

1,310

1.7

3,240

4.2

1,617

81,196

Policy and Resources

32,816

1,194

3.6

6,785

20.0

1,413

42,208

Recreation and Heritage

25,931

264

1.0

113

0.4

988

27,296

Social Services

206,477

3,829

1.8

6,198

2.9

5,628

222,132

 

919,164

20,599

2.2

10,641

1.1

30,707

981,111

23.2 Staffing numbers in the base budget are forecast to be 278 higher than in the 2002/03 budget. More details on staff changes are set out in Appendix 7.

24. Hampshire Fire and Rescue Authority (HFRA) levy (£40.8m)

24.1 The HFRA meet on 5 February to approve a budget for 2003/04, having consulted with the constituent authorities on its draft budget including the possible inclusion of new growth of up 1%. The Cabinet resolved to request the HFRA in the light of its budget growth over the last two years and the uncertainty surrounding the settlement of the firefighters' pay award, as well as the County Council's difficult grant settlement, to prepare a budget at the base budget level, with no additional cost from new growth items.

24.2 The base budget includes provision of £2.2m (4.5%) for inflation. This assumes a 4% increase in firefighters' pay from November 2002 and a further 4% increase from November 2003. Allowance has been made for a 3.5% award for non-uniformed staff, a 1% increase in national insurance contributions, and increased non-pay costs of 2.5%. The base budget also allows for growth of £0.6m (1.3%), comprising the full year effect of previous years' approved growth (£0.4m) and increased operational leasing and capital financing costs (£0.2m). This growth is however largely offset by lower projected pension costs in 2003/04 of £0.5m (1.1%), producing an overall base budget increase of £2.3m (4.7%). The County Council's share of the increase is £1.8m.

25. Other expenditure outside service cash limits

25.1 It is the County Council's policy to exclude a number of headings from service budgetary control limits. These are items which are outside the direct control of services and the magnitude of which means that variations could unreasonably jeopardise service plans if substantial variations took place during the year. They do of course remain a prior charge on the Council's expenditure.

    Education mandatory awards to students (£1.7m)

25.2 Spending on mandatory awards to students is now confined to disabled students, as the County Council ceased to be financially responsible for the funding of other new students from September 1999. As mandatory awards are 100% grant-aided changes in the level of spending have no impact upon the County Council's overall financial position.

    Flood protection levies (£5.4m)

25.3 The Environment Agency has the statutory responsibility for flood defence and the costs incurred by local Flood Defence Committees are levied on County councils and unitary authorities pro rata to council taxbase. The County Council receives levies from the Southern, Thames and South Western regions. Provision has been made for levies in 2003/04 at 2002/03 levels. Actual levies for 2003/04 will be set shortly and a central provision for increased levies has been included in the inflation contingency.

    Magistrates Courts (£10.9m)

25.4 Magistrates' Courts Committees receive 80% government grant, subject to a cash limit set by the Lord Chancellor's department. The County Council, Isle of Wight, Portsmouth and Southampton unitary councils finance the remaining 20% of the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Committees costs. The cash limit set by the Lord Chancellor has increased by 11.1% in 2003/04 and after adjusting for a planned carried forward of an underspending in 2002/03, the County Council's contribution net of specific grant is expected to increase by 9.9% in 2003/04.

26. Capital financing charges (£29.7m)

26.1 The system of accounting for capital assets means that capital financing charges do not feature in service budgets but are charged to a central asset management revenue account. The level of financing charges made to the central account is however a key factor in setting the Council's budget. The charges comprise loan repayments and interest of £31.5m, offset by interest on balances of £1.8m. The base budget has been prepared on the basis of current short-term interest rates linked to a base rate of 4%.

26.2 The estimate assumes a continuation of the policy of repaying debt at the minimum statutory level and of making no voluntary set aside of capital receipts to repay debt. The estimate is £3.0m higher than the original estimate for the current year for the following main reasons:

    · debt outstanding at the end of 2002/03 is expected to be about £39.0m higher than the level assumed at 1 April 2002 in setting the 2002/03 budget. Additional repayments of principal and interest on this increased borrowing in 2003/04 are estimated at £3.6m

    · though base rate has remained unchanged at 4% since November 2001, savings of £0.6m in interest costs have been achieved both in the actual cost of short-term borrowing and from new long-term borrowing at lower rates than assumed.

27. Revenue contributions to capital (£26.1m)

27.1 These contributions supplement Government borrowing approvals and grants and the use of capital receipts in financing the capital programme.

27.2 The base budget of £26.1m is £0.5m lower than the 2002/03 budget as a result of the following variations:

Table 6

 
 

£m

   

Service proposals to transfer resources between capital and revenue

-0.5

2.5% uplift for inflation to reflect non-pay assumption in the revenue budget

0.6

Reduction to reflect transfer to capital reserve arising from anticipated transfer of credit approval by the HFRA

-0.6

 

0.5

28. Specific grants (-£110.2m)

28.1 Specific grants are £9.3m lower than in the original 2002/03 budget, mainly as a result of the transfer of Education and Social Services specific grants into revenue support grant amounting to £23.5m. Specific grants comprise:

Table 7

 
   

£m

Education

 
 

Standards Fund - 50% or 100%

26.9

 

Direct grants to schools

14.9

 

Childcare strategy - 100%

4.2

 

Teachers pay reform - 100%

13.0

 

