Complaints Commission sees sharp drop in reports

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In examining the work of the Complaints Commissioner’s Office during a hearing focused largely on budgetary issues and the hurricane recovery, the Commission of Inquiry questioned current and former Complaints Commissioners Erica Smith-Penn and Sheila Brathwaite on July 1.

Both leaders said the office needs more legislation-backed teeth to get information and enforce its recommendations.

Ms. Brathwaite assumed the role in 2015, succeeding founding commissioner Elton Georges, and Ms. Smith-Penn took over on Jan. 1 of this year.

Ms. Brathwaite began the hearing by reading out a position statement on good governance that she voluntarily submitted to the COI. In it, she complimented her predecessor for his work paving the way with ensuring the public service is responsive to complaints.

“He essentially laid the groundwork for the commission to be effective in its mandate,” Ms. Brathwaite said.

She also shared the “highs and lows” of her own tenure, explaining her frustration with public officers not responding to requests for information.

Because the Complaints Commissioner Act 2003 doesn’t grant adequate enforcement power to compel information, she said, she often had to resort to “encouragement mode” for getting answers.

“In my estimation, the commission has been relatively successful in being effective under the circumstances of budgetary and staffing constraints, the number of complaints dealt with, the processing of annual reports, the need for amendments to the [Complaints Commissioner Act 2003], independence of the office, and human rights issues,” she said.

Complaint decline

COI Counsel Bilal Rawat inquired why the Complaints Commissioner’s Office saw a decline in complaints it handled starting around 2016. The office, he said, recorded 135 contacts in 2011; 115 in 2013; 123 in 2014; 77 in 2016; 22 in 2017; and 16 in 2018. Neither he nor Commissioner Sir Gary Hickinbottom listed the figure for 2015, but Sir Gary also noted that in 2020 there were 30 complaints — still a considerable drop from before 2016.

Ms. Brathwaite, who was appointed in 2015, responded, “I’m not sure what happened between 2015 and 2016. But I do think that by 2017, because of the hurricanes in the latter part of the year, we had no complaints. We literally didn’t have an office.”

She said this situation carried over into 2018, but she also attributed the decline to greater awareness by public officers of the importance of customer service.

Ms. Smith-Penn said the office also currently handles fewer official complaints because her staff is tasked with addressing matters not under her remit.

“A lot of times persons come in and just ask for advice, and it’s not recorded anywhere, and so we just indicate it as an inquiry, but it’s not really recorded,” Ms. Brathwaite said. “So people … are not aware of the effectiveness of the office. And as I indicated earlier, we do our own-motion investigations. They have yielded good results in the main.”

As an example of unrecorded inquiries, Ms. Smith-Penn recounted liaising with the director of human resources concerning an anonymous complaint about Covid-19 safety protocols not being followed.

Sir Gary noted that only 22 complaints were handled in the eight months prior to Hurricane Irma, and that complaints remained low year as of last year.

“It could also be that we have not been advertising, we have not been reminding people that we are here,” Ms. Brathwaite acknowledged.

Complaints

Ms. Brathwaite also offered examples of the types of issues the office investigates, including safety and hygiene issues at Her Majesty’s Prison.

Ms. Smith-Penn added that the number of prisoners held without sentencing remained consistently high during the past decade, at more than 30 percent of the prison population.

“Then we have police officers who in their private lives do things which are not on the up and up, so to speak,” Ms. Brathwaite continued. “In one particular instance, I met with the former [police] commissioner and he said he had no recourse because it was not a dereliction of duty.”

But she believed the complainant was denied the right to proper service from the police officer and advised him to seek legal aid.

She added that teachers have also often reached out about disability discrimination, though they were reluctant to instigate an investigation.

Office effectiveness

Ms. Brathwaite was critical of some factors she said affected the office’s effectiveness. Budget-driven travel restrictions made it difficult to adequately service complainants on the sister islands, and annual reports were often late in getting to the House of Assembly because of what she saw as an unnecessary step in bringing them to Cabinet.

But she did state that the office is effective in offering advice to community members on issues like land rights, though she said those interactions aren’t recorded in detail.

“The act itself has limited effectiveness because we are unable to demand that individuals, public officers, follow through on recommendations that we make,” she noted, calling for an amendment.

She said the public has been calling for legislation with more teeth since Mr. Georges’ time. She suggested several options, including measures giving the office more power to enforce its recommendations.

As Mr. Rawat summarised, the complaints commissioner submits its reports to relevant ministries, and if no appropriate action is taken, she writes a report to be laid in the House of Assembly.

However, both commissioners said submitting reports to the House is often fruitless given that there is no special committee to consider their recommendations.

But the office has dealt with more recent challenges as well.