Nottingham Post

Legal aid to cost city council extra £100k

AUTHORITY IS USING EXTERNAL EXPERTS AMID RECRUITMEN­T ‘ISSUES’

- By JOSEPH LOCKER joseph.locker@reachplc.com @joelocker9­6

NOTTINGHAM City Council is to spend an additional £100,000 on legal aid as it continues to be plagued by an inability to recruit permanent staff members.

The cash will go towards a solicitor over the course of a year as it seeks to become financiall­y stable.

The Labour-run council had been under the scrutiny of an independen­tly-chaired improvemen­t board after it lost £38m in taxpayer cash in Robin Hood Energy.

And after further financial mishaps were uncovered, with an estimated £40m from its Housing Revenue Account wrongly spent, the Government said it was minded to now send in the commission­ers.

So far the council has managed to decrease its debt levels from £1.2 billion to £900 million, primarily through the success of its asset rationalis­ation programme through which it has been selling off property assets it no longer needs, however its progress has come at a cost, too.

The council has been struggling to recruit permanent roles and it lacks the required expertise in a number of areas.

As such it has been employing consultant­s and external support, some of whom charge upwards of £1,000 per day, to fill this void.

Council documents state the £100,000 will go towards a locum solicitor within the Legal and Governance directorat­e to support ongoing work.

According to job advertisem­ents on the council’s website, fixed-term solicitor jobs offer roughly £40,000 per year, meaning it is paying considerab­ly more for a locum solicitor.

For senior roles, the salary rises to around £44,000.

The city council says: “The work undertaken by the locum property solicitor supports a key deliverabl­e for the council under the Together for Nottingham Plan.

“There was, and remains, insufficie­nt capacity within the existing permanent staffing establishm­ent to deliver the disposals required under the Asset Rationalis­ation Programme, which is an ongoing scheme of high value to the council.

“The temporary locum solicitor was engaged through an agency provider in January 2021 and has contribute­d positively to this agenda.

“As there remains to be insufficie­nt resource internally to deliver this work, despite a number of fixed-term recruitmen­t attempts, it is now proposed to extend this arrangemen­t for a further period of up to 12 months to enable this work to continue.”

Explaining why such costly experts are being employed, city council leader and Dales ward councillor, David Mellen, added: “The Government’s non-statutory review of the council places a requiremen­t on the council to improve, with a focus on financial and governance arrangemen­ts. “We are making good progress on this, but we need external expertise at this early stage of our transforma­tion, with changes required at pace. “We made a request to Government for capitalisa­tion, allowing us to borrow up to £20m against capital assets, which has helped us to create a transforma­tion reserve. “Some of this reserve money is being used to appoint external experts and set up new business support and customer service arrangemen­ts to drive the transforma­tion activity that’s been identified is needed at the council. “This does not impact on our budgets for running day-to-day services.”

There remains to be insufficie­nt resource internally to deliver this work.

City council spokespers­on

 ?? JOSEPH RAYNOR ?? The city council is spending an additional £100k on legal aid as it struggles to recruit permanent staff
JOSEPH RAYNOR The city council is spending an additional £100k on legal aid as it struggles to recruit permanent staff

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