Mandatory student awards - 100%

1.7

 

European Social Fund - subsidy per litre of milk

0.1

Rural bus services - 100%

1.3

Magistrates' Courts - mainly 80%

9.4

Emergency Planning - 100%

0.3

Public Service agreement pump priming grant

0.3

Social Services grants (various conditions)

38.1

 

1,10.2

29. Provision for future inflation and contingencies (£4.9m)

29.1 Service budgets incorporate an allocation for general pay and price inflation based on provision of 3.5% for pay increases and 2.5% for price increases. The contingency provision of £4.9m in the base budget covers other items for which resources need to be earmarked in the budget, but where it would be premature to allocate the resources or where allocation decisions have still to be made. The provision is made up as follows:

Table 8

   
     

£m

·

A central contingency of £3.0m has been included in the base budget for higher waste management contract costs. This is to cover:

3.0

 

-

A further increase of £1 per tonne in the land fill tax from 1 April 2003 (£0.4m)

 
 

-

price increases due from 1 January 2003 and 1 January 2004 under the terms of the contract (£0.6m)

 
 

-

the impact of new infrastructure and the potential impact of higher waste volumes (£2.0m)

 

·

changes in business rates are budgeted for centrally, with services being allowed to adjust their cash limits to reflect actual costs. This treatment reflects the uncertainty associated with valuation appeals and the effect of transitional arrangements following revaluations. The operation of the transitional arrangements still in place following the 2000 revaluation are expected to be broadly neutral for the County Council in 2003/04. A sum of £0.2m has been included in the contingency for the effect of the 1.7% increase in the national poundage

0.2

·

flood protection levies for 2003/04 will be set in mid-February. A sum of £0.5m has been set aside for increased levies

0.5

·

short-term interest rates are expected to increase from their current low level during 2003 and provision has been made for rates to increase to an average of 5% in 2003/04

1.2

     

4.9

30. Summary

30.1 In summary therefore the base budget for 2003/04 is £996.8m, made up as follows:

Table 9

 
   

£'000

Service cash limited expenditure

981,111

HFRA levy

40,780

Mandatory student awards

1,689

Flood protection levies

5,429

Magistrates' Courts

10,944

Capital financing charges

29,741

Revenue contributions to capital

26,094

Specific grants

-110,222

Inflation and central contingencies

4,893

 

990,459

     

Use of reserves and balances:

 
 

Contribution to balances

3,500

 

Contribution to job evaluation transitional costs and pay, recruitment and retention reserves

2,000

 

Transfers to and from Magistrates' Courts, Supplies, Invest to Save and job evaluation implementation reserves to support spending in the base budget

155

 

Transfer to capital reserve to reflect HFRA's proposed transfer of credit approvals in 2003/04

653

   

996,767

    Annex 1

    Education Service

    Base Budget 2003/04

    Significant Variations

    Major variations between the repriced budget 2002/03 and the base budget for 2003/04 (at November 2002 prices) contributing to the decrease of £5,695,000 (-1.0%) out below:

Variations

Against the 2002/03

Repriced Budget

     
 

£'000

%

Net reduction in response to changes in pupil numbers

-366

-0.1

     

Full year effect of budget changes introduced in 2002/03

-651

-0.2

     

Revenue costs of capital programme

156

0.5

     

Variation in the number of school days

-94

-0.4

     

Variations in the level of expenditure financed by government grants

2,800

-

     

Shortfall in inflation allocation

-268

-

     

Net variations in expenditure on home to school transport

-179

-0.9

     

Inclusion (SEN) - inter-authority recoupment

130

3.2

     

Other school centrally-held budgets

-103

-0.5

     

Support Services (mainly Inclusion Branch)

322

1.3

     

Training and Curriculum Development (Standards Fund)

-202

-0.5

     

Addition to general contingency

71

-

     

Transfer to Policy and Resources of budgets for repairs and maintenance of buildings and central support services delegated to schools, for determination of delegated sums in 2003/04

-7,279

-

Annex 2

Environment Service

Base Budget 2003/04

Significant variations

Major variations between the repriced budget 2002/03 and the base budget for 2003/04 at November 2002 prices contributing to the increase of £3,240,000 (4.2%) are set out below:

   

Variations against the repriced 2002/03 budget

   

£'000

%

Highways and transportation

   

Highways maintenance

   

Increased road lengths - additional routine maintenance and street lighting expenditure arising from highway adoptions

33

0.2

Transfer from capital structural maintenance to compensate for required increase in winter maintenance provision

27

0.1

Increase in budget resulting from lower inflation during 2002/03

197

1.1

Capital Programme - additional expenditure arising from the implementation of highways improvement schemes

188

1.0

Transfer of savings arising from term maintenance contract retendering from capital structural maintenance programme

362

1.9

Deletion of additional one-off support to 2002/03 budget from underspendings carried forward from 2001/02

-80

-0.4

Transfer to capital of structural maintenance element of additional expenditure arising from implementation of highway improvement schemes

-67

-0.4

Transfer of savings arising from retendering of highways term maintenance contract to management and support services, to partially offset higher costs arising from implementation of highways network management best value blueprint

-478

-2.6

     
     

School crossing patrols

Additional one-off sum included in 2002/03 original budget not available in 2003/04

-50

-5.2

Public transport

Bus subsidies

-

higher expenditure arising from contract re-tendering and commercial service de-registrations

