2. Appointment of External Auditors
Following the extensive communication and invitation exercise undertaken during 2016, all smaller authorities in England were opted-in to the national procurement and appointment of external auditors for the 5 year period from 1 April 2017.
A further communication exercise is taking place in August 2022 giving authorities the opportunity to opt-out for the next 5-year period of 2022-23 to 2026-27 and to appoint their own external auditor (although it is a complex and difficult process for a smaller authority to appoint its own external auditor) – Opted Out Authorities Key Messages
If an authority wishes to continue as part of the SAAA sector led external auditor appointment regime then no action is required, the authority will remain part of central scheme for the next 5 year period.
All auditor appointments are listed by contract (County) area on the audit appointments page of the SAAA website together with their contact details, and a full listing of all smaller authorities in the ‘Directory of small body auditor appointments’ is also published on the SAAA website.
Every authority will have been e-mailed by SAAA a ‘notification of external auditor appointment’ letter confirming their appointed auditor and providing contact details and fee scales.
New auditor appointments have been made for 2022-23 to 2026-27 following a procurement exercise undertaken by SAAA in autumn 2021 and contracts signed with successful audit firms in November 2021.
These notifications of external auditor appointment were e-mailed to the latest address notified to their existing external auditor.
The auditors were initially been appointed for a 5 year period commencing 1st April 2017, with the new appointments commencing from 1st April 2022 for audit year 2022-23.
Fees were determined by SAAA following consultation for the Audit Years 2017-18 to 2021-22 and the fee scale document is available on the website. Fee scales have been held at similar levels to those applicable to the previous 5 year period.
Revised fee scales for limited assurance reviews for the next 5-year period of 2022-23 to 2026-27 have only increased by 5%
Scales of fees for smaller authorities are based on bands of annual income or expenditure, whichever is the higher. This means that the fees are broadly proportionate to the public funds and risks involved and the ability of each authority to pay.
An authority that is able to certify itself as ‘exempt’ (qualifying criteria must be met) and does not require or chose to have a limited assurance review will not have to pay an external audit fee provided a completed Certificate of Exemption is returned to the auditor by the required submission date or unless an objection is received from a local resident or interested party which requires investigation.
If an authority that meets the exemption criteria wishes the auditor to carry out a review, then the standard fee of £200 will be payable.
Additional charges will be incurred if statutory deadlines for the submission of the Annual Governance and Accountability Return or Certificate of Exemption are missed.
Yes, Parish Meetings are included in the definition of smaller authorities and the audit legislation and regulations are applicable to them, therefore all Parish Meetings require an appointed auditor even if they have no precept or financial transactions, and will still need to complete and submit a Certificate of Exemption (provided the qualifying criteria are met).
However, the publication requirements differ for Parish Meetings as the Transparency Code for Smaller Authorities does not cover Parish Meetings.
4. Annual Governance and Accountability Return (AGAR) completion
The AGAR is divided into 3 separate parts which reflect different levels of financial turnover. An authority will need to complete only one of the three parts. The three parts are:
Part 1 – Certificate of Exemption and Declaration of No Accounts;
Part 2 – Certificate of Exemption and Annual Return; higher of annual gross income or gross expenditure was £25,000 or less and meets the qualifying criteria;
Part 3 – over £25,000 up to £6.5 million – limited assurance review.
Parish Meetings where there is no Parish Council have slightly different AGAR forms for completion – Part 1PM, Part2PM, Part3PM – reflecting the differences in statutory requirements applicable to Parish Meetings.
The external auditor will distribute the audit instruction letter by e-mail towards the end of the financial year (late March). If you have not received any communication from the external auditor by mid-April then please contact them. You should check spam and junk folders to ensure any e-mail has not been filtered; it is advisable to add the auditor to your ‘safe senders’ list.
It is strongly recommended that the authority has a specific authority e-mail address “belonging to the authority” rather than using a personal e-mail address of the Clerk; this will ensure that important e-mail communications continue to be received even if there is a change in Clerk.
An electronic PDF version of the AGAR can be downloaded and completed electronically. This can then be printed off, signed, as physical signatures are still required, and returned to the auditor. The AGAR can be scanned and returned by e-mail. Please use post or e-mail, not both.
In line with government strategy, communications including the sending out of the audit pack and AGAR from the appointed auditors will be via e-mail unless paper copies have been specifically requested.
Between 1 April and 30 June – the AGAR is completed and approved, then either a Certificate of Exemption or a completed AGAR form with supporting documents must be sent to the external auditor.
Before 1 July – the required documents are published
Before 1 October – authorities that required a limited assurance review by the external auditor publish the required documents together with the External Auditor Report and Certificate.
The external auditor will follow-up and charge for reminders and/or additional time involved, and then will consider whether exercise formal powers such as issuing a written (Statutory) recommendation or Report in the Public Interest.
Reports in the Public Interest are copied to the Secretary of State at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) and the Monitoring Officer at the local Unitary or District Authority. They are also published on the SAAA website.
If either a written (Statutory) recommendation or Report in the Public Interest are issued, the authority will be unable to certify itself as exempt for the following year and will need to submit a completed AGAR to the external auditor for a limited assurance review and be charged the relevant fee.
The auditor will issue the final invoice on completion of the limited assurance review with the completed External Auditor Report and Certificate. The fee will be as set out in the published Scales of Fees for the review, plus any charges for late submission reminders and/or investigation work.
Auditor fees are a statutory fee and must be paid direct to the auditor. Authorities that fail to pay invoices despite reminders will be referred back to SAAA to commence legal proceedings for recovery plus costs.