Cheshire West & Chester Council (23 011 725)
Category : Children's care services > Looked after children
Decision : Upheld
Decision date : 07 Dec 2023
The Ombudsman's final decision:
Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint about children services’ actions. The Council has now agreed to follow the Children Act statutory complaints’ procedure.
The complaint
- The complainant, whom I shall call Mr X, says the Council failed to properly reply to his children services’ complaint.
The Ombudsman’s role and powers
- We investigate complaints about ‘maladministration’ and ‘service failure’. In this statement, I have used the word fault to refer to these. We provide a free service but must use public money carefully. We may decide not to start or continue with an investigation if we are satisfied with the actions a council has taken or proposes to take. (Local Government Act 1974, section 24A(7), as amended)
How I considered this complaint
- I considered information provided by Mr X and the Council.
- I considered the Ombudsman’s Assessment Code.
My assessment
- The law sets out a three-stage procedure for councils to follow when looking at complaints about children’s social care services. The accompanying statutory guidance, Getting the Best from Complaints, explains councils’ responsibilities in more detail.
- The first stage of the procedure is local resolution. Councils have up to 20 working days to respond.
- If a complainant is not happy with a council’s stage one response, they can ask that it is considered at stage two. At this stage of the procedure, councils appoint an investigator and an independent person who is responsible for overseeing the investigation. Councils have up to 13 weeks to complete stage two of the process from the date of request.
- If a complainant is unhappy with the outcome of the stage two investigation, they can ask for a stage three review by an independent panel. The Council must hold the panel within 30 days of the date of request, and then issue a final response within 20 days of the panel hearing.
- Mr X complained in May 2023 about matters relating to his children’s care, information the Council gave the Court and officers’ behaviour. The Council replied at stage one of its children social care complaints’ procedure in July 2023. Mr X requested this be escalated to stage two in September 2023. The Council told him it would not do so as it could not change the Court’s Care Order.
- If we were to investigate it is likely we would find fault causing Mr X injustice because the reasons given to refuse escalation to stage two are not ones which allow the Council to avoid its duty to complete the Children Act complaints’ procedure.
Agreed action
- The Council has agreed to:
- complete a Children Act stage two statutory complaints’ procedure within 65 working days of this decision.
Final decision
- I uphold this complaint as the Council has agreed to resolve the complaint early by providing a proportionate remedy for the injustice caused to Mr X.
Investigator's decision on behalf of the Ombudsman