The decision on any level of fees and charges should be transparent and open to scrutiny.
It is recognised that it will not always be appropriate to seek to recover the full cost of delivery, including relevant amount of organisational overhead, but should be set as a subsidised, or concession, or nominal charge. However, such decisions should be subject to prior approval by the relevant Executive Director, in consultation with the relevant Portfolio Holder, and if necessary, with the Section151 Officer.
An example of not applying full cost recovery is where services provide support to service users that helps prevent the need to access more costly or complex services later therefore it is in the interest of the council not apply full cost recovery.
There are a range of different types of charges against different types of services, supported by individual objectives which, for the purpose of this Policy, fall across the following:
- statutory services
- discretionary services
- commercially trading discretionary services
Statutory services
Services that the council has a duty to provide. Fees and charges set nationally
Type - statutory:
Type - statutory prohibition:
- objective - no charges can be made against these services
Discretionary services
Type - Full cost recovery:
- objective - The council wishes to make the service generally available but does not wish to allocate resources to the service. All costs fully recovered
Type - Subsidised:
- objective - The council believes access to the service should be widely available and is prepared to subsidise the service to ensure target groups have access. Could also be due to adverse impact a full cost recovery or commercial charging policy would have on other council services. Funding support will come from the revenue budget, meaning council taxpayers are subsidising this service
Type - concession:
- objective - The service should be widely available, with users of the service making some contribution from their own resources, but not to the full value of cost recovery
For example, organisations whose purpose is to assist the council in meeting specific objectives in its priorities and policy framework, or which contribute to the aims of local partnerships in which the council has a leading role.
The funds to make up the difference are not from revenue budget and might instead come from grant funding or other fundraising.
Concessions might also be applied as a temporary discount by generating less income in the short term but linked to a better outcome, e.g., encourage growth of a new product, increase overall uptake, in the future.
Type - nominal:
- objective - The council wishes the service to be fully available but sets a charge to limit inappropriate or over-use of services that would otherwise be fully funded
Type - fully funded:
- objective - Fully funded services are free for service users as they are funded by the council. As these services present a direct and full cost to the council, knowing their value is critical
Commercially Trading Discretionary Services
Discretionary services provided as a commercial trading activity. The power to trade permits an authority to generate a surplus provided the activity occurs under a trading model, e.g., Local Authority Trading Company (LATC). Fees and charges set by the council taking into account competitor pricing, demand, and the council’s market position.
Type - full commercial:
- objective - The council seeks to maximise revenue within an overall objective of generating surplus as large as possible from this service. Full cost recovery model
Type - commercial with discounts:
- objective - As full commercial but with discounted concessions being given to enable disadvantages groups to access the service. Full cost recovery model
Type - Constrained Commercial (Full Cost Recovery):
- objective - The council seeks to maximise income but is subject to a defined constraint – policy, competition, commitment to service users, political. Full cost recovery model