{"id":4054,"date":"1971-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1971-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1971-vol-52-no-11-the-principle-of-the-ombudsman\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:45:21","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:45:21","slug":"november-1971-vol-52-no-11-the-principle-of-the-ombudsman","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1971-vol-52-no-11-the-principle-of-the-ombudsman\/","title":{"rendered":"November 1971 &#8211; VOL. 52, NO. 11 &#8211; The Principle of the Ombudsman"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Everybody knows the meaning of                     &#8220;Ombudsman&#8221; &#8211; he is someone to whom any citizen may take                     complaints about the actions of people in the government service.                     The Ombudsman will listen, examine, and try to obtain redress                     of an injustice or amends for a grievance.<\/p>\n<p> There are many descriptive titles given the Ombudsman. He                     may be called Citizen&#8217;s Defender, Citizen&#8217;s Champion, Defender                     of Civil Liberty, Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration,                     or Citizen&#8217;s Guardian. Whatever his title, it is his duty                     to keep watch over the way in which government agencies and                     officials apply the law and regulations in dealing with the                     public.<\/p>\n<p>Scores of books and hundreds of magazine and newspaper articles                     show the interest people take in this relatively new office.                     In May 1968 the American Academy of Political and Social Science                     devoted an issue of <em>The Annals <\/em>to an exhaustive examination                     of &#8220;The Ombudsman or Citizen&#8217;s Defender: A Modern Institution.&#8221;                     This has become a source-book and a detailed guide to persons                     investigating the need for such a system of citizen-protection.                     Much of the information in this <em>Letter <\/em>has been drawn                     from it.<\/p>\n<p>The need to keep government administrators from abusing                     the wide powers that have been necessarily given them in recent                     years demanded a creative innovation. The institution of the                     Ombudsman went a long way toward providing what was necessary.<\/p>\n<p>Social service reaches into every area of life, and the                     officials in charge of its many agencies come into contact                     with every citizen. The purpose of the Ombudsman is to hold                     the scales so that justice is satisfied, and justice, as St.                     Thomas Aquinas defined it, &#8220;is a constant and perpetual will                     to yield to each one his right.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Citizens will take their problems and complaints to the                     Ombudsman because they look upon him as representing the State&#8217;s                     conscience. He is not a person bound by legalities, seeking                     to win a case, but an arbiter who seeks to dispel erroneous                     notions on one side or the other by setting forth the truth.<\/p>\n<h3>Service to individuals<\/h3>\n<p>A review given in <em>The Annals <\/em>shows that there are                     many different procedures in the carrying out of Ombudsman                     duties, but his central purpose is always to protect the individual.                     He is, as was said upon appointment of the Quebec provincial                     Ombudsman: &#8220;to receive the complaints of the public against                     the government administration, to make investigations and                     bring to the attention of the authorities the problems that                     he uncovers.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Many persons who have grievances would find it difficult                     to go through procedures required under the regulations. They                     may not know where to start; they may not be able to pay the                     legal expenses; or their emergency may be of such a nature                     as to demand quick action. Then, too, a request for review                     addressed to a government department may be referred to the                     officer originally involved, and that is not of the nature                     of a real appeal.<\/p>\n<p>It has been said that if every member of parliament, every                     member of a legislature, every civil servant, every member                     of a municipal council, and every member of a school board                     looked upon himself as an Ombudsman there might not be an                     opening for a special appointee. People in administrative                     positions have a tendency to forget why they exist: to serve                     the people. They can do this effectively by telling people                     about their rights.<\/p>\n<p>As it is, there is a gap to be plugged. The existence of                     an Ombudsman, independent of politics and of the bureaucracy,                     encourages those in authority to consider maturely before                     making up their minds about legal decisions and discretionary                     acts.<\/p>\n<h3>Some objections<\/h3>\n<p>It was found in Great Britain and in Australia that the                     strongest opposition to appointment of an Ombudsman came from                     the legislators, although it is recognized everywhere that                     the <em>sine qua non <\/em>of effective citizen guardianship                     is freedom from political connections. A member of parliament                     receiving a complaint from a constituent would be under obligation                     to divorce himself from consideration of the political usefulness                     of the case and address himself to the merits of the grievance.