Wednesday, 19 July 2023

INDEX: Council Leader Covers Up £218m of Accounting "Errors"


July 2023

This is a series of posts in numerical order, click on any link to be taken directly to that post.

Summary of contents:

1 - Executive summary. 2

2 - What is City Deal? 3

3 - How local authorities should account for capital grants 3

4 - 2015/16 – City deal is accounted for correctly. 4

5 - 2016/17 – Correct accounting in the first draft accounts 5

6 - 2016/17 – Material, late changes in the revised draft accounts 6

7 – The additional £17.8m accounting blunder 8

8 – The A&A Committee approves the accounts without knowing their contents 10

9 - November 2017 – the CFO distances himself from his own accounts. 12

10 - 2018/19 – EY fails to challenge accounting treatment 14

11 – The £160m U-turn and £218m cover-up. 16

12 - The evidence for fraudulent false accounting. 19

13 - Cambridgeshire CC’s going concern position. 20

14 - EY’s retrospective objection investigations 23

15 - Conclusion. 24

Cambridgeshire County Council’s leader, Cllr Lucy Nethsingha has declined to explain why the authority failed to correct acknowledged accounting errors totalling £218 million that materially overstated the level of usable reserves in five consecutive years’ audited financial statements, even after the council was forced to make a £160m correction for the identical error in the following year’s accounts (2020/21). 

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 1/15 in a series - Executive Summary

1 - Executive summary

“At a time when several councils are experiencing financial difficulties following high-risk investments, high quality audit is vital to maintain public trust.”

Dame Meg Hillier, Chair of the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee.

Seventh Annual Report of the Chair of the Committee of Public Accounts 2022-23

-oo0oo-

This lengthy and detailed narrative is an account of how Cambridgeshire County Council (CCC) deliberately and materially misstated its revenue position and embellished its balance sheet and usable reserves by prematurely recognising five years’ worth of central government City Deal grants in the first year of a five-year arrangement (2015/16 – 2019/20).  

In 2020/21 CCC employed the same incorrect accounting treatment in its draft accounts, but it performed a swift U-turn in May 2022 after the accounting treatment was exposed in the national press under the headline “Cooking the books”.  

Having acknowledged the error for the 2020/21 grant, the authority declined to enter prior-period adjustments for the same error in the previous five annual grants which overstated the council’s true debtor balances and usable reserves, and hence its liquidity position by a total of £218m in the aggregate.  The reason CCC gave for not making those prior-year adjustments (in breach of International Accounting Standard 8), was that the errors were “not material to the users of the accounts.”  Ernst & Young (EY), CCC’s current external auditor has failed to challenge its client over its inconsistent accounting treatment.

Two independent auditors - BDO from 2015/16 to 2017/18 and EY from 2019/20 onwards have colluded with CCC in agreeing to the material misstatements and attempting to cover them up.  At the time of writing BDO has still not concluded its investigation into a formal objection in 2018 from a local elector over City Deal accounting.  

Both external auditors at different times have held contradictory opinions on the issue and signed off the financial statements with both the correct and the incorrect accounting treatments, stating them to be true and fair on each occasion.

CCC finance officers and the two audit firms have repeatedly lied to and intentionally misled elected members of the Audit & Accounts Committee (A&A) on this matter.   Finance officers have also lied to the two local electors who first challenged the incorrect accounting treatment in November 2017.  The electors have also been provided with false information and denied documents that finance officers repeatedly claimed did not exist, only for them to be produced at a later date.

The same two electors have been insulted and on one occasion threatened in public meetings by elected members serving on the A&A Committee – (the committee charged with governance) for speaking the truth about the incorrect City Deal accounting treatment.

The historical overstatements of debtors and reserves took place over a period in which the council’s short-term borrowing rose seventy-three-fold from £3.4m in 2015/16 to £248.9m in 2020/21, the year in which the former Chief Finance Officer admitted that the authority was engaging proactively with MHCLG (now DLUHC) to discuss its precarious financial position.

CCC’s failure over five years to correct the material historical misstatements, and the two audit firms’ collusion mean that local taxpayers and other users of CCC’s financial statements (including central government) can have no confidence in the veracity of any financial information published by the authority even after it has been audited by BDO or EY.

The sections below explain what City Deal is and set out the correct accounting treatment for capital grants.  The sections from 4 onwards chronicle how City Deal grants were accounted for at CCC, and how both external audit firms have conducted themselves since 2015/16.

