Term
|
Definition
|
Complainant
|
A person, organisation or their representative/advocate making a customer complaint.
A complainant is a ‘customer’ for the purposes of the customer complaints management framework if they are directly affected by the issue they are complaining about (for example, a student complaining about something that has happened to them at school), or they are authorised representative of someone who has been directly affected (for example, a parent complaining on behalf of their child).
|
Complaints officer
|
A complaints officer is a departmental employee who is involved in managing customer complaints. Complaints officers may work in schools or education centres, regions or divisions. Their functions may include, but are not limited to, intake, assessment, management, resolution, and data entry. The management of a customer complaint may involve one or more complaints officers.
|
Conflict of interest
|
A conflict of interest can occur when an employee has, or is seen to have, a private interest, either financial (pecuniary) or non-financial (non-pecuniary), which conflicts or may conflict with the discharge of the employee’s official duties.
|
Customer complaint
|
A customer complaint is defined within section 264 of the Public Sector Act 2022 as a complaint about the service or action of a department, or its staff, by a person who is apparently directly affected by the service or action. Examples may include complaints about:
- a decision made, or failure to make a decision, by a departmental employee
- an act, or failure to act, by the department
- the formulation of a proposal or intention by the department
- the making of a recommendation by the department
- the customer service provided by a departmental employee.
|
Days
|
Depending on the nature of the complaint and the area managing the complaint, customer complaints will be managed within either working days (that is, business days) or school days (that is, days during the school term).
|
External review
|
A process conducted by an external review body (for example, Queensland Ombudsman or Queensland Human Rights Commission) to ensure departmental decision-making is fair, reasonable and proper.
|
Feedback
|
Opinions, comments and expressions of interest, made directly or indirectly, explicitly or implicitly to or about the department, its products, services, staff or its handling of a complaint. Feedback is not a customer complaint.
|
Frivolous complaint
|
A frivolous complaint is one with no serious purpose or value, and does not justify the resources that would be required to action it.
|
Human rights complaint
|
A complainant can make a human rights complaint if the department has:
- acted or made a decision in a way that is not compatible with human rights; or
- failed to give proper consideration to a relevant human right when making a decision.
|
Internal review
|
A process conducted by appropriately trained departmental staff on request from the complainant which examines if the complaint management process for the original customer complaint was appropriate and/or if the outcome reached was reasonable. An internal review is not a re-investigation of the original customer complaint.
The department’s Internal review procedure provides more information about the internal review process.
|
Internal review officer
|
An internal review officer is a departmental employee who conducts an internal review. The officer must be:
- independent from the original customer complaint; and
- in a position equal to, or higher than, the original decision-maker and authorised to make internal review decisions, including recommendations, or be nominated by someone with this authority.
Internal review officers will be regional or divisional staff. An internal review may involve more than one internal review officer.
|
Privacy complaint
|
A complaint by an individual about an act or practice of an agency in relation to the individual’s personal information that is a breach of the agency’s obligation under the
Information Privacy Act 2009 (Qld) to comply with the privacy principles or an approval under section 157 of the Act. See the Information privacy and right to information procedure for more information.
|
Procedural fairness
|
Providing any party who may be affected by a customer complaint with a fair opportunity to be heard and a reasonable opportunity to respond to any claims. Procedural fairness is also known as natural justice.
|
Protected information
|
Very sensitive and confidential information, where unauthorised and/or premature disclosure might cause damage to one or more parties. Refer to the Information security procedure for more information.
|
Register
|
A tool used to capture and record customer complaints data, including information about the complainant, their complaint, how the department has resolved the matter, and any reviews undertaken.
The Customer Complaints Management System (CCMS) (DoE employees only) is the department’s enterprise system for recording, assessing, managing, resolving and reporting on customer complaints. The CCMS should be used as the register for regional and divisional customer complaints.
Schools can record complaints in a school system or use a local register (DoE employees only).
|
Request for service
|
An application for a service related to an interest or a concern made directly or indirectly, explicitly or implicitly to or about the department, its products, services, staff or its handling of a complaint. A request for service is not a complaint.
|
Resolution
|
A customer complaint is resolved when the issue raised is dealt with in line with the department’s customer complaints management approach. The resolution may or may not be to the complainant’s satisfaction.
|
System improvement
|
System improvement may involve a change to policy, procedure or process.
|
Unreasonable complainant conduct
|
Conduct is likely to be unreasonable where it involves actions or behaviours which because of the nature or frequency, raises substantial health, safety, wellbeing, resource or equity issues for the department, its staff, other service users or the complainant themselves. Examples include:
- persistent contact (for example, excessive and unnecessary phone calls or emails)
- demanding conduct (for example, demanding more reviews than departmental procedures allow, or demanding a different outcome without showing the original decision was incorrect)
- unreasonable lack of cooperation (for example, refusing to identify the issue of complaint or providing disorganised information)
- unreasonable arguments (for example, making irrational claims)
- unreasonable behaviour (for example, aggression or violence to staff, or threatening harm to self and others).
The Managing unreasonable complainant conduct procedure provides more information.
|
Vexatious complaint
|
A vexatious complaint is without reasonable or sound basis in fact, has little chance of succeeding, and is instead designed to harass, annoy, or create a resource burden for the department.
|