A weekly update on children and education complaint decisions

Please note: our decisions are published six weeks after they are issued to councils, care providers and the person who has made the complaint. The cases below reflect the caselaw and guidance available at the time of issue and the individual circumstances of each case.


Summary: The Council did not properly record its decision-making when deciding Mr B’s school transport appeals and it failed to provide sufficient detail in its decision letters. There was fault in the way the Council recorded its decision-making. Because of this, Mr B suffered uncertainty. The Council will apologise to Mr B, train staff, and offer Mr B a fresh appeal.

Summary: We cannot investigate Mr X’s complaint about alternative provision and the Council’s decision to refuse a personal budget. It was appropriate for Mr X to appeal to the tribunal if he disagreed with the type of placement specified in the Education Health and Care plan.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about a travel assistance request for school transport. There is not enough evidence of fault to justify our involvement.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about an alleged data breach because the complainant will be able to complain to the Information Commissioner.

Summary: We cannot investigate Ms X’s complaint about the outcome of care proceedings and the current custody arrangements for her children because it lies outside our jurisdiction. The law prevents us from investigating complaints about matters that have been considered and decided in court proceedings.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s safeguarding decision about school transport provided by Mr X. The decision is within the range we would expect to see in similar circumstances and there is not enough evidence of fault by the Council to warrant investigation.

Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint about the Council’s decision not to consider his complaint further whilst there are ongoing court proceedings. This is because there is no sign of fault by the Council.

Summary: We cannot investigate the Council’s response to Ms X’s complaint about the contents of a report written by Council staff. This is because the complaint does not meet the tests in our Assessment Code on how we decide which complaints to investigate. We have no remit to consider matters in connection with reports used in court proceedings.

Summary: Mrs Y complained about the Council’s delay in delivering the educational provision in her child, Z’s Education, Health and Care Plan. We have found fault by the Council in failing to: arrange the provision within the required statutory timescales; and agree reimbursement of the payments Mrs Y made for provision in the meantime, causing injustice. The Council has agreed to remedy this by apologising, making payments to reflect the impact on Z of the missed provision, upset, frustration and worry caused to Mrs Y, agreeing with and reimbursing Mrs Y for any outstanding provision costs, and making a service improvement.

Summary: Ms X complained that the Council failed to act when her son was not attending school. We found some fault causing an injustice. The Council has agreed the recommended ways to remedy this. Therefore, we have completed our investigation and are closing the case.

Summary: Mrs X complained about the Council’s delay in issuing a final Education, Health and Care Plan for her son. We have found fault causing an injustice. The Council has agreed to the recommended ways to remedy this. Therefore, we have completed our investigation and are closing the complaint.

Summary: Mr X complained the Council delayed the issuing of his son’s EHC Plan, and that the alternative provision offered during the delay did not meet Y’s needs. We found fault causing injustice in relation to both matters complained about. The Council agreed to apologise to Mr X and make a payment to him, and another for Y’s benefit, to remedy the injustice caused.

Summary: Mrs X complained the Council failed to provide her child, Z, with a suitable alternative education while they were absent from school due to health issues. The Council was not at fault. It considered all the information and decided Z could still access an education at school. There was no fault in the way it reached this decision.

Summary: We will not investigate Mrs X’s complaints about the Council’s Elective Home Education team’s involvement with her children. Part of the complaint is late. For the rest of the complaint, there is insufficient evidence of fault and no additional outcome achievable by the Ombudsman.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s querying of the elective home education Mrs X provides. There is not enough evidence of fault by the Council to warrant our further involvement.

Summary: We will not investigate Mrs X’s complaint about the Council’s decision not to carry out an education, health and care needs assessment for her son. This is because it would have been reasonable for her to appeal against the decision. We will not investigate Mrs X’s complaint about the Council’s refusal to put in place alternative provision for her son as there is not enough evidence of fault.

Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint about the Council’s decision not to provide home to school transport for his child. There is not enough evidence of fault in the way the Council considered the matter to justify an investigation.

Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint about the Council not referring his case to the National Referral Mechanism. It is unlikely we would find this caused him any significant injustice.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s handling of child protection concerns. The Council has already apologised for an error it made and offered to record Mr X’s views on its records. We cannot achieve anything further and cannot give Mr X the outcome he wants.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the way the Council has dealt with Mrs X’s grandchildren since they have been placed in care. We could not add to the Council’s response or make a different finding of the kind Mrs X wants.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the actions of the Council’s children’s services. This is because there is either insufficient evidence of fault, further investigation would not lead to a different outcome, or we cannot achieve the outcome that the complainant is seeking.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about care provided to Mrs X’s children during a short period of fostering. There is not enough evidence of fault by the Council to warrant our further involvement.

Summary: We will not investigate Mrs X’s complaint about the Council’s decision to significantly increase the threshold before mileage can be claimed as expenses. This is because there is insufficient evidence of fault.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s response to a complaint about the actions of Children’s Services. This is because our intervention would not add to the investigation which has already been carried out, or lead to a different outcome.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s failure to remove information regarding Mr X from its records. This is because the complaint relates to personal data and is best placed for the Information Commissioner’s officer to deal with.

Summary: The Council failed to provide Mr B’s son, Y, with any education for over two years, and has failed to provide sufficient education since January 2024. It also failed to issue an amended Education, Health and Care Plan since it was decided changes were needed in February 2023. The Council has agreed to make payments to Mr B and Y and take action to improve its service.

Summary: Miss X complained about the Council’s failure to issue a draft amended Education, Health and Care Plan and related matters including lack of provision, poor communication and complaint handling. We found the Council to be at fault. To remedy the injustice to Miss X, the Council has agreed to apologise and make a payment to acknowledge her loss of provision, distress and frustration.

Summary: Mrs X complained the Council delayed completing reviews of her daughter’s Education, Health and Care Plan (EHC Plan) including a delay in the year she was transferring to secondary school causing frustration and uncertainty. The Council took over a year to issue the final EHC Plan and missed the statutory timescale in the transition year. A suitable remedy is agreed.

Summary: The Council was at fault for failing to consider requests that Mrs X made for reasonable adjustments to her daughter’s school transport provision. It also mishandled her complaints. It has agreed to reconsider her requests and make a symbolic payment to recognise her injustice.

Summary: Mx X complained the Council failed to ensure their child Y received appropriate education and specialist provision in line with their Education, Health and Care Plan. The Council was at fault for the delay in finalising the Education, Health and Care Plan, in arranging provision following the annual review, and in making a refund to Mx X. This caused Mx X frustration and uncertainty and meant Y missed out on education provision. The Council has agreed to apologise and make payments to Mx X and Y.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about educational provision for Mrs X’s child in the year 2022-23. The complaint is late and there is no good reason to investigate this matter now.

Summary: We will not investigate Miss X’s complaint about inaccurate children services records. The Information Commissioner’s Office is better placed.

Summary: Ms X complained about the way the Council handled her statutory children’s complaint. She said delays had a significant impact on the family and caused distress. We find the Council at fault for delays in complaint handling, which caused injustice. We are satisfied the Council has remedied the injustice caused.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s response to a complaint about child protection action. This is because investigation would achieve nothing significant.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint that the Council has failed to address disrepair at a children’s centre. This is because any injustice caused to the complainant flows from her relationship with a private provider, not the Council.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the complainant’s deregistration as a foster carer. This is because another body is better placed than the Ombudsman to do so.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the accuracy of reports written by a council social worker. We cannot consider complaints about matters discussed in court or which could be raised in court.

Summary: Mr X complained about how the Council considers school transport applications for children in his village. We do not find fault with how the Council assesses these applications. We find the Council at fault for delays in considering Mr X’s appeal. The Council has agreed to apologise and make a payment to recognise the uncertainty caused.

Summary: Mrs X complained about the Council’s handling of her child, Y’s, Education, Health, and Care plan. The Council was at fault for delays consulting schools and putting tuition in place for Y, and for its poor communication early on. It agreed to provide a remedy for the term of education Y missed. It also agreed to carry out a review of Y’s plan.

Summary: There was excessive delay by the Council in completing an annual review and amending a final Education, Health and Care Plan; in consulting specialist schools so it took two years to identify a place; and in replying to a request for a statutory reassessment. There was also a failure to complete agreed complaint actions. This caused unnecessary time, trouble, frustration, uncertainty and distress and delayed a right of appeal by over a year. The Council will apologise, make a symbolic payment and carry out service improvements. The complaint is upheld.

