Source · SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman)

South Lanarkshire Council

SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman) Partly Upheld Reference 201003881 Sector Local Government Category secondary school Decided 01 May 2012

View South Derbyshire Council scorecard

Full decision

Summary

Mr C's daughter was taking music lessons at school. When she started, the lessons were free but, unknown to Mr C, the council had already decided that they would begin to charge for them at the start of the next school year.

Mr C complained that the council unreasonably failed to tell him that in future there would be a charge, which he could not afford, and said that he was out of pocket as he had bought his daughter an instrument and sheet music. He said that he would not have done that if he had known that the council had already decided to start charging.

He also complained that the council failed to consider the issue of inclusive education in their impact assessment on a proposed efficiency savings policy (which included the introduction of these charges).

Our investigation found that the council did not tell parents about the charges until finalising the administrative and income collection processes for them, some four months after taking the decision. We upheld Mr C's complaint as we found it unreasonable that the council did not tell parents who applied for free music tuition in the preceding months that a charge would apply from the start of the new school year. We considered whether we should recommend that they recompense Mr C for the cost of the instrument and music, but decided that they should not, as other alternatives were available, and the decision to buy the items was clearly his choice.

On inclusive education, we considered that the council's impact assessment took account of equalities legislation and community relations. The council explained that there is normally a charge for music tuition for pupils who are not studying for Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) music qualifications. Mr C's daughter was not studying for such a qualification. Although, therefore, Mr C felt that his daughter was excluded on ability to pay, there was in fact no requirement for the council to provide free tuition outwith the SQA qualification.

Related reading

View Decision Report 201003881 as a PDF (18.19 KB) Updated: March 13, 2018

View original on SPSO (Scottish Publ… website

Other decisions involving South Lanarkshire Council

Reference Date Summary Outcome
202403098 01 Apr 2025 C complained about the handling of two planning enforcement complaints which they had brought to the council in regards to … Upheld
202002423 01 Sep 2023 C reported concerns to the council’s environmental services department about smoke pollution over a number of years as a result … Upheld
202110238 01 Jul 2023 C complained about the actions of South Lanarkshire Council in relation to work that they carried out to a property … Partly Upheld
202107992 01 Jun 2023 C is the parent of two children, A and B, who complained about the council's handling of child protection concerns … Partly Upheld
202001793 01 Mar 2022 C, parent of A, complained to the council that during A's time at school the council had failed to address … Partly Upheld
View all decisions for this organisation