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 2/15 in a series - What is City Deal?

2 - What is City Deal?

City Deals 1 and 2 are two, five-year government grant arrangements sponsored by the DLUHC and the Treasury.  The grants were awarded to the Greater Cambridge Partnership (GCP).  CCC is the accountable body for the GCP, which means it holds funds and oversees payments to its delivery partners under the scheme (Cambridge City Council and South Cambs District Council) and suppliers where relevant.

The first City Deal (City Deal 1) ran from 2015/16 to 2019/20.  It comprised five annual grants, with conditions, worth £20 million each, i.e. £100m over all five years. 

City Deal 2 began in 2020/21.  It too comprises five annual grants, with the same conditions, worth £40m each, i.e. £200m over the five years to 2024/25.

The conditions are contained in grant determination documents signed by authority of the Minister of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government (now DLUHC).  The grant determination documents have been sent to CCC each year since 2015/16 to accompany the corresponding annual grant payments.  The conditions in all City Deal grant determination documents to date have been the same.  They state:

“Grant paid to a local authority under this determination may be used only for the purposes that a capital receipt may be used for in accordance with regulations made under section 11 of the Local Government Act 2003.”

That means if any grant monies are used for purposes, outside those specified, the grant monies may need to be returned, or the government may cease to pay the grants.

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 3/15 in a series - How Local Authorities should account for Capital Grants

3 - How local authorities should account for 

capital grants

Each year, CCC’s published statement of accounts contain the following statement under the section on the Chief Finance Officer’s responsibilities:

The Chief Finance Officer is responsible for the preparation of the Council's Statement of Accounts in accordance with proper practices as set out in the CIPFA/LASAAC Code of Practice on Local Authority Accounting in the United Kingdom (the Code).

The Code has been prepared under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which since 2010 have been adopted as the basis for public sector accounting in the UK.  Therefore, the Code is consistent with IFRS.

The fundamental accounting principle in the Code and IFRS is accruals base accounting.  That means that income and expenditure are recognised in the Comprehensive Income & Expenditure Statement (CIES) in the financial period to which they relate.  This is made explicit in the section headed “Accounting policies, general principles” in CCC’s published financial statements:

ACCRUALS OF INCOME AND EXPENDITURE

Revenue accounts are maintained on an accruals basis. Expenditure is charged to the revenue accounts in the year in which goods and services are received and, similarly, income is credited in the year to which it relates, regardless of the timing of cash payments or receipts. For example, accrued income is recognised where an amount is earned in the current accounting year, but is expected to be received in a subsequent year. Deferred income reflects any income which has been received in advance of it being earned, and is recognised when it can be matched with the year in which it is earned.

Accruals base accounting for recognising capital grants is also made explicit in paragraph 2.3.2.8 of the CIPFA Code:

The word “immediately” above relates only to the year of account.  It means that if the authority has satisfied the grant conditions for that year, but the grant payment has still not been received, then the grant receivable in that financial year may be recognised in that year’s Comprehensive Income and Expenditure Account.  

It does not mean that the authority can recognise the revenue from future years’ grants before those grants become receivable.  To do so would breach the fundamental principle of accruals base accounting and materially distort the financial statements.

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 4/15 in a series - City Deal Accounted for Correctly

4 - 2015/16 – City deal accounted for correctly

2015/16 was the first financial year of City Deal 1.  The first City Deal grant of £20m was receivable and duly received in that financial year. Consequently £20m was correctly recorded in the Comprehensive Income & Expenditure Account (CIES) as City Deal revenue. 

In the same year CCC received an additional £17.8m of City Deal grant.  This component was disclosed as grant received in advance because it related to the following year’s grant.  The £17.8m was therefore not recognised in the 2015/16 CIES but was held in the balance sheet as a creditor (Dr Cash, Cr Creditor - £17.8m).  This accounting treatment was correct, and corresponds to the deferred income scenario described in the box above.  This is how it was disclosed on page 89 of CCC’s final 2015/16 financial statements:


This correct accounting treatment shows that CCC’s CFO and the BDO auditor understood how City Deal grants should be accounted for.  In the following year (2016/17), only £2.221m of grant would be receivable in cash from the government under the arrangement, and the credit balance above would be reversed out to make the revenue up to the £20m grant total for the 2016/17 financial year (Dr Creditors, Cr Revenue £17.8m).