100

1.9

-

extent to which savings would need to be made to constrain bus subsidies expenditure to budget control total

-500

-9.6

Pump priming grant in connection with Public Service Agreement for increasing bus usage

154

3.0

Rural Bus Subsidy Grant

Increased funding approved by the Government

28

2.1

Management and support services

Employees - estimated net cost of salary increments payable from 1 April 2003

112

0.8

Staff retention payments - ongoing costs associated with measures introduced during 2002/03

53

0.4

Office accommodation - additional expenditure arising from commitments entered into during 2002/03

80

0.5

IT services - additional hardware and software to meet operational needs of department

68

0.5

Intelligent transport systems - additional operation expenditure arising from implementation of capital programme schemes

42

0.3

Pump priming grant in connection with Public Service Agreement for management of natural resources

76

0.5

Estimated additional cost arising from implementation of the highways network management best value review blueprint

701

4.7

Savings required to absorb salary increments and other cost pressures

-313

-2.1

Expenditure in 2002/03 budget financed from savings brought forward from 2001/02 and from redeployment of resources, not available in 2003/04

-315

-2.1

Anticipated additional fee income from review of level of fees chargeable to capital maintenance programme and review of highways development control arrangements

-240

-1.6

Planning services

Employees - estimated net cost of salary increments payable from 1 April 2003

38

0.8

County Structure Plan - variation in base budget provision

-26

-0.6

Minerals and Waste Local Plan - variation on base budget provision

-47

-1.0

Deletion of additional one-off support to 2002/03 budget from underspendings carried forward from 2001/02

-247

-5.4

Efficiency savings - required to comply with base budget control total

-36

-0.8

Waste management

Waste disposal contract - adjustment to budget to reflect increases in expenditure, other than inflation

2,893

10.1

Abandoned vehicles disposal - additional funding provided by the Government

394

19.6

Employees - estimated net cost of salary increments payable from 1 April 2003

8

0.4

Efficiency savings - required to offset salary increments

-8

-0.4

Annex 3

Policy and Resources

Base Budget 2003/04

Significant variations

Major variations between the repriced budget 2002/03 and the base budget for 2003/04 at November 2002 outturn prices contributing to the increase of £6,785,000 (20.0%) are set out below:

   

Variations against the repriced 2002/03 budget

   

£'000

%

       

Chief Executive

   
     
 

Transfer from capital to fund 2002/03 staff costs, previously funded from grant aid.

Reduction in funding from Surveyor's relating to traffic orders - 2002/03 part year staff costs

50

-4

1.0

-0.1

County Personnel and Training Officer

   
 

Reduction in Corporate Health and Safety budget, transferred to departments

-56

-2.5

 

Deduction of Corporate funding for the Pay and Benefits project

-148

-6.7

 

Transfer from Social Services Department in respect of increased training requirements for staff transferred into Personnel and Training from SSC

15

0.7

County Treasurer

   
 

Additional staff for the FAB project, Enterprise training team and Social Services finance staff

729

7.4

 

Staff recruitment and training expenses reflecting increased staff numbers

59

48.1

 

Net effect of IT charge adjustments

-66

-5.8

 

Falling client base re non residential charges for Social Services

-22

-69.2

 

Loss of Police, Fire and Southampton City contracts

65

7.9

 

Increase in charge to the Pension Fund plus increased scheme members

-137

-13.6

 

Additional SLA income re FAB project and Social Services finance staff

-499

-7.9

Tourism and Defence Heritage

Transfer of staff to Recreation and Heritage

-94

-16.6

     
     

Schools Delegated Budget

   
 

Transfer from Education to enable Policy and Resources to determine the budget delegated to schools for repair and maintenance of buildings, property and legal services in 2003/04

7,227

-

       
     
       
       

Annex 4

Recreation and Heritage Services

Base Budget 2003/04

Significant variations

Major variations between the repriced budget 2002/03 and the base budget for 2003/04 at November 2002 prices contributing to the increase of £113,000 (0.4%) are set out below:

   

Variations against the repriced 2002/03 budget

   

£'000

%

     

Museums and Archives

   
 

Increments

36

1.0

 

Deletion of one-off addition (Gosport Museum)

-10

-

     

Tourism

   

Transfer from Policy and Resources

94

-

     

Libraries and Information

   
 

Increments

47

0.5

 

Revenue effect of past capital programme

16

-

 

Transfer of post to Director and Business Development

-21

-

     

Countryside

   
 

Increments

23

0.9

     

Arts Sport and Community

   
 

Increments

11

1.6

 

Revenue effect of past capital programme

9

-

 

Transfer from Outdoor HQ to Calshot for single status costs

-50

-

     

Calshot

   
 

Transfer from Outdoor HQ for single status costs

50

-

       

Director and Business Development

   
 

Transfer of post from Libraries and Information

21

-

Annex 5

Social Services

Base Budget 2003/04

Significant variations

Major variations between the repriced budget 2002/03 and the base budget for 2003/04 at November 2002 outturn prices contributing to the increase/decrease of £6,198.000 (2.9%) are set out below:

 

Variations against the repriced

 

2002/03 budget

 

£'000

£'000

%

       

Transfer of responsibility for paying for Nursing Care

 

-5,831

-2.8

       

The transfer of this responsibility to the NHS from 1 April 2003 has

     

resulted in a reduction in the base budget, as follows:

     
       

Older People

-5,269

   

Adults under 65 years with Physical or Sensory Impairment

-314

   

Adults under 65 years with Learning Disabilities

-187

   

Adults under 65 years with Mental Health Needs

-61

   
       

Balances for later allocation

 

-1,777

-0.9

       

Unallocated balances have decreased by £2.3m,

   

from £16.8m to £14.5m

     

Original unallocated balances of £16.8m included contingency and

     

grant-related expenditure.

