Finance and General Purposes Committee Minutes 4 May 2022
Finance and General Purposes Committee Minutes 4 May 2022
Corporation and Committee Minutes- Finance and General Purposes Committee Minutes 4 May 2022
Minutes of a meeting of the board of Leicester College corporation: Finance and general purposes committee
Held on 4 May 2022
Present: Danielle Gillett (Chair), Ed Marsh*, Verity Hancock*, Caroline Tote, Chan Kataria
In Attendance: Louise Hazel - Director of Governance and Policy, Shabir Ismail - Deputy Principal/CEO, Della Sewell - Director of HR, Craig Paterson - Bespoke Consulting (item 3)
*Joined meeting online via Teams
- Declaration of interests - 1.1 Verity Hancock, Louise Hazel, Shabir Ismail and Della Sewell declared an - interest in item 3 
 
- Apologies for absence - Apologies for absence were received from Jonathan Kerry. 
 
- Senior postholders pay review - CONFIDENTIAL minute - Verity Hancock, Louise Hazel and Shabir Ismail joined the meeting 
- Minutes of previous meeting and matters arising - 4.1 The minutes of the meeting held on 2 March 2022 were received and - agreed. 
- 4.2 As a matter arising it was asked if there had been any update to the Changing - the Face of FE report. Work was ongoing and there was nothing to update on - at this stage. 
- 4.3 The confidential minutes of the meeting held on 2 March 2022 were - received and agreed. 
 
- Financial report (Period 8) - 5.1 The Deputy Principal presented finance report (period 8). The following points were highlighted. - 5.1.1 The College was on track to hit the spring reforecast position. The - year-to-date result was an operating deficit after restructuring costs of - £2,428k compared to the budgeted deficit of £2393k. 
- 5.1.2 The College was not expecting to meet its 16-18 learner responsive - learner number and funding target by the end of the year. There were - still some withdrawals and achievement was not yet known. 
- 5.1.3 Indications from the latest data return and discussions with the - curriculum directors suggested that the College would also fall short of - its AEB allocation. This was reflected in the spring reforecast. 
- 5.1.4 Apprenticeship income was currently in line with the reduced spring - reforecast target of £3.9m, excluding employer incentives. The impact - of COVID-19 on new starts in 2020/21 had resulted in fewer carry-ins - for this year. 
- 5.1.5 A further reduction of £327k in HE income was included in the spring - reforecast. This had associated cost savings of £27k 
- 5.1.6 Pay continued to be very tight and it was unlikely there would be any - further efficiencies. Pay and non-pay would be reviewed further in the - summer reforecast. 
- 5.1.7 The College continued to meet its bank covenants and remained in the - ‘requires improvement’ financial health rating at 170 points. Cash - balances were healthy. The bank remained supportive and - discussions continued over the College’s position. 
 
- 5.2 Governors asked a number of questions including: - 5.2.1 If the points total for the autumn reforecast should read 170 not - 160. It should, this would be corrected. 
- 5.2.2 The College was on track for the spring reforecast but the - summer reforecast would be important. Agreed, for the summer - reforecast all lines would be reviewed again. Enrolment was still - taking place for AEB provision in ESOL and City Skills. 
- 5.2.3 What was the risk around a £3 million adverse movement which - would move the College from ‘requires improvement’ to - ‘inadequate’ and intervention? This was felt to be low risk; it might - occur through a combination of lower income and/or higher costs but it - was unlikely that the College would be in that position. The main - concern was around the risk of breaking bank covenants. Dialogue - had already taken place with the bank but it remained supportive. The - College did not want to revisit the covenants. 
- 5.2.4 Was there anything in writing to indicate the bank’s support? - This had not yet been requested. The summer reforecast and budget - for next year would be completed and then a view would be taken as - to which year would be under more pressure and at what point the - bank’s formal support might be needed. 
 
- 5.3 Governors noted the period 8 finance report. 
 