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 5/15 in a series - 2016/17 Correct Accounting in First Draft Accounts

 

5 - 2016/17 – Correct accounting in the first draft accounts

The draft accounts for 2016/17 were published in July 2017 and made available to the public to inspect - click here to view - Agenda Item 11. These accounts correctly reversed out the City Deal grant received in advance the year before, as stated on page 11:


Legislation (The Local Authority and Accountability Act 2014) requires councils to publish draft accounts for the external auditors to audit and for interested parties to inspect, request documents, and ask questions of the auditors.  Local electors may also submit objections to the draft accounts, addressing their objection to the auditor.  The statutory period for the public and local electors to do this for the 2016/17 draft accounts expired on 15th August 2017.

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 6/15 in a series - Material Late Changes/Revised Draft Accounts

6 - 2016/17 – Material, late changes in the revised draft accounts

Unusually, five weeks after the deadline for objecting to the accounts, at the 19th September 2017 meeting of the A&A Committee, CCC finance presented a revised draft set of financial statements to committee members - See Appendix to Item 6 at foot of page.

It was presented late, denying members the statutory five working days to read it before the meeting.  The main difference was a wholesale revision of the accounting treatment for City Deal.  According to BDO’s September 2017 interim report to those charged with governance (ISA 260 report), which was also presented late to the meeting, CCC had revised its accounting treatment of City Deal “in response to recommendations made last year” (see Appendix 1 below).  Presumably those recommendations came from BDO, but there is no evidence of them in any document on the A&A Committee webpages.  The revised draft accounts treated the five annual grants as a single £100m grant, which contradicts the discrete annual grant figures clearly set out in the determination documents.  BDO’s audit findings and conclusion in its ISA 260 report state:

“We concluded that the grant income awarded to the Council in relation to the City Deal in 2015/16 (£100m, to be paid in 5 annual instalments of £20m) did not have any conditions attached regarding its use.  The Code requires that grants should be recognised immediately as income unless any conditions have not been met.  In the absence of such conditions, the grant should have been recognised in full in the year the grant was awarded.” 

This is how BDO’s comments were translated in CCC’s second draft set of accounts:






This set of accounts can be found on the webpage of the 19th September meeting of the A&A Committee in the Appendix to Agenda Item 6 at the foot of the page.

The council was re-writing the previous year’s accounts, which BDO had signed off as correct in October 2016, and which had correctly shown £20m as the City Deal grant revenue receivable in that financial year, reflecting the contents of that year’s grant determination document MHCLG sent to CCC, the accountable body.

The revised 2015/16 accounts, in this second draft at least, embellished the prior year revenue by £80m (none of which was receivable in that financial year) to reflect BDO’s incorrect new interpretation of the City Deal grant.

To offset that imaginary extra revenue, two debtors were created, one short term, one long term, to reflect the grant cash receivable within 12 months (i.e. £20m in 2016/17), and the remaining £60m receivable in the years to 2019/20.

The amendment also produced £80m of virtual “reserves”, which had to be accounted for somehow.  CCC decided to put them into the “Capital Grants & Contributions Unapplied Reserve”, which forms part of usable reserves and thus made those reserves look £80m healthier than they in fact were.

 CCC’s Capital Grants & Contributions Unapplied Reserve is defined in the notes to the accounts.  It has existed at CCC at least as far back as 2012/13, and the wording of its definition has not changed since then:

“this reserve includes all capital grant income credited to the Comprehensive Income and Expenditure Statement, and subsequently reversed out of the General Fund Balance in the Movement in Reserves Statement.  It is designed to show the position when a capital grant has been received, and conditions of its award met, but is yet to be used to finance capital expenditure.  Amounts in this reserve are transferred to the Capital Adjustment Account once they have been applied to fund capital expenditure.”

 As the highlights show, this reserve is designed for grants that have been received, and for which the conditions have been met.  The £80m worth of future City Deal grants posted to that reserve had not been received, and their conditions had not been met in 2015/16, because the four future, conditional grants of £20m each were not awarded in 2015/16.  They were due to be awarded in the four years that followed 2015/16, subject to CCC continuing to comply with the conditions clearly set out in the grant determination documents.