     

New grants of £3.7m have not yet been allocated. There has been an

     

increase of £1.0m in respect of the impact of the Non Residential

     

charges review. £9.0m has been allocated to client groups in

     

respect of the Preserved Rights, Promoting.

     

Independence and Carers Grants

     

Allocations of contingencies and grants are as follows:

 

8,757

4.2

       

Children's Services

74

   
       

Older People

2,382

   

Adults under 65 years with Physical or Sensory Impairment

1,378

   

Adults under 65 years with Learning Disabilities

4,736

   

Adults under 65 years with Mental Health Needs

300

   

Other Adult Services

143

   

Assessment & Care Management

31

   

Management & Support

-288

   
       

Increased / New Grant Funding

 

3,194

1.5

       

New and increased grant funding has been included in the 2003/04 base

     

budget. A full analysis is shown at Appendix 6. New grants that have

     

been allocated to client groups are as follows:

     
       

Children and Families

2,214

   

Older People

1,009

   

Mental Health

1

   

Management & Support (Invest to Save)

-30

   
       

Function change - withdrawal of Residential Allowance

 

2,285

1.1

for new independent sector clients

     
       

Shortfall in inflation provision

 

-439

-0.2

       

Joint Finance Taper

 

117

0.1

       

This addition reflects the further financial responsibilities under the 'pick-up'

     

arrangements with the Primary Care Trusts for those schemes already

     

in operation within Hampshire

     
       

Management & Support

 

-107

-0.1

       

Allocations to other services for Personnel and Training, Health and Safety

     

and the transfer of the Blue Badges scheme to County Treasurers have

     

resulted in a reduction for 2003/2004

     

Appendix 3A

Education Service

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Proposals for New Growth and Redeployment of Resources - Schools Block

 

2003/04

£'000

2004/05

£'000

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04 2004/05

Continuing provision for:

- cash protection-sixth forms

250

390

-

-

- former GM schools

300

-

-

-

- St Bede temporary school

50

-

-

-

Standards Fund Changes

       

- replacement of terminated grants

3,910

3,910

-

-

- reduction in grant percentage

413

413

-

-

- matched funding on
ceased/reduced grants

-601

-601

-

-

- additional allocations requiring
increased County Council
contribution

1,338

1,338

-

-

- Provision for recruitment and

retention in schools' budget shares

1,885

1,885

-

-

Early Years and Childcare

165

283

5

9

Behaviour Intervention Service

200

200

7

7

Portage Service Schools' Budget shares

100

100

2

2

- special schools addition
provision for MLD pupils

160

320

-

-

- additional provision for staff
cost pressures

1,420

1,352

-

-

         

Total increase allowed in the budget guidelines

9,590

9,590

14

18

Appendix 3A

Education Service

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Proposals for New Growth and Redeployment of Resources - LEA Block

 

2003/04

£'000

2004/05

£'000

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04 2004/05

Priority Budget Pressures

       

Standards Fund changes

       

- replacement of ceased grants

399

399

-

-

- reduction in grant percentage

78

78

-

-

- additional allocations requiring increased
County Council contribution

108

108

3

3

Continuation of EWO posts to support Public Service Agreements

90

90

-

-

School improvement initiatives

90

90

-

-

Effective school place planning

40

40

1

1

Parent Partnership - increased demand

45

45

1

1

ICT replacement of legacy

       

Systems

400

-

-

-

Agreed syllabus changes - Religious Education

20

-

-

-

Pay and benefits project-additional support for EPS

50

-

-

-

 

1320

850

5

5

         

Redeployment of Resources

       

Carry forward of 2002/03 underspending

-867

-417

-

-

Reduce home to school transport contingency provision

-250

-250

-

-

Reduce LEA Block general contingency provision

-203

-183

-

-

 

-1320

-850

-

-

Appendix 3B

Environment Service

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Proposals for redeployment of resources

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

   

£'000

£'000

   
           
 

Additional service pressures

       
 

Hampshire Natural Resources Initiative (HNRI)

150

150

-

-

           
 

Minerals and Waste Local Plan (MWLP)

100

100

-

-

           
 

Strategic planning and sustainability initiatives

160

160

-

-

   

410

410

-

-

           
 

Proposals for redeployment of resources

       
 

Savings across all services on an opportunity basis

-410

-410

-

-

           
   

-410

-410

-

-

           

Appendix 3C

Policy and Resources Services

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Proposals for new growth and redeployment of resources

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

   

£'000

£'000

   

Increases included within passporting of Schools and Social Services FSS increases

       
           

Repair and maintenance of buildings - to compensate for impact of excess inflation in 2002/03

       
 

Schools

400

400

-

-

 

Social Services

100

100

-

-

           

Allowance for increased activity levels affecting central support services delegated to schools

50

50

-

-

         