<\/p>\n<p>Events have not shown that the status of parliamentarians                     has been eroded by appointment of an Ombudsman. On the other                     hand it is admitted that in countries where complaints must                     be submitted through a member of parliament the citizens are                     deprived of the satisfying feeling that a special power &#8211;                     the Citizen&#8217;s Champion &#8211; is working on their behalf.<\/p>\n<p>Writing in <em>The Annals <\/em>about the situation in the                     United States, Dr. Ake Sandier, Professor of Government in                     California State College, said: &#8220;The average congressman (or                     any legislator, for that matter) has neither the time nor                     the inclination to do anything about a complaint other than                     to put in a phone call or write a letter on behalf of his                     complaining constituent.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To handle a complaint in the detailed way of the Ombudsman&#8217;s                     office requires an expenditure of time, and if legislators                     spend time in following up complaints they are necessarily                     absent from the House where their legislating duty demands                     their presence. Their vital governing function benefits by                     the appointment of an Ombudsman.<\/p>\n<p>There is another point, one of great importance. When individual                     legislators handle complaints the administration is deprived                     of the enlightenment given by the accumulation of information                     about similar cases. What may appear to be a solitary complaint                     may be one of a large pattern which it would be important                     to recognize. A number of complaints of the same nature passing                     through an Ombudsman&#8217;s office would ring a warning bell, calling                     attention to a condition that needed investigation.<\/p>\n<h3>Community needs<\/h3>\n<p>It is not only in federal and provincial affairs that there                     is opportunity for exercise of the Ombudsman function. As                     Hing Yong Cheng, a Colombo Plan Scholarship student at Carleton                     University and now in the Ministry of Culture and Social Affairs,                     Singapore, wrote in <em>The Annals<\/em>: &#8220;Faced with a huge                     and complex body of government instrumentalities, an aggrieved                     citizen may not even know where or to whom to complain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In a big urban centre citizens may have the opinion that                     municipal government is remote from them and unapproachable.                     They doubt their ability to obtain satisfactory consideration                     of their complaints about many things: taxes, licenses, garbage                     collection, street repair, snow clearing, welfare assistance,                     zoning, fire safety, transportation, police, pollution, parking,                     airport noise, and a hundred other things in the planning                     or administration of which something goes wrong.<\/p>\n<p>A great number of people in paid and voluntary positions                     are meeting some of the need. For some months <em>The Montreal                     Star <\/em>printed a daily column under the heading &#8220;The Target                     is Trouble&#8221;. Through it the writer, Bruce Taylor, exemplified                     one purpose of the press, to be the &#8220;Voice of the lowly and                     oppressed, advocate of the friendless, righter of public and                     private wrongs.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In the <em>Monthly Letter <\/em>of November 1970 it was suggested                     that &#8220;It might be feasible to transplant the Ombudsman idea                     to the community by setting up a central service providing                     information about where to apply for help in solving problems,                     coping with crises, and starting something designed to improve                     the community.&#8221; Some community chests have service offices                     which will tell citizens where they should apply for this                     and that kind of help: but first the citizen must find out&#8221;                     about this office.<\/p>\n<p>There are, too, many community-type Ombudsmen at work in                     many capacities: clergymen, private social workers, certain                     service clubs, settlement workers, and police officers specially                     trained in ombudsman-type work. Some big business establishments                     have staff members whose job it is to receive complaints and                     deal with them in the interest of customers.<\/p>\n<h3>Government agencies<\/h3>\n<p>Greatest need for the Ombudsman, however, is in connection                     with government activities. Government as a going concern                     consists of thousands of officials, agencies and civil servants.                     Year by year, under the growing pressure of new services and                     policies, the work of the agencies expands, not only in volume                     but into new areas.