CCC’s accounting trick that BDO recommended is analogous to the council anticipating the receipt of the next four years’ worth of Council Tax income all in the current year, and thus recognising a massive windfall revenue surge, along with a corresponding rise in usable reserves which cannot be called upon because they simply do not exist.  Using the same trick any council could make any sized hole in their reserves magically disappear, and make their balance sheet look substantially healthier to users of the accounts, including central government, local taxpayers or other councils who might consider lending money to it, based on its apparent liquidity. 

With this revised interpretation of City Deal, CCC was claiming two contradictory things.  It was saying that in year one of the arrangement, the remaining four annual grants had already been received (the £80m added to the capital grants unapplied reserve), but at the same time they had not been received because the £80m was also categorised as debtors.  In any event, the non-existent additional revenue and the non-existent reserves clearly did not give a true and fair view of the council’s financial position.  Instead, the overstatements materially misstated that position.  But things were about to get even worse.

Accounting Errors at CCC - Post 7/15 in a series - The Additional £17.8m Accounting Blunder

7 – The additional £17.8m accounting blunder

In making the above prior-period adjustments to the 2015/16 accounts, CCC overlooked an important detail.  In 2015/16 the council did not just receive that year’s £20m City Deal grant.  It also received the £17.779m in advance, representing 89% of the following year’s City Deal grant (see sections 4 and 5 above).  In the 2015/16 accounts that grant received in advance was correctly accounted for as a creditor.  The credit balance was correctly reversed out in the draft 2016/17 financial statements, and taken to that year’s revenue account (Dr Creditors £17.8m, Cr Revenue £17.8m).  But that journal entry is inconsistent with BDO’s new interpretation, in which all £100m of City Deal 1 revenue was supposed to be recognised in year one (2015/16).  Under that model there should be no City Deal creditor to reverse out the following year, because all £100m grant revenue had already been recognised in 2015/16.

Therefore, on top of the prior-period adjustments shown above, an additional adjustment was needed to remove the superfluous 2015/16 creditor.  Also, because £37.8m of the £100m City Deal grants (20+17.8) had physically been received in 2015/16 and duly debited to the bank account, the “true” City Deal debtor position under the false BDO model should have been £62.2m, not the £80m (20+60) shown in the table of prior period movements above.  So, the additional “tweak” needed on top of the above adjustments to make the 2015/16 accounts consistent with the new revenue frontloading model would be to reduce both the creditor and the debtor balances by £17.8m – i.e. Dr Creditors £17.8m, Cr short term debtors £17.8m.

As the prior period adjustments in CCC’s final, audited 2016/17 accounts show, that is not what CCC did.  The final, audited version published on the council’s website on 12th October 2017 “correctly” debited the creditor balance, but instead of crediting the debtor balance, it credited Revenue in the Comprehensive Income & Expenditure Statement, thus overstating 2015/16 revenue by £97.8m instead of merely by £80m.  Had the correct journal been added, the net effect on reserves (over and above the initial prior period adjustments shown above (from Sept 2017), would have been zero.  But because the debtor balance was not reduced in the final tweak, it was overstated by a further £17.8m, which meant the Capital Grants & Contributions Unapplied Reserve was similarly overstated by £17.8m to £97.8m.  The screenshot below, taken from page 98 of the final, audited accounts published on 12th October 2017 shows the effect of the supplementary tweaks on the

September 2017 prior-period adjustments:

These are the prior-period adjustment figures that made it to CCC’s final accounts that were signed off and certified as true and fair by the CFO (Chris Malyon) on 12th October 2017 (page 21) and were approved by the Vice Chair of the Audit & Accounts Committee (Cllr Rogers) on 11th October 2017 (page 22).  

They were also signed off with an unqualified (“true and fair”) audit opinion by BDO’s audit partner Lisa Clampin.  Those final accounts can be found here under the link “ SoA 2016-Final inc audit opinion and signatures”.  

Nobody appears to have noticed the incorrect final adjusting journal that raised the already overstated revenue, debtors and reserves by a further £17.8m.  That £17.8m in itself exceeded BDO’s final materiality thresholds for 2015/16 and 2016/17 of £14.935 and £16.5m respectively.

In the following years of the City Deal 1 regime, the debtors and usable reserves would taper down by £20m each year, whilst the revenue account in the CIES would be understated by £20m each year because it had all been recognised prematurely in year one – 2015/16.  The table overleaf summarises the material misstatements for each year in which CCC applied the incorrect revenue-frontloading accounting treatment for City Deal 1: