Cash-strapped Northamptonshire council lent law firm £1m

  • Published
Companies House filing outlining the Northamptonshire County Council overdraft to LGSS Law
Image caption,
Critics say "questions need to be asked" about the continuing overdraft offered by the cash-strapped council

A council labelled the worst-run in the country and facing "severe financial challenges" lent a law firm nearly £1m, it has emerged.

Northamptonshire County Council was twice forced to stop all non-essential spending in 2018.

But the BBC has learned the council continues to offer a £1m overdraft facility to a company called LGSS Law.

The credit was offered to "ensure the emerging company avoided any cash flow difficulty", the council said.

LGSS Law - which is owned by Cambridgeshire County Council, Northamptonshire County Council and Central Bedfordshire Council - was founded in 2015 with the aim of providing a "new model" for public sector legal services.

'Money back'

It now has more than 100 public sector and not-for-profit clients, including Ipswich Borough Council and Corby Borough Council, and employs more than 150 people.

Filings with Companies House reveal LGSS Law, which had an £8.7m turnover in 2018, drew down £950,000 of the Conservative-led council's £1m overdraft in 2017-18.

Labour councillor Mick Scrimshaw, who is also the county council's overview and scrutiny committee chairman, said: "There are definitely questions that need to be asked.

"There is no question that the council could do with that money back. It would go some way to dealing with the overspend."

Northamptonshire County Council's financial crisis timeline

Image caption,
The county council is due to be scrapped in 2020
  • September, 2017: The council launches an appeal for fairer funding from central government as a Local Government Association (LGA) peer review group says it is "running out of time"
  • November, 2017: Council staff are told they must take a day's unpaid leave
  • January, 2018: Sajid Javid, secretary of state for local government at the time, orders a probe into the council's finances
  • February, 2018: The council bans almost all new spending for 2017-18
  • February, 2018: Auditor KPMG says the council's 2018/19 budget may be unlawful
  • March, 2018: Inspector Max Caller outlines his findings - recommending Northamptonshire should have two new unitary authorities by 2020
  • March, 2019: Government-appointed commissioners find council is 'now operating more effectively'

A council spokesman said the overdraft was provided when the company was established.

"This was before the council's recent financial difficulties," he said.

"The purpose of the overdraft was to provide a working capital to ensure the emerging company avoided any cash flow difficulty.

"This facility is still required by the company at this present time."

LGSS Law did not respond to questions about the overdraft from the BBC.

The county council - once called "the worst run in the country" by Kettering MP Philip Hollobone - is projected to overspend this financial year.

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