- Final funding allocations 2022/23 - 6.1 The Deputy Principal presented a report on the final funding allocations for - 2022/23. The following points were raised. - 6.1.1 The Agency funding allocations for 16-19 funding and AEB had been - received. The total AEB allocation was £10,337k compared to - £10,309k in the current year and so was effectively being held at pre- - COVID levels. There was no change in the 97% tolerance and no - increase in the funding rates for an eleventh year. More adult funding - was being devolved which left a smaller central funding pot. 
- 6.1.2 The 16-18 allocation showed a reduction of 203 students to 3,364, an - impact of COVID-19. This equated to nearly £1.5 million of funding - that the College would ordinarily have received. There was additional - funding for T levels and the TPS so overall the reduction looked to be - around £250k less than 2021/22. This included the increase in rates. - Although it was reported to be an increase of 8% the AoC estimated - that it was much lower than this in real terms. 
- 6.1.3 The National Skills Fund (NSF) would continue to impact on the loans - allocation. 
- 6.1.4 Discussion was ongoing with the local councils around high needs - funding. It might be necessary to revisit discussions about the viability - of the PMLD provision again. 
- 6.1.5 Overall, allocations were 2.4% higher than 2020/21 but this hid the - additional required 7% increase in delivery for 16-18s. 
 
- 6.2 Governors noted the final funding allocations. 
 
- Tuition fees 2022/23 - 7.1 The Deputy Principal presented a paper on the tuition fees for 2022/23. The - following points were highlighted. - 7.1.1 The fees policy was largely unchanged. The College would continue to - adopt an assumed fee element of 50%. 
- 7.1.2 The funding rules now reflected changes following Brexit including that - only EEA students with settled or pre-settled status, under the EU - Settlement Scheme, were now eligible for ESFA funding. This now - included those who entered the UK under Ukraine and Afghanistan - resettlement schemes. 
- 7.1.3 The College had taken the decision to surrender its Home Office - Sponsor Licence. It would retain fee levels for international students - currently on programme. Deposits would no longer be required for - overseas students as this was no longer relevant. 
 
- 7.2 Governors asked a number of questions including: - 7.2.1 What was the policy on agreeing discounts? All avenues including - providing access to bursaries and more flexible instalment plans were - offered before discounts were agreed. These would be in exceptional - cases and might be 10-15%. 
- 7.2.2 Had the Home Office Sponsor Licence been suspended after the - Ofsted RI rating? It had and had then been restated. The pandemic - had affected international recruitment and there was now so much - competition for students that the numbers were unlikely to recover. 
- 7.2.3 Were there therefore implications for the International Office? - There would be and this was currently being looked at. 
 
- 7.3 Governors approved the tuition fees for 2022/23. 
 
- ESFA Financial dashboard - 8.1 The Deputy Principal presented the ESFA Financial Dashboard. The following - points were highlighted. - 8.1.1 Data had been taken from the financial record and from forecasts. It - did not reflect any changes in policy that might have affected colleges’ - ability to forecast such as the introduction of the apprenticeships levy. 
- 8.1.2 The dashboard confirmed there were no issues with financial controls. 
 
- 8.2 In response to a question about why the debt service cover charts showed - such a decline and then incline, it was explained that this was based on the - forecast assumption that the College would have to pay the AEB clawback, - which it had not had to do. 
- 8.3 Governors noted the ESFA dashboard. 
 
- Bad debt write-off - 9.1 The Deputy Principal presented a paper requesting authority to write-off debts - that were considered uncollectable. The following points were highlighted: - 9.1.1 The debts had been chased as far as possible and were now - considered to be uncollectable. 
- 9.1.2 During the academic year to date, from 1 August 2021, there had been - previous write offs of £46,615.29. With this recommendation, the - cumulative total for the year would be £51,499.29. 
 
- 9.2 Governors considered the paper and agreed to approve the write-off of - uncollectable debts totalling £4,884. 
 
- Waivers of financial regulations - 10.1 Governors received and noted the report on waivers of financial - regulations. 
 
- Date of next meeting - 22 June 2022