We appreciate how frustrating it can be when something has gone wrong with a service we provide, or where we are unable to provide a service that a customer would like from us.
We also appreciate that people experience many barriers and pressures (for example, cost of living, vulnerability, and trauma impacts, both visible and invisible) and we understand that it is frustrating when we cannot help or solve a problem.
We will always do our best to assist but sometimes there are things we cannot change or control because there are laws, rules or other limitations that we have to work within. This might restrict our ability to solve certain problems or provide the exact solutions customers are looking for.
We will always think about each customer's situation and see if there are specific things affecting them or any barriers we need to understand better, so we can offer different kinds of help. Barriers and circumstances can be intersectional and complex, involving various factors, including disabilities which can be visible and non-visible, for example:
- anxiety
- chronic conditions
- neurodivergence
- domestic violence
- language differences
- literacy barriers
- digital exclusion
- D/deafness
- sight loss
- social deprivation
In these cases, we will collaborate with customers to find solutions. We may ask for specific details, including sensitive information like protected characteristics, to fulfil our duties to promote fairness and inclusivity in the services we provide. This helps us ensure fair access and opportunities for everyone, even within our limitations.
We will continue to offer the best level of service that we can, even in challenging circumstances and will take steps to check our decision-making through relevant internal consultation, using customer feedback, and reflective case assessment approaches. However, in a small number of cases, unreasonable behaviour can be directed towards our staff and negatively impact other customers/service users.
There are a range of behaviours which have been identified as ‘unreasonable’ and affect our ability to serve all our different customers fairly and equally.
These fall broadly under one of the following categories:
A. Aggressive or abusive behaviour
We appreciate that anger, distress, and frustration can rise when an issue remains unresolved and is continuing to directly impact customers or their families. When anger, distress, and frustration escalate into aggression, violence or abuse towards our staff, this is considered unacceptable.
Aggressive or abusive behaviour can be physically or emotionally hurtful or harmful towards our staff and other customers or service users.
This includes the following behaviours directed towards our staff, in-person, verbally or in writing:
- abusive
- offensive
- discriminatory or threatening language
- threats
- intimidation
- harassment
- physically aggressive
Inflammatory, aggressive, disrespectful statements and unsubstantiated allegations may also be considered abusive.
Harassing behaviours towards our staff or other customers include:
- sexual innuendos
- aggression
- micro-aggressions
- victimisation
- bullying
In keeping with our Customer Promise, we expect our customers to treat our staff and other customers with respect – the very same way our customers expect to be treated by us.
We have a zero-tolerance approach to the following behaviours directed towards our staff:
- racist
- sexist
- homophobic
- transphobic
- any other discriminatory, abusive, and threatening behaviour
Examples include but are not limited to:
- sending rude, abusive, harassing, racist, phobic, discriminatory, or threatening correspondence or expressing related views
- making unsubstantiated allegations about a staff member’s capabilities and/or asking for their employment to be terminated
- publication of abusive, harassing, racist, phobic, discriminatory, or threatening material including on the internet, or via social media
- acting in an abusive, aggressive, racist, phobic, discriminatory, harassing, or disruptive manner whilst attending our Customer Service Centres, or other council offices or sites
- shouting, threatening, harassing, or acting in a disruptive manner at council or committee meetings and with our staff
- physical, verbal, and insinuated or implied threats of violence towards our staff and/ or other customers
- the use of animals to intimidate and threaten staff
B. Unreasonable demands and/or extensive contact
A demand can be unreasonable when it takes up a disproportionate amount of staff time and resource to resolve (based on the needs of the individual customer), where these could be used to provide or improve council services for the majority of our customers.
This may involve an individual making repeated contact with us, re-sending extensive communications, contacting multiple staff repeatedly, aggressively and often about the same issue which is ongoing or where we have explained what we can and/or cannot do to resolve it.
Examples include but are not limited to:
- unreasonably engaging in multiple, lengthy correspondence with council staff
- repeatedly asking questions that take up a disproportionate amount of staff time to deal with
- insisting on immediate responses to enquiries or requests raised
- repeatedly refusing to accept the council’s decision or explanation
- insisting on how a matter should be handled, especially if it is unreasonable or goes against council policy
- refusing to mediate and problem solve alongside the council or share information that can help us resolve the issue
- refusing to accept that some issues are not within the council’s remit to action or influence for change
- repeatedly insisting on the importance of minor or technical issues that do not impact the outcome of the council’s decision on the issue
- refusing attempts at mediation or resolution
- raising repeat issues with minor additions or variations, insisting these are ‘new’ issues or complaints requiring attention
- refusing to follow the relevant escalation route when an outcome is not as expected or preferred
- making representations claiming to represent organisations or groups for which they do not have authority
- pressuring the council and staff to act under threats and duress or threatening consequences