header-logo header-logo

13 July 2011
Issue: 7474 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-detail

Ombudsmen reform

The Law Commission has proposed reforms to the way the five public services ombudsmen work

In a report published this week, Public Services Ombudsmen, it claims the procedures for making a complaint about public services are “out of date and inconsistent”.

The proposed reforms include removing statutory requirements that complaints be made in writing; removing the statutory bars that prevent ombudsmen handling complaints that could be dealt with by the courts; and allowing members of the public to complain directly to the Parliamentary Commissioner, as well as through their MP.

The commissioners want a fundamental review of the ombudsmen’s relationship with courts, tribunals, and other justice institutions.

Frances Patterson QC, the law commissioner heading the project, said: “Public services are an everyday fact of life for a great many of us, and it is vital that we are able to seek redress if the services we receive are not what they should be.

“By reforming the way the ombudsmen work, we can improve access to justice for individuals, enable the ombudsmen to modernise how they respond to the public, and make savings for citizens, public bodies and the courts.”

Issue: 7474 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Ogier—Martin Livingston

Ogier—Martin Livingston

Martin Livingston joins Ogier in Cayman to strengthen regulatory support

Blake Morgan—47 promotions

Blake Morgan—47 promotions

Blake Morgan announces 47 summer promotions across UK offices

NEWS
Consultant-led law firms should prepare for closer regulatory attention as oversight evolves
Artificial intelligence may draft workplace grievances, but employers cannot treat them any differently from conventional complaints
From dishonest claimants to judicial promotions and procedural skirmishes, the latest legal developments offer plenty for litigators to digest
Fresh guidance is set to influence how courts decide whether hearings take place online or in person
County Court judges remain divided over whether landlords can lawfully force entry to carry out essential safety inspections after tenants ignore access injunctions
back-to-top-scroll