Writing-off of Hampshire Training Solutions projected 2002/03 deficit

150

-

-

-

           

Development of Health scrutiny function

100

100

2

2

   

800

650

2

2

           

Redeployment of resources

       
           

Policy unit research assistant to support the Leader

50

50

1

1

Increase in long service award to staff

27

27

-

-

Additional grants to Voluntary organisations

34

34

-

-

Recognition of higher cost of Coroners' service

50

50

-

-

 

161

161

1

1

         

Provision for Dibden Bay inquiry

-81

-81

-

-

Lower audit and inspection costs

-50

-50

-

-

Reversal of planned cut in Emergency Planning grant

-30

-30

-

-

 

-161

-161

-

-

Appendix 3D

Recreation and Heritage Services

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Proposals for redeployment of resources

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

     

£'000

£'000

   
 

New initiatives

       
   

Expanding user base

353

353

3

3

   

Innovation and quality

209

209

2

2

   

Market development

202

202

3

3

   

Staff development

82

82

1

1

     

846

846

9

9

             
   

Reinstate base budget provision for museums and archives and libraries following creation of director post

57

57

-

-

   

Increased support for Staunton Country Park following withdrawal of Portsmouth CC from the joint management committee

50

50

-

-

   

Additional revenue support for Milestones

40

40

-

-

   

Other pressures

50

50

-

-

     

1,043

1,043

9

9

   

Virement to capital

500

500

   
     

1,543

1,543

   
   

Met by redirections

       
   

Libraries and Information

-1,095

-1,095

-3

-3

   

Countryside

-120

-120

-1

-1

   

Arts Sport and Community

-233

-233

-1

-1

   

Museums and Archives

-84

-84

-2

-2

   

Director and Business Support

-11

-11

   
     

-1,543

-1,543

-7

-7

             

Appendix 3E

Social Services

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Proposals for new growth

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

     

£'000

£'000

   
           
 

Increase in passported FSS - to be used to meet unavoidable pressures

6,559

6,559

   
             
             
 

Total increase allowed in the budget guidelines

6,559

6,559

   

Appendix 4

Proposals for efficiency improvements in 2003/04

As a result of absorbing cost increases

 

Education

Environment

Policy and Resources

Recreation and Heritage

Social Services

Total

 

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

             

Excess inflation

53

134

-

-

-

187

Salary increments

1,634

158

496

117

327

2,732

Other base budget pressures

-

201

-

-

-

201

Public liability insurance

-

-

-

65

-

65

Calshot single status costs

-

-

-

120

-

120

Hampshire paths partnership

-

-

-

50

-

50

 

1,687

493

496

352

327

3,355

Appendix 5A

    Education Service

    Revenue Budget 2003/04

    Review of Income

   

Budget 2003/04

Current charge

Date of last review

Planned date for next review (where applic.)

Comment

   

£'000

£

     
 

Charges

         

1.

Mandatory/National charges

         
 

Inter-authority recoupment

1943

Full cost

01/04/02

01/04/03

Annually calculated to national regulations

             

2.

Discretionary charges

         
 

School Meals at Education Centres

52

1.40

01/09/02

01/09/03

Reviewed per the terms of the agreed contract

             
 

Rents

110

Various

01/09/02

01/09/03

Annual rent review by PBR&S (Estates Practice)

             

-

Education Psychology

Service

160

Full cost

01/04/02

01/04/03

External Income, 4-5 Contracts annually reviewed

             

-

Outdoor Education

(Recharge to OLA's)

52

Full cost

(SLA)

01/04/02

01/04/03

Contribution towards cost of service

-

Privileged Transport

173

275.00

(inc. VAT)

01/09/02

01/09/03

Administered by the Passenger Transport Group. Increase is based on the general Retail Price Index in April

             
 

Contributions from OLAs/

Health Authorities

- Youth Service

203

n/a

01/09/02

01/09/03

Projects or partnerships jointly funded. Reviewed at revised estimate stage after management reports from districts received.

 

Other

         

-

Guidance and Careers Service

183

n/a

n/a

n/a

Profit sharing agreed annually with Vosper Thorneycroft Southern Careers

3.

Services provided free where charges could be made

Nil

       
   

2876

       

Appendix 5B

Environment Service

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Review of income

   

Current charge

Total income 2003/04

Date of last review

Planned date for next review (where applicable)

Proposed increase (if proposed now)

Is charge set to recover full cost

Yes/No

Is charge subject to an assessment scale determined locally?

Yes/No

Additional

income from increased or

new charge

   

£

£'000

   

£

   

£

 

Charges

               
                   

1

Mandatory/National charges

               
                   
 

Planning application fees

Various

103

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

No

No

N/A

                   

2

Discretionary charges

               
                   
 

Road traffic accidents

               
 

-

works recharged

Actual cost

109

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

-

administration

8% - 15% oncost

82

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

                   
 

Rent from highways properties

Various

40

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Transport charges

Actual cost

36

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Trench inspection fees

Actual cost

309

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Land search fees

Various

136

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

TAG external income

Various

48

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Income from external bodies (AA)

Various

3

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Highways Agency Area 3

Actual cost

53

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Road closures

£201

13

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Safety audits

£350

3

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Engineering consultancy external fees

Various

309

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

County highways laboratory external fees

Various

313

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Land Search status enquiries

Actual cost

9

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

                   
 

