HC Deb 21 May 2003 vol 405 c798W
Mr. Swire

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (1) what the average time for dealing with a complaint to the Pensions Ombudsman was in(a) 1997–98, (b) 1998–99, (c) 1999–2000, (d) 2000–01 and (e) in the current year; [114030]

(2) how many complaints the Parliamentary Ombudsman received in (a) 1997–98, (b) 1998–99, (c) 2000–01, (d) 2001–02 and (e) this year; [114031]

(3) how many (a) investigators and (b) solicitors the Pensions Ombudsman has to investigate complaints. [114032]

Maria Eagle

The Pensions Ombudsman currently employs 15 investigators of whom five are legally qualified. In addition to this a small number of lawyers are used on a "fee per case" basis.

The information requested on average clearance times and number of complaints are in the following tables. The information on the year 2002–03 is not available. The Pension Ombudsman's annual 2002–03 report, which will be published later this year, will contain data that assesses performance using different criteria and consequently will not be directly comparable.

Average time for dealing with a complaint
Months
From acceptance to completion Once formal investigation begins
1997–98 12.7 7.3
1998–99 11.0 7.3
1999–2000 8.8 6.8
2000–01 5.7 4.7
2001–02 8.5 6.9
Complaints received
Inquiries Accepted cases
1997–98 2,328 729
1998–99 3,067 719
1999–2000 3,269 627
2000–01 3,215 911
2001–02 2,946 831

Source:

Pensions Ombudsman annual reports 1997–2002

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