Issue - meetings

Customer Strategy Complaints Policy

Meeting: 15/11/2022 - Cabinet (Item 95)

95 Customer Strategy Complaints Policy pdf icon PDF 653 KB

Additional documents:

Decision:

1.         Cabinet agreed the proposed Complaints Policy as described in this report and annexed as appendix 1.

 

2.         Cabinet delegated authority to the Strategic Director (People and Transformation) to make any further changes to the policy following feedback from the Overview and Scrutiny Committees.

Minutes:

Decision

 

1.    Cabinet agreed the proposed Complaints Policy as described in this report and annexed as appendix 1.

 

2.    Cabinet delegated authority to the Strategic Director (People and Transformation) to make any further changes to the policy following feedback from the Overview and Scrutiny Committees.

 

Corporate Priorities

 

Ensuring efficient, effective and modern service delivery.

 

Statutory Officer Comments:

 

Monitoring Officer:

 

The revised policy provides an appropriate framework to ensure that Customer Complaints are responded to in a timely manner at an appropriate level within the organisation. This should help to ensure the resolution of complaints and minimise further complaints to the Local Government Ombudsman.

 

S151 Officer:

 

The proposed complaint policy changes are not expected to have a financial impact on the Council, but they form a part of the wider customer strategy changes that are expected to deliver £200k of efficiencies as part of the current Medium Term Financial Strategy.

 

Advice

 

Cllr Elliot introduced the report and welcomed any questions.

 

Cllr Banks expressed appreciation for the paper but expressed some concern that the policy contains only links to submit complaints via website and email, it does not include ‘if you would like to write to us’ detail?

 

AWilkie responded and advised they have received some similar feedback so are already looking at inserting an address to add to our approach.

 

Cllr Tindall queried his presumption that the policy applies to our corporate partners, where we engage them to deliver services on our behalf and queried, in that case, is there any distinct note or obligation that any complaint that goes to contractor first is automatically referred to Council and included in the process?

 

AWilkie responded that we work with a variety of partners and have spoken to them about how we can ensure there is swift communication around that, highlighting that it is the beauty of this approach as it is more rigorous to the performance of contractors, allowing us to identify where there are delays in this process and to then tackle those areas.

 

Cllr Tindall noted he didn’t see anything specific about the obligation for contractors to refer those complaints to us to log in our system.

 

Cllr Williams commented that if you have a policy that instructed partners to report those matters to Council it would need to be in the contract.  If a customer complained directly to the contractor and they resolved that, there would be no need to refer it to us.

 

Cllr Tindall expressed he feels there is a gap to be closed.

 

AWilkie confirmed this would be a contractual issue and this policy would not be the correct place to resolve that, but what we are doing is speaking with contractors so we are aware earlier of potential issues and creating a log of conversation so that we already have that information if a complaint crosses our desks.  That plus a greater understanding of the data and what the accumulation of complaints is telling us will allow us to tackle that.  If  ...  view the full minutes text for item 95