Summary: There was fault by the Council in amending Y’s Education Health and Care Plan, issuing a decision to re-assess his needs, refusing to commission specialist assessments and a failure to ensure he received the therapies and equipment set out in his existing Plan. The Council will apologise, make payments to reflect lost provision and issue Y’s final Plan without further delay.

Summary: We will not investigate Mrs X’s complaint about the Council’s decision to refuse to name a new educational setting in her children’s Education, Health, and Care plans. This is because the Ombudsman has no jurisdiction to investigate as she has used her right of appeal.

Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint about how the Council dealt with his concerns about a school’s complaint handling. This is because the complaint flows from the internal management of a school, which we have no jurisdiction to consider. The law says we cannot consider complaints about the actions of councils in relation to matters that are outside our jurisdiction.

Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint about an unsuccessful appeal for a school place. This is because there is not enough evidence of fault by the panel for us to be able to question its decision.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the Council’s children’s social care services as there is not enough evidence of fault.

Summary: We cannot investigate this complaint about the Council’s responses to Mr X’s concerns about his children. The matters complained of are closely linked to matters concerning the residence and contact arrangements for children, which have been subject to court action. A legal bar prevents us investigating them.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the conduct of child protection action relating to the complainant’s family. This is because investigation would not achieve the outcomes he is seeking.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the residence of children. Only a court can decide this matter and it would therefore be reasonable for Miss X’s family to use their right to go to court.

Summary: There was a seven-month delay in reviewing and amending Y’s Education Health and Care Plan which caused avoidable distress, frustration and a delay in appeal rights. Communication with Y’s mother Ms X was also poor. The Council will apologise, make a payment of £250. It will also provide evidence it has reviewed procedures and reimbursed Ms X’s travel expenses.

Summary: Miss F complained the Council failed to provide her son with suitable education and the support set out in his EHC plan. We have ended our investigation. This is because Miss F could have used her right to appeal to the SEND Tribunal, which puts it out of our jurisdiction.

Summary: Mrs X complained the Council did not issue her child with an Education, Health and Care Plan within statutory time frames and did not provide the provision in the Plan. Mrs X says this caused unnecessary and avoidable distress and impacted her child’s health. We find the Council at fault which caused Mrs X and her child injustice. The Council has agreed to make a payment and apologise to Mrs X.

Summary: We cannot investigate Mrs X’s complaint about the Council’s decision not to provide alternative provision for her child, Y, when Y became unable to attend school. We also cannot investigate how the Council delivered the content of Y’s Education, Health and Care Plan to them. This is because Mrs X used her right of appeal to a Tribunal, and the law says we cannot investigate.

Summary: We will not investigate Miss X’s complaint about a Council’s school admissions appeal panel’s decision as it is unlikely we would find fault.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about the education provided to the complainant’s children. The complaint is late and there are no grounds for us to now consider it.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about an assessment carried out by the Council’s social worker. This is because the assessment was carried out to inform the Court. This places the matter outside the Ombudsman’s jurisdiction.

Summary: We will not investigate Mr X’s complaint. This is because there is no sign of fault in the Council’s decision not to accept his complaint because he does not have parental responsibility for the children involved.

Summary: We will not investigate this complaint about an allegation the Council wrongly shared personal information with a third party. The Information Commissioner’s Office is the appropriate body to consider this complaint.

Summary: We will not investigate the Council’s responses to Mr X’s complaint about staff working with his family. This is because the complaint does not meet the tests in our Assessment Code on how we decide which complaints to investigate. We have no remit to consider matters in connection with reports used in court proceedings. And there is no evidence of a significant injustice arising from fault to warrant investigation in the remaining matters.

Summary: Mrs X complained about the way the Council handled the review of her child’s education, health and care plan and her complaint. She said this delayed her right to appeal the plan, caused unnecessary distress and frustration, and cost her time and trouble. We find the Council at fault, and this caused injustice. The Council has made a payment to Mrs X, and has agreed to apologise. The Council has already agreed to add a note to Mrs X’s file.

Summary: Miss X complains the Council did not properly assess her child during the EHCP process and failed to ensure the provision in the EHCP was delivered. The Ombudsman finds fault with the Council for failing to suitably consider its duty to alternative provision for Child Y. The Council has agreed to pay a financial remedy for the lost education.

 


This email was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: The Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman · 53-55 Butts Road · Coventry · CV1 3BH GovDelivery logo