Part of the Ombudsman's role is to investigate complaints that members of local government bodies have behaved wrongly. The Ombudsman has issued statutory guidance known as
Guidance for members of county and county borough councils, fire and rescue authorities and national park authorities, and
Guidance from the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales for members of community councils. Each local authority must adopt a Code of Conduct. The Ombudsman has power to investigate any complaint referred to her. If she concludes that there is evidence which warrants doing so, she will send a formal report either to the authority's standards committee or to the Adjudication Panel for Wales. It will be for the authority or the Panel to decide if the code of conduct has been broken and if so, what penalty to impose on the member concerned. The maximum penalty the Panel may impose is five years’ disqualification from office. Those who are subject to such supervision are the following types of authority in
Wales and the members of any of them: •
Community council •
County or County Borough Council •
Fire authority •
Police authority •
National park authority ==See also==