Decision search


What's this ?
  • Organisation
  • Decision type

  • Reference number
  • Date range

     

  • Sort Results

Show advanced search

Your search has 50317 results

  • Lancashire County Council (24 008 773)

    Statement Upheld Special educational needs 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: The evidence currently suggests fault by the Council on Mrs Y’s complaint about it failing to initially accept her private Educational Psychologist report in support of her request for an Education, Health and Care plan for her daughter. It failed to issue the final plan within statutory timescales or deal with her complaint properly. As a result, her daughter lost provision for one and a half terms. The fault also caused frustration, lost opportunity, and uncertainty. The Council agreed to pay for lost educational provision and distress. It would remind relevant officers about the role of a panel, the need to give clear explanations about doubts of private reports, and the need to follow its own complaints procedure.

  • Bury Metropolitan Borough Council (24 008 800)

    Statement Upheld Refuse and recycling 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: Mr X complained the Council has repeatedly failed to collect his household waste and recycling as scheduled over a significant period. We found the Council’s failure to properly address the issue of restricted access to the back street and to ensure household waste and recycling could continue to be collected as scheduled is fault. As is the failure to communicate with residents regarding any proposed or implemented changes to the waste collection service. As a result Mr X now takes all his waste and recycling to the Household Waste and Recycling Centre. The Council has agreed to apologise for this fault and make a payment to Mr X, and to review the waste collection arrangements for Mr X’s street.

  • London Borough of Newham (24 008 922)

    Statement Upheld Parking and other penalties 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: Mr X complained about the way the Council dealt with his representations when he disputed a penalty charge notice for a vehicle he did not own at the time. This caused significant distress, frustration and inconvenience in trying to resolve the matter, impacting on his wellbeing. The Council accepted it made an error by not properly considering his evidence. The Council has agreed to further remedy the injustice with another apology and symbolic payment to Mr X.

  • Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea (24 009 703)

    Statement Upheld Homelessness 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: Mr X complained about the way the Council handled his homelessness and housing register applications. We have found the Council at fault for delaying in deciding Mr X’s housing register application, delays processing his homelessness application and for not providing temporary accommodation. This caused Mr X avoidable distress and meant he spent time in unsuitable accommodation. To remedy the injustice caused the Council agreed to apologise, make a payment to Mr X, offer him temporary accommodation and issue him with a decision on his housing register application.

  • Liverpool City Council (24 010 564)

    Statement Upheld Homelessness 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: Mr X complained that the Council failed to provide sufficient support when he became homeless due to domestic abuse. The Council was at fault as it did not consider its duty to provide interim accommodation when Mr X first presented as homeless, did not consider if the interim accommodation offered to him was suitable, failed to investigate if Mr X’s eviction was justified when ending its duty to provide temporary accommodation, failed to protect his personal property, delayed in responding to his emails and delayed in dealing with his request to increase his housing priority. The faults caused Mr X to be street homeless for one month and caused distress and uncertainty to him. The Council has agreed to remedy this injustice by apologising to Mr X and making a total symbolic payment of £1350.

  • Gedling Borough Council (24 010 572)

    Statement Closed after initial enquiries Enforcement 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the way the Council processed, considered and approved a planning application for a new property behind Ms X’s home. We have already considered this complaint and issued a final decision statement on these matters. Ms X also complains about a lack of enforcement action against the lack of a retaining wall behind her property and the removal of trees on the site. There is not enough evidence of fault in the way the Council responded to her reports of breaches of planning control. And the trees were not protected and therefore could be removed.

  • Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council (24 018 473)

    Statement Closed after initial enquiries Refuse and recycling 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: We will not investigate Ms X’s complaint about the Council not doing enough to prevent rubbish overflowing from some of her neighbours’ waste bins, and not dealing with the rubbish. There is not enough evidence of fault, and insufficient significant personal injustice caused by the matters complained of, to warrant an investigation.

  • London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham (24 018 716)

    Statement Closed after initial enquiries Allocations 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the time the complainant has been waiting for a bigger home. This is because there is insufficient evidence of fault by the Council.

  • Kent County Council (24 018 750)

    Statement Closed after initial enquiries Special educational needs 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: We cannot investigate Miss X’s complaint about the contents of her child’s Education Health and Care plan. This is because Miss X has used her right of appeal to a tribunal.

  • London Borough of Barking & Dagenham (24 018 859)

    Statement Closed after initial enquiries Other 24-Mar-2025

    Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about parking because we are satisfied with the actions an organisation has taken or proposes to take.

LGO logogram

Review your privacy settings

Required cookies

These cookies enable the website to function properly. You can only disable these by changing your browser preferences, but this will affect how the website performs.

View required cookies

Analytical cookies

Google Analytics cookies help us improve the performance of the website by understanding how visitors use the site.
We recommend you set these 'ON'.

View analytical cookies

In using Google Analytics, we do not collect or store personal information that could identify you (for example your name or address). We do not allow Google to use or share our analytics data. Google has developed a tool to help you opt out of Google Analytics cookies.

Privacy settings