LGO (Local Government & Social Care Ombudsman) Other

St Albans City Council

25-009-323 · Benefits And Tax › Housing Benefit And Council Tax Benefit · Decision date: 12 November 2025

Full Decision

The Ombudsman's final decision

Summary: We cannot investigate Mx X’s complaint about the Council’s decision and handling of her housing benefit. The complaint is outside our jurisdiction as Mx X has appealed to the Tribunal.

The complaint

Mx X complains the Council unfairly ended her housing benefit claim and is refusing to send her appeal to the tribunal. She says her arears are increasing as a result of the delay.

The Ombudsman’s role and powers

The Local Government Act 1974 sets out our powers but also imposes restrictions on what we can investigate.

The Social Entitlement Chamber (also known as the Social Security Appeal Tribunal) is a tribunal that considers housing benefit appeals. (The Social Entitlement Chamber of the First Tier Tribunal) We cannot investigate a complaint if someone has appealed to a tribunal about the same matter. We also cannot investigate a complaint if in doing so we would overlap with the role of a tribunal to decide something which has been or could have been referred to it to resolve using its own powers. (Local Government Act 1974, section 26(6)(a), as amended)

How I considered this complaint

I considered information provided by the complainant and the Council.

I considered the Ombudsman’s Assessment Code.

My assessment

The Council ended Mx X’s housing benefit claim. It said she did not provide information it needed. Mx X complained but the Council did not change its decision. Mx X asked the Council to send her appeal to the tribunal. I note it since has.

The law says we cannot investigate any matter if someone has appealed to a tribunal about the same matter.

Final decision

We cannot investigate Mx X’s complaint because she has appealed to the tribunal.

Investigator's decision on behalf of the Ombudsman