Corby Borough Council
Annual statistics
More about this data
Complaints upheld – complaints in which we found some fault in a council's actions. These include complaints where the council accepted fault before we investigated.
Compliance with Ombudsman recommendations – not complying with our recommendations is rare. An authority with a compliance rate below 100% should scrutinise the complaints where it failed to comply and identify any learning.
Satisfactory remedies provided by the Council – the authority upheld the complaint and we agreed with how it offered to put things right.
Average performance rates – we compare the annual statistics of similar types of councils to work out an average level of performance. We do this for County Councils, District Councils, Metropolitan Boroughs, Unitary Councils, and London Boroughs.
-
Complaints upheld
67% of complaints we investigated were upheld.
This compares to an average of 51% in similar authorities.
2 upheld decisions
View upheld decisionsStatistics are based on a total of 3 investigations for the period between 1 April 2021 to 31 March 2022
-
Compliance with Ombudsman recommendations
No recommendations were due for compliance in this period
-
Satisfactory remedies provided by the Council
In 0% of upheld cases we found the Council had provided a satisfactory remedy before the complaint reached the Ombudsman.
This compares to an average of 20% in similar authorities.
0 satisfactory remedy decisions
Statistics are based on a total of 2 upheld decisions for the period between 1 April 2021 to 31 March 2022
View all satisfactory remedy decisions
Annual letters
We write to councils each year to give a summary of the complaint statistics we record about them,
and their performance in responding to our investigations.
Reports
The Ombudsman has published the following reports against Corby Borough Council
Find out more about reports
We issue reports on certain investigations, particularly where there is a wider public interest to do so. Common reasons for reports are significant injustice, systemic issues, major learning points and non-compliance with our recommendations. Issuing reports is one way we help to ensure councils are accountable to local people and highlighting the learning from complaints helps to improve services for everybody. Reports are published for 10 years.
No reports published
Service improvements
The Council has agreed to make the following improvements to its services following an Ombudsman investigation.
Find out more about service improvements
When we find fault, we can recommend improvements to systems and processes where they haven’t worked properly, so that others do not suffer from these same problems in future. Common examples are policy changes; procedural reviews; and staff training. Service improvements from decisions are published for 5 years and those from reports are published for 10 years.
The latest 10 cases are listed below – click ‘view all’ to find all service improvements.
Case reference: 20 013 903
Category: Benefits and tax
Sub Category: COVID-19
- The Council did not offer the complainant the opportunity to ask for a review or appeal of its decision and it dealt with the complaint poorly. The Council will remind staff of the need to offer service users a right of review to its decisions and it will provide relevant staff with training on effective complaint handling.
Case reference: 18 012 217
Category: Benefits and tax
Sub Category: Council tax
- The Council will develop a (Council wide) policy on how to check with service users whether they need any reasonable adjustments, because of a disability, to allow access to a service. It is for the Council to decide the extent of that policy. But it should ensure it complies with the requirements of the Equality Act and its Code of Practice; for example that the duty is anticipatory. The Policy should outline when officers should ask about adjustments and when the Council does agree an adjustment, it needs to keep a record of what has been agreed, or why it has not agreed to a request.
Last updated: 4 April 2015