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, as George B. McClellan, the Alberta Ombudsman,                     said in an article in <em>The Alberta Municipal Counsellor<\/em>:                     &#8220;There is hardly any field of business, manual labour, or                     other occupation, in which the average person finds himself                     engaged, where he is not subject to numerous forms of government                     control.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Complaints are not always of some fault by a civil servant,                     but result from the confusion a citizen feels when caught                     in the complexity of the government structure necessary to                     supply services. As in an expanding business corporation,                     mechanisms of management become more elaborate, relationships                     between departments become a criss-crossing maze, duplication                     of responsibility and work becomes a menace.<\/p>\n<p>When a crevasse of misunderstanding separates an individual                     and those in authority it causes unhappiness. To bridge this                     chasm is primarily the responsibility of those in public service.                     They must be on their guard against out-and-out violation                     of the rights of citizens, but in addition they need to watch                     for ways in which they infringe without realizing that they                     are doing so. They will keep in mind the principle enunciated                     by the Emperor Marcus Aurelius: &#8220;He often acts unjustly who                     does not do a certain thing; not only he who does a certain                     thing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Control of agencies<\/h3>\n<p>One of government&#8217;s most pressing problems is the supervision                     of administration in a time of rapidly-expanding public service.                     No reasonable person expects the agencies or their officers                     to be without fault in the performance of their duties, but                     the source of trouble goes deeper than mere mistakes. There                     can be misuse of power, or fixation on the rules in a book,                     or neglect of reasonable duties not expressed in the Act that                     established the agency.<\/p>\n<p>Appointment of an Ombudsman signifies the government&#8217;s desire                     to make sure that its administrators are not guilty of any                     injustice to any citizen; that they be faithful to the government&#8217;s                     plans and purposes, and that they refrain from arbitrary acts.<\/p>\n<p>The Ombudsman will go about his task by checking the history                     of the transaction complained about. <em>The Annals <\/em>suggests                     some questions. Did the officer have before him all the facts                     and did he give them balanced consideration? Were the rules                     applied properly or harshly? Did the officer discriminate,                     delay, or pass the decision-making to someone else? Was there                     inattention, unreasonableness or prejudice? By weighing the                     evidence connected with the alleged fault the Ombudsman will                     reach an impartial judgment as to the propriety of the complaint.<\/p>\n<p>If he makes a finding that is unfavourable to the agency,                     the Ombudsman does not then become prosecutor or judge. He                     has not the authority to reverse, alter or annul a decision,                     or to take disciplinary action. He uses admonition and suggestion.                     He may recommend an appropriate change in the law or rule                     that caused the complaint to be made. His ultimate weapon                     is his report to Parliament in which he brings the grievance                     to attention and recommends that it be redressed.<\/p>\n<p>There is another side to the coin. While making sure that                     the government agencies do not exceed their power or exercise                     it in an unreasonable way, the Ombudsman&#8217;s findings protect                     the agencies against unjustified complaints. In <em>The Annals                     <\/em>chapter on the New Zealand practice it is said: &#8220;The civil                     service has come to regard the Ombudsman as a defense against                     unjustified criticism rather than as an enemy.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To win this high regard from both the complainant and the                     agency complained about, the Ombudsman needs to be an officer                     free from meddling or pressure. In Sweden, neither the cabinet                     nor parliament can stop an investigation that the Ombudsman                     believes to be necessary.<\/p>\n<p>Essential to the proper carrying out of his duties is the                     Ombudsman&#8217;s dedication to the principles of equity. In its                     broadest and most general signification equity denotes the                     spirit and the habit of fairness, justness, and right dealing                     which would regulate the intercourse of men with men &#8211;                     the rule of doing to all others as we desire them to do to                     us: or, as it is expressed by Justinian: &#8220;To live honestly,                     to harm nobody, to render to every man his due.&#8221; It is therefore                     the synonym of natural right or justice.<\/p>\n<h3>Democracy and Ombudsmen<\/h3>\n<p>The countries that have Ombudsmen functioning as Defenders                     of Civil Liberties are countries dedicated to the principle                     of democratic government. Alfred Bexelius, Ombudsman in Sweden,                     wrote in <em>The Annals<\/em>: &#8220;It is certainly an expression                     of real democracy when a society establishes a special institution                     with the task of ensuring that the other agencies serving                     the society respect the rights of the citizens.