DfT/EU grant

Actual cost

126

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

                   
                   
 

Income from outside bodies

Actual cost

23

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

NRSWA Section 74

Actual cost

50

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

TRICS income

Actual cost

35

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Abnormal loads

Actual cost

10

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Tourist signing

Actual cost

5

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Traffic surveys

Various

100

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Road safety fees and materials

Various

20

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

On-street parking charges

Various

1,296

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Lorry rent

£81,000

94

Jan 1993

Jan 2003

N/A

No

No

N/A

 

Minibus driver training and assessment

£80 to

£340

37

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Bus contracts - district council contribution

Actual cost

95

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Cross boundary bus subsidies

Various

422

Various

Various

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Ferries (contributions from Cities)

Various

23

Under review

N/A

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

                   
 

Planning - publications

Various

3

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Planning - other charges

Various

176

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Trade waste

Various

581

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Waste management rent

Various

693

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Waste management (PCC/SCC contribution)

Various

61

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

NFFO income

Various

28

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Waste management (West Berkshire contribution)

Various

21

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

 

Waste management - other miscellaneous income

Various

18

April 2002

April 2003

N/A

Yes

No

N/A

                   
                   

3

Services provided free where charges could be made

               
                   
 

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

     

5,484

           

Appendix 5C

Policy and Resources

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Review of income

   

Current charge

Total income

Date of last review

Planned date for next review

Proposed increase (if proposed now)

Is charge set to recover full cost

Yes/No

Is charge subject to an assessment scale determined locally?

Yes/No

Additional income from increased or new charge

   

£

£'000

   

£

   

£'000

1

Mandatory/National charges

               

Chief Executive:

               

-

Commons Registration

 

25

-

-

-

-

No

-

-

Recovery of legal costs

 

58

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

2

Discretionary charges

               

Chief Executive:

               

-

Legal fees for Police

 

216

April 2002

April 2003

-

Yes

No

-

-

Legal fees for Fire

 

25

April 2002

April 2003

-

Yes

No

-

-

Legal fees for other bodies

 

86

Annual

April 2003

-

Yes

No

-

County Treasurer:

               

-

Contractual Income

Various

2,239

Annual

Next year

       

Property, Business and Regulatory:

               

-

Property Services

Various

420

-

-

-

Yes

No

N/A

Office Accommodation:

               

-

Rents and service charges from other bodies

Various

283

-

Various

-

Yes

No

N/A

County Farms:

               

-

Agricultural lettings

Various

354

Per agreements

-

-

Yes

No

N/A

-

Other rents and income

Various

106

Per agreements

-

-

Yes

No

N/A

Sites for gypsies and travellers:

               

-

Rents

 

159

April 2002

April 2003

-

No

No

N/A

-

Utilities

 

42

April 2002

April 2003

-

Yes

No

N/A

Sir Harold Hillier Gardens and Arboretum:

               

-

Entrance fees

 

366

Nov 2000

Jan 2004

-

Yes

No

N/A

-

Conference lettings

 

32

Nov 2000

Jan 2004

-

Yes

No

N/A

-

Rents (gardeners)

 

46

Nov 2000

Jan 2004

-

Yes

No

N/A

Corporately held land:

               

-

Great Hall sales

 

48

Various

Various

-

-

Yes

No

-

Commercial and other rents

 

1,090

as lease allows

as lease

allows

-

Yes

No

N/A

Registration Services:

               

-

Fees for marriages in approved premises

 

240

Annual

2003/04

-

Yes

No

N/A

3

Services provided free where charges could be made

               
 

None

               
     

5,835

           

Appendix 5D

Recreation and Heritage Services

Revenue Budget 2003/04

Review of income

   

Current charge

Total income

Date of last review

*

Planned date for next review

Proposed increase

Is charge set to recover full cost

Yes/No

Is charge subject to an assess-ment scale determined locally?

Yes/No

* Additional income from increased or new charge

     

£'000

   

£'000

   

£'000

 

Discretionary Charges

               
                   

1

Museums and Archives

               
 

Fees and charges, publications, photocopying, micro-form, microfiche, microfilm, photos, searches, cinema use, miscellaneous

Various

834

Jan 2002

2003

-

No

No

-

                   

2

Milestones

               
 

Fees and charges, publications, miscellaneous

Various

809

Jan 2002

2003

-

No

No

-

3

Libraries

               
 

Fines, video hires, publications

Various

1,563

Jan 2002

2003

-

N/A

No

-

                   

4

Countryside

               
 

Entrance charges, car parks

Various

555

Jan 2002

2003

-

No

No

-

                   

5

Arts. Sport and Community

               
 

Fees and charges, rents, bar, car parks

Various

762

Jan 2002

2003

-

No

No

-

                   

6

Calshot Activities Centre

               
 

Fees and charges, sales, board, rents

Various

1,437

Jan 2002

2003

-

Yes

No

-

   

5,960

   

-

   

-

* Charging policy agreed at Executive member decision day December 2002, charges are to be reviewed in 2003 in line with this policy and are expected to generate significant additional income.

Appendix 5E

    Social Services

    Revenue Budget 2003/04

    Review of income

   

Current charge

Total income

(Budget 2002/03)

Date of last review

Proposed new Amount

Charge Effective Date

Is charge set to recover full cost?

Yes/No

Is charge subject to an assessment scale determined locally?

