South Ribble "disappointed" by auditors' approach
External auditors last month made a ‘statutory recommendation’ for the council to speed up the process, initiated after a series of failings in its licensing department emerged in 2016.
South Ribble has been receiving advice from local authority leaders about how to improve its performance.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThe so-called ‘peer review’ team made a follow-up visit to the authority in mid-March, after which it suggested the council needed to quicken the pace of a plan to restructure its senior management team and fully implement a shared services agreement with neighbouring Chorley Council.
When the audit was published in July, deputy leader Caroline Moon told a meeting of the council’s governance committee that it “already felt out of date”, because many of the issues raised had been addressed since a largely new cabinet began work in April.
But another part of the audit did consider more recent matters - namely, that the authority’s chief finance officer had been filled by four different individuals in the space of nine months.
Auditors Grant Thornton accepted that the role had been “sufficiently discharged”, but questioned whether a strategic approach could have been taken to the council’s financial position amidst so many changes.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThe scrutiny committee will next week be told: “There appears to be no recognition that this council has moved from a deficit position to a positive position, and that, for the first time, the council has an approved 5-year financial strategy.”
A meeting of the full council will decide whether to accept the auditors’ recommendation - and what action to take - at a later date.