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In the Canadian ideal of society, every person is as completely                     in charge of his own life as he can be. The individual is                     the central figure, but he cannot ensure his own aims in isolation.                     If he lived alone and tried to meet his problems by himself                     he would perish. The Ombudsman is a connecting link to bring                     all the resources of society to the aid of the individual                     and to protect him against wrongful acts.<\/p>\n<p>Amid all the improvements in social services and welfare                     plans, civil rights must be preserved if democracy is to live                     up to its meaning.<\/p>\n<p>Every society finds it necessary to frame legislation which                     is binding upon citizens, but it must observe basic rights.                     The Ombudsman helps to keep the balance between the increasing                     encroachment of government administration and the citizen&#8217;s                     rights. He contributes much toward establishing citizens&#8217;                     confidence in government because his appointment is evidence                     of the government&#8217;s determination to pay regard to the rights                     of people and to prevent the abridgment of civil rights by                     administrative agencies.<\/p>\n<h3>Justice is a goal<\/h3>\n<p>The Ombudsman&#8217;s duty is not merely to act as a buffer between                     the individual and authority, but to be actively employed                     in promoting justice. Justice is good in itself, not merely                     a necessary means of preserving order in a State. As Cicero                     put it: &#8220;Justice is much the most glorious and splendid of                     all virtues, and alone entitles us to the name and appellation                     of good men.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The welfare of the people is the supreme purpose of the                     government. Grievance-handling machinery should be designed                     so as to provide easily accessible judicial review, flexible                     disposition of cases, and speedy judgment. But the Ombudsman                     must not be so just that he forgets to be humane, nor can                     he be so generous that he neglects to be just. Those who appeal                     to him should remember that he is not there to dispense favours                     but to safeguard rights.<\/p>\n<p>The existence of the Ombudsman, though he is not appealed                     to by a citizen, gives a feeling of security. The citizen                     knows that should he ever believe that he has a legitimate                     reason to complain he has a friend at court who will see that                     attention is given to his complaint. He will have confidence                     in the government which has appointed this independent officer                     to ensure the rule of law and the protection of rights. He                     will find it less necessary to parade and demonstrate to call                     attention to his grievance.<\/p>\n<h3>Simple in operation<\/h3>\n<p>The Ombudsman&#8217;s activity is simple, informal and rapid.                     He is a master in discriminating between what is important                     and what is trivial; he can diagnose new situations because                     he has wide knowledge of similarities and differences in cases;                     he can look at both sides of an argument and seek some negotiable                     point; he puts the relevant facts together for inspection                     and brings the problem into sharp focus. He fulfils his duty                     when he advises fully on the evidence put before him, and                     initiates remedial action if he considers it necessary.<\/p>\n<p>The complaints reaching an Ombudsman cover a bewildering                     variety of subjects, running the gamut of human error from                     mere pin-pricking annoyances to complaints of wrongful infringement                     of liberty. They are all important to the person making them                     because they affect his life.<\/p>\n<p>While taking every complaint seriously and giving it the                     needed attention, the Ombudsman has, of course, to tell some                     complainants that he cannot deal with their grievances. The                     test is: have the civil rights of the person complaining been                     interfered with by an agency or an official?<\/p>\n<p>There are people who enjoy making a fuss, and they are annoyed                     when other people remain undisturbed. The Ombudsman may decide                     not to proceed with a case if he believes the complaint to                     be frivolous, not made in good faith, or designed to attack                     a person rather than to criticize an action. On occasion an                     Ombudsman has found it necessary to advise complainants to                     cease groundless attacks on departments or officials.<\/p>\n<h3>What sort of man&nbsp;?<\/h3>\n<p>Who can fill that sort of office? He must be a person with                     wide knowledge, high prestige, personal merit, great energy,                     and abundant courage. He must be able to stand against criticism,                     concerned more about discharging a job of social worth than                     with personal popularity.