Yes/No

   

£

£'000

 

£

     

1

Mandatory/National Charges

             

Residential Care for Adults and Older people
- independent sector

various

36,410

April 02

Various

April 03

Yes

No

 

Residential Care for Older People - County Council homes

343.00

April 02

357.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Residential Care for the Elderly Mentally infirm

392.00

830

April 02

399.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Residential Care for people with Physical or Sensory Disability

770.00

134

April 02

789.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Residential Care for Adults with a Learning Disability

693.00

564

April 02

710.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Orchard Close - Standard Week

588.00

98

April 02

603.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
     

£000

         

2

Discretionary charges

             
                 
 

Residential Accommodation for Children

             
 

Community homes for Children

1,330.00

0

April 02

1,820.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Secure Unit (Swanwick Lodge)

3,304.00

1,590

April 02

3,451.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Homes for Children with a Disability

1,057.00

159

April 02

2,135.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Residential Accommodation for Adults

             
 

Orchard Close - Client Contribution

108.00

51

April 02

112.00

April 03

No

No

 

Day Care Establishments

             
 

Day Services for Older People

135.00

34

April 02

140.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Day Services for People with Mental Health Needs

195.00

6

April 02

200.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Day Services for People with Physical or Sensory Disabilities

             
   

including transport

265.00

239

April 02

270.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

excluding transport

215.00

 

April 02

220.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
 

Day Services for Adults with a learning Disability

             
   

including transport

155.00

169

April 02

160.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

excluding transport

125.00

 

April 02

130.00

April 03

Yes

No

     

£000

         
 

Full Cost Annual Charges

             
 

Day Services for Adults with a Learning Disabilities

             
   

including transport

4,360.00

included

April 02

4,470.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

excluding transport

3,450.00

above

April 02

3,540.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Banded Charges for Day Services for People with a Learning Disability

         
   

including transport

4,020.00

included

April 02

4,120.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

excluding transport

3,130.00

above

April 02

3,210.00

April 03

Yes

No

 

Plus banded charge for each hour per week

518.00

 

April 02

534.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
 

Non Residential Charges

10.00

5,566

April 02

No Change

Jan 03

No

Yes

 

Other Charges

             
                 
 

Meals for Adults:-

             
 

Day Services for People with a Physical Disability, Learning Disability, Mental Health Needs or Older People, Meals on Wheels and Luncheon Clubs per meal

2.40

630

April 02

2.50

April 03

No

No

                 
     

£000

         
 

Hostels for People with a Physical Disability: Transport charge per week

6.90

 

April 02

7.10

April 03

No

No

                 
 

Parental Contributions Weekly Charge

16.60

20

April 02

16.90

April 03

No

No

                 
 

Hire of Rooms - per hour

20.50

1

April 02

21.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
 

Hampshire Foster Care Placement Management
Charge - per week 201.00

0

April 02

210.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
 

Foster Care assessments

1,849.00

0

April 02

1,895.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
 

Broken down over the following elements:-

             
   

Initial Enquiry

124.00

0

April 02

127.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

Preliminary Checks/Contracts

132.00

0

April 02

135.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

Preparation Groups

185.00

0

April 02

190.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

Individual Assessment

1334.00

0

April 02

1,367.00

April 03

Yes

No

   

Standard Visit

74.00

0

April 02

76.00

April 03

Yes

No

                 
     

46,500

         

Appendix 8

Budget Forecast for 2004/05 and 2005/06

 

2004/05

2005/06

 

£m

£m

£m

£m

         

Proposed budget requirement in previous year

 

1,032.1

 

1,074.5

Variations in committed expenditure at current pay and price levels

       

    Waste management contract

3.0

 

2.8

 

    Capital financing costs

3.5

 

3.0

 

    Revenue effect of the capital programme

0.3

 

0 3

 

    Other variations

0.7

 

-0.1

 

 

7.5

 

6.0

Provision for inflation:

       

    Based on 3.5% for pay, 2.5% for prices and increased pension contributions

 

32.2

 

34.6

Passporting of Schools and Social Services spending increases:

       

    Schools

-4.2

 

4.8

 

    Social Services

6.9

 

4.4

 

 

2.7

 

9.2

       

Forecast spending increase

 

42.4

 

49.8

Projected budget requirement

 

1,074.5

 

1,124.3

Projected FSS - based on current share of national control totals and assuming a 2.5% floor

 

1,029.7

 

1,074.2

Budget forecast in excess of FSS

 

44.8

 

50.1

Increase in excess over FSS

 

7.3

 

5.3

Projected council tax increase (%)

 

6.3

 

6.7

Appendix 9

Summary of reserves and balances at 31 March 2004

The table below summarises estimated reserves and balances at 31 March 2004 and incorporates the proposals for contributions to and use of reserves and balances in the budget proposals:

   

Estimate at
31 March 2004 prior to budget proposals

Proposed variation in

2002/03 2003/04

Budgeted at 31 March 2004

           

Revenue account balance

10,544

-2,700

50

7,894

           

Earmarked reserves:

       
 

Schools

28,309

-

-

28,309

 

Trading units

1,561

-

-

1,561

 

Committee underspendings

24

1,289

-896

417

 

On-street parking

842

-

-

842

 

Insurance

4,647

-

-

4,647

           

General capital:

       
 

To cover repayment of credit approvals to HFRA

1,379

-

653

2,032

 

