THOUSANDS of complaints have been made to Local Authorities in Wales.

This is over a three month period.

More than 4,300 complaints were received by Welsh Local Authorities in the first quarter of 2021/22; this is the equivalent of 5.57 complaints for every 1,000 residents of Wales. (Public Services Ombudsman for Wales - PSOW - uses this type of representation to better compare public services which vary greatly in size.) 

Denbighshire County Council received 114 complaints and 114 were closed. A total of 99.12 per cent were closed within 20 days and 0.88 per cent between 20 days and three months. 57.02 per cent were upheld. Nine were referred to PSOW and three were closed by PSOW. 

Conwy County Borough Council received 88 complaints and 82 were closed. A total of 84.15 per cent were closed within 20 days and 14.63 per cent took between 20 days and three months. 1.22 per cent took between three to six months and 50 per cent were upheld. Five were referred to PSOW and three were closed by PSOW. 

Gwynedd Council recorded 192 complaints and 185 were closed. 86.49 per cent were closed within 20 days, 13.51 per cent were closed between 20 days and three months and zero per cent between three and six months and 49.19 per cent were upheld. 10 were referred to PSOW and five were closed by PSOW. 

Isle of Anglesey County Council recorded 28 complaints and 23 were closed. 69.57 per cent were closed within 20 days, 30.43 per cent were closed between 20 days and three months and none between three and six months. 8.70 per cent were upheld, four were referred to PSOW and three were closed by PSOW. 

Following the introduction of the Public Service Ombudsman (Wales) 2019 Act and the establishment of the Complaints Standards Authority, the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales (PSOW) has the power to set minimum standards of complaint handling for public bodies in Wales.

The work on Complaints Standards includes issuing model complaint handling procedures, providing free training on good complaint handling practice and collecting information on complaints handled by public bodies themselves.

Local Authorities were the first Welsh Public Service bodies to be subject to Complaints Standards and, for the first time, PSOW is publishing the complaints data it has collated from them.

About 78 per cent of complaints across Wales, which were closed in the first quarter of the year, were done so within the target of 20 working days. This measure of performance is important to people who use complaints services. However, whilst it is important that complaints investigations are conducted promptly, PSOW stresses that they should not be cut short simply to meet a target.

Local Authorities in Wales upheld roughly half of the complaints they closed. This figure shows how often complaints are found to hold some merit and can also lead to improvements in public service delivery. It is important to note that high uphold rates are not necessarily a sign of poor performance but can be an indication of willingness to improve service delivery.

Nick Bennett, the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales said: “I’m delighted with the excellent progress made in making use of our proactive powers and we’re excited to publish complaints data for the first time. These powers were several years in the making and I’m grateful to all the public bodies who have engaged with my colleagues. This regular data publication should become an important source of information which raises standards, promotes collaboration and drives improvement in public services.”

More than 250 complaints related to Local Authorities were referred to PSOW in the first quarter of the year, which represents about 6.5 per cent of all complaints closed in the same period. This figure gives new context to both Local Authority complaints data and PSOW information – and could provide insight into how effectively complaints services function.

PSOW closed 99 cases related to Local Authorities in Quarter One of the year, with about a quarter of these cases being deemed within its jurisdiction to consider. Of the cases which it acted upon, the vast majority (87.5 per cent) featured an early resolution being made by the Local Authority involved. The remaining examples featured cases where an investigation was upheld against the Local Authority – meaning that PSOW intervened in 100 per cent of available cases in the period.

Matthew Harris, PSOW’s Head of Complaints Standards, said, “We’re delighted to publish data submitted to us for the first time and I’d like to thank our colleagues in Local Authorities across Wales for engaging so positively with our Complaints Standards work.

"Our quarterly data publications will drive transparency and consistency, as well as giving new context to what ‘complaints performance’ means.

"I think we need to understand that high volumes of complaints don’t necessarily mean low quality services; just as low levels of complaints don’t always indicate good service provision. The information shown here needs to be the start of the story, with the end goal of all complaints processes being to deliver better public services – not necessarily fewer complaints.”

A spokesperson for Denbighshire County Council said: “By following the National guidance set out by the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales, the council is able to engage with residents to rectify any issues of concern and use this to help us to make continued improvements to our service delivery across Denbighshire.”

Conwy County Borough Council didn't have anything to add at this time but did inform the paper the local authority publishes a Corporate Compliments and Complaints report every year.