The number of complaints made about Carmarthenshire Council has risen again.

There were 1,855 complaints in 2023-24 compared to 1,376 and 884 in the previous two years.

A council officer told a scrutiny committee that expectations of public services were changing. “While the increase is disappointing I would not say that it’s unexpected either,” she said.

The officer also said complaints were becoming more complex and that “managing challenging behaviour is becoming more of an issue for us from a complaints perspective”.

Nearly half the complaints in 2023-24 were about the council’s place and infrastructure department, which includes things like waste collection and roads. The next highest number of complaints was the communities department, which includes housing services.

A report before the governance and audit committee said councils have been facing years of budgetary pressures and that “this poses challenges for service delivery in terms of reduced capacity and stretched resources”. The council tries to resolve complaints at what’s known as stage one, but if it’s not possible it moves onto stage two.

The report said the complaints team met colleagues from waste services regularly to work through key themes emerging from the data. It added that a rise in the number of housing repairs complaints had led to dedicated resources to work through the service pressures and respond to queries form the public.

The report said a large number of “redirects” were reaching the complaints team due to residents not being able to access information or know how to get a response to an enquiry, and that further work was needed to reduce these.

The officer presenting the report to the committee said working in the complaints team could be quite a thankless task but that it was quite satisfying when a complaint was resolved.

The contents of the report were noted