Balance of reserve

4,725

-

-

4,725

           

Pay and recruitment and job evaluation transitional costs

2,000

-

2,000

4,000

Delayed hospital discharges

2,000

-

-

2,000

Grant equalisation reserve

-

5,211

7,857

13,068

Other reserves

106

138

184

428

   

45,593

6,638

9,798

62,029

           
           

Total reserves and balances

56,137

3,938

9,848

69,923

           

Appendix 12A

Education Service

Revenue Budget 2003/04

1% and 1.5% savings in 2003/04 - LEA Block

 

2003/04

£'000

2004/05

£'000

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04 2004/05

1. Savings to Achieve 1% Reduction

Home to School Transport

       

    - cease denominational transport

-65

-130

-

-

    - cease Post-16 transport

-40

-80

-

-

    - out of school activities

-72

-72

-

-

    Reduce provision for teachers

    early retirements

-100

-100

-

-

    Reduce home to school transport contingency provision

-100

-100

-

-

    Reduce LEA Block contingency provision

-159

-54

-

-

 

-536

-536

-

-

         

2. Further savings of 0.5%

Eliminate home to school transport

provision

-100

-100

-

-

    Eliminate/reduce LEA Block contingency provision

-59

-168

-

-

Staff vacancy management

-109

-

-4

-

1.5% Savings

-804

-804

-4

-

         

Appendix 12B

Environment Service

Revenue Budget 2003/04

1% and 1.5% savings in 2003/04

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

     

£'000

£'000

   

1.

Efficiency savings

       
 

Reductions in staff costs through vacancy management, reduced overtime and travel, less use of external consultants for external studies and savings in office expenses

-300

-300

-2

-2

     

300

300

-2

-2

           

2.

Other savings to bring total savings up to 1%

       
 

Reductions in bus subsidy support

-169

-169

-

-

           
 

1% savings

-469

-469

-2

-2

           
             

3

Further 0.5% savings

       
 

Reductions in bus subsidy support

-235

-235

-

-

           
 

1.5% savings

-704

-704

-2

-2

             
           

Appendix 12C

Policy and Resources

Revenue Budget 2003/04

1% and 1.5% savings in 2003/04

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

     

£'000

£'000

   

1.

Efficiency savings

       
             
 

Total efficiency savings

-

-

   
             

2.

Other savings to bring total savings up to 1%

       
 

Chief Executive:

       
   

Vacancy management

-20

-20

   
   

Reduce travelling expenses, photocopying, printing, postage, training/support for LIPS

-20

-20

   
   

Reduce the number of Citizens' Panels from 3 to 2

-12

-12

   
   

Miscellaneous reductions to be managed during the course of the year eg non participation in various events such as local democracy week

-4

-4

   
   

Halve the level of grant to the four Local Enterprise agencies in Hampshire / Withdraw support for international trade

-6

-6

   
   

Members expenses - reduce training and printing costs

-15

-23

   
 

County Personnel and Training

Officer:

       
   

Vacancy management programme within PPU

-13

-13

   
   

Increased income generation within HTS

-7

-7

   
 

County Treasurer:

       
   

Reduction of one auditor or consultant post

-31

-31

-1

-1

 

Property Business and Regulatory:

       
   

Staffing

-100

-100

-3

-3

   

Winter maintenance

-100

-100

   
   

Furniture, equipment, training etc

-34

-34

   
 

Further savings on non Chief Officer budgets

-45

-45

   
             
 

1% savings

-407

-415

-4

-4

             

3

Further 0.5% savings

       
           
 

Chief Executive:

       
   

Vacancy management

-10

-10

   
   

Reduce travelling expenses, photocopying, printing, postage, training / support for LIPS

-10

-10

   
   

Miscellaneous reductions to be managed during the course of the year eg non participation in various events such as local democracy week

-7

-7

   
   

Halve the remaining level of grant to the four Local Enterprise agencies in Hampshire. Withdraw all support for international trade

-3

-3

   
   

Members expenses - reduce training and printing costs

-8

-8

   
 

County Personnel and Training

Officer:

       
   

Vacancy management programme within PPU

-6

-6

   
   

Increased income generation within HTS

-4

-4

   
             
 

County Treasurer:

       
   

Reduction of further half auditor or consultant post

-15

-15

-0.5

-0.5

 

Property Business and Regulatory:

       
   

Staffing

-50

-50

-1.5

-1.5

   

Winter maintenance

-50

-50

   
   

Furniture, equipment, training etc

-17

-17

   
             
 

Further savings on non Chief Officer budgets

-23

-23

   
             
 

1.5% savings

-610

-618

-6

-6

             

Appendix 12D

Recreation and Heritage Services

Revenue Budget 2003/04

1% and 1.5% savings in 2003/04

 

2003/04

2004/05

Staffing (FTEs)

2003/04

2004/05

     

£'000

£'000

   
           

1

Other savings to bring total savings up to 1%

       
 

Increased income

-262

-262

-

-

             
             
 

1% savings

-262

-262

-

-

             

2

Further 0.5% savings

       
 

Reduced acquisitions

-25

-25

-

-

 

Further increased income

-19

-19

-

-

 

Reduced support for arts and sports development

-38

-38

-

-

 

Reductions in operational expenditure

-49

-49

-

-

 

1.5% savings

-393

-393

-

-