<\/p>\n<p>Professor Sandler. wrote in <em>The Annals<\/em>: &#8220;He should                     be so carefully selected that there never could be a question                     of his honesty, integrity, ability or motive. This is indeed                     to ask for perfection, or pretty close to it. But it should                     be aimed for. In all the 160 years that Sweden has had its                     Ombudsman, the <em>man <\/em>has never been doubted.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The character of the man having been taken account of, it                     remains to lay<\/p>\n<p>down the ground rules for his guidance. The Ombudsman is                     not appointed because of people&#8217;s lack of confidence in the                     public service. He will not exercise general supervision or                     management over the administrative process, but will deal                     with individual grievances of citizens who complain that they                     have been hurt or annoyed by the occasional mistakes made                     by government departments. These are matters which, while                     of no great public moment and quite unlikely to make headlines,                     are of very real importance to the individuals concerned.<\/p>\n<p>The Ombudsman is someone who will listen. Just to be able                     to tell one&#8217;s troubles to a person of consequence is a relief.                     But the Ombudsman is in position to do something about these                     troubles. He can reach the ears of the individual or organization                     by whom the wrong was inflicted.<\/p>\n<h3>Using the Ombudsman<\/h3>\n<p>Anybody who feels that he has been unfairly dealt with by                     a government agency or official may carry his complaint to                     the Ombudsman. The citizen who believes that he has been given                     the run-around by the Circumlocution Office (satirized in                     Dickens&#8217; <em>Little Dorrit<\/em>) will find &#8211; at least in                     Denmark &#8211; a sign on the Ombudsman&#8217;s office: <em>The door                     is open<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>There is nothing belittling to one in seeking advice, or                     in asking help from the Ombudsman. People who are big in spirit                     are willing to ask for, accept, and consider advice. Test                     your case by asking: &#8220;Can the Ombudsman explain my difficulty,                     solve my problem, enlighten me on this point, or show me the                     way to get redress for my injury?&#8221; The answer you receive                     from the Ombudsman will be the honest and impartial advice                     of a clever, honourable and independent man, well versed in                     the matters he handles.<\/p>\n<p>Keep in mind that the Ombudsman is not a clairvoyant, able                     to read your mind. He is an intelligent man. It is your duty,                     and it is necessary to the successful pleading of your case,                     to give him all the facts and reasons.<\/p>\n<h3>Need for the Ombudsman<\/h3>\n<p>Many countries and several Canadian provinces have found                     it logical that as operations of government increasingly affect                     the lives of citizens, there should be an equal increase in                     the care taken to make sure that such intervention is carried                     out with caution.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Donald C. Rowat of Carleton University, named by Mr.                     Cheng as the leading Canadian expert on the subject, is author                     of <em>The Ombudsman: Citizen&#8217;s Defender <\/em>(University of                     Toronto Press, 1965). He gave testimony before the 1964 parliamentary                     committee which recommended appointment of an Ombudsman for                     the federal government and one for each of the&#8221; provinces.<\/p>\n<p>It was Socrates, the man who professed not to be wise but                     to seek wisdom, who said: &#8220;Four things belong to a judge:                     to hear courteously, to answer wisely, to consider soberly,                     and to decide impartially.&#8221; That is an excellent description                     of the ideal Ombudsman, and an argument for his need.<\/p>\n<p>The Ombudsman is not to be confused with the writer of advice                     columns in the newspapers. He is a responsible person &#8211;                     responsible to the person he serves, responsible to his parliament,                     responsible to the agencies with which he deals, and responsible                     in a really personal way to himself for the decisions he makes                     and the actions he takes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[51],"class_list":["post-4054","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-51"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>November 1971 - VOL. 52, NO. 11 - The Principle of the Ombudsman - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1971-vol-52-no-11-the-principle-of-the-ombudsman\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November 1971 - VOL. 52, NO. 11 - The Principle of the Ombudsman - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Everybody knows the meaning of &#8220;Ombudsman&#8221; &#8211; he is someone to whom any citizen may take complaints about the actions of people in the government service. 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The Ombudsman will listen, examine, and try to obtain redress of an injustice or amends for a grievance. There are many descriptive titles given the Ombudsman. 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