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11 January, 2026
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Home Brighton

Councillor calls for overhaul after town hall phone moans

by Frank le Duc
Monday 7 Nov, 2022 at 7:17PM
A A
5
It’s time to grasp the nettle as weeds overrun our city

Councillor Peter Atkinson

Councillor Peter Atkinson

A councillor wants a review of Brighton and Hove City Council’s phoneline capacity after spending time with customer services staff.

North Portslade councillor Peter Atkinson was prompted to action after residents complained about getting through to the staff even though the customer service centres are open at Hove Town Hall and Bartholomew House in Brighton.

The Independent councillor put a call out on social media to ask people about their experiences because he had dealt with individual cases but wanted the bigger picture.

After the responses from residents, he has asked for action from Green council leader Phélim Mac Cafferty, his deputy councillor Hannah Allbrooke, whose portfolio includes customer service, and chief executive Geoff Raw.

Councillor Atkinson said: “We have a lot of older residents in North Portslade and Mile Oak who don’t access the internet and often can’t find the right number for the service they require.

“This means they have to go through the main council phone number which can sometimes be very busy.

“Telephone, however, is often the only way they can contact the council. The telephone service needs to be made much easier to use and more customer friendly. There are also residents who can use the internet but actually need to speak to someone in person.”

People told Councillor Atkinson that they struggled to reach several services and spent a long time trying to get through to

  • Cityclean to report missed rubbish and recycling collections
  • the council tax helpline
  • parking services to get parking permits
  • the housing repairs service
  • housing services in general
  • officials to report the death of a council tenant

…

Councillor Atkinson said that people did not understand why so few council staff had returned to public-facing roles, particularly as he believed that much of the council’s telephone infrastructure was outdated and needed upgrading.

He said: “It had apparently been very difficult when parking permits were in demand recently but has now calmed down.

“If residents have a housing need of any sort, there are telephone points there where they can speak to someone at Bartholomew House for private housing or homelessness issues or the council housing helpline at Moulsecoomb.

“I would have some concern with the Customer Service Centre’s ability to cope, however, if there is a large rise in people needing help due to the cost of living crisis.

“There are not that many staff there and they would quickly be overwhelmed. I am, however, most concerned at the potential issues with the telephony system being completely overwhelmed when winter arrives and the cold together with the cost of living crisis really begins to bite.”

The council said: “Central government funding for the council has reduced by more than £100 million over the last ten years.

“This has made it more and more difficult for us to maintain services at the level we and our residents might like to see. These financial pressures are becoming more extreme rather than less.

“This means we simply don’t have the resources to employ large numbers of extra customer service staff. However, we are proud of the work our team does to support our residents.

Bartholomew House in Brighton

“Like virtually all other councils and businesses, we have made a big commitment to improving our digital customer service offer. This has enabled us to respond to an increasing volume of queries via online forms and emails.

“This has, in turn, given us the capacity to resolve things by phone when people’s needs can’t be fulfilled online.

“Face-to-face appointments remain available across all services in instances where we can’t fulfil customer need either online or via telephone.

“These customers can include people having difficulties because of disability, language barrier or digital exclusion.

“Last year and earlier this year, we had some technical problems as a result of expanding our digital response efforts.

“But our most recent data for parking shows that we are meeting the expectations laid out in our ‘customer promise’ in relation to average call waiting time and responding to digital queries.

Hove Town Hall

“We are aware of the problems residents are facing with the council tax phone line and email responses. We are working towards resolving these.

“These particular problems have been caused by a large volume of extra work being put on to the service by the government’s energy rebates.

“We know from our own customer feedback analysis that a lot of dissatisfaction pre-covid was related to us being slow or inadequate in responding to emails and digital forms.

“With limited resources, we are ensuring we can provide the best support we can to those who need us the most.”

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Comments 5

  1. Jason says:
    3 years ago

    The standard excuse nowadays is “staff shortages”, whether it’s councils, bus companies, train operators, hospitals, GP’s, pharmacies or just about anything else.

    Due to government incompetence (I’m tempted to say malice), large numbers of people have lost their jobs over the past three years. Where are those people?

    As just one example, I see large numbers of ambulances and ambulance cars parked up at a depot between Moulsecomb and Falmer while people are dying for lack of treatment. It shouldn’t matter to people in trouble that hospitals are practically closed down. Those ambulance crews themselves saved lives in the past while on their way to the hospitals. They did it then, but it seems they can’t do it now.

    We’ve had enough excuses, so as Ronnie Barker once said to organisation such as these, “GET STAFFED” or move aside and let someone competent take over.

    Reply
    • Some Guy says:
      3 years ago

      Some issues include:
      >Absolutely miserable conditions and morale in the public sector (I’ve never known the public to be so aggressive, nor so many sad cases that make my job difficult to cope with day-in-day-out)
      >Offering inadequate wages for the work (why get £X for being a public servant when you can get 90% of £X working in Tesco, which is much easier)
      >Many staff taking early retirement where possible
      >Lots of deferred maternity going on at the moment, as people waited out the pandemic to procreate
      >Sickness is high at the moment, and in some places those staff remain on the books and taking up pay budget for a long time
      >Public services not being funded to grow/replace losses, even where badly needed
      >Shortages of other resources making the staffing situation irrelevant (either materials, vehicles, or mandatory senior staff presence e.g. pharmacists)

      Reply
  2. Mike Beasley says:
    3 years ago

    How about a review of the Council in toto?
    The whole apparatus is hopeless and profligate, has its own agenda – contrary to what taxpayers want, and should be in special measures

    Reply
  3. Hendrik says:
    3 years ago

    It is amazing how B&H council have no difficulty when it comes to funding their own useless vanity projects, but are happy to blame the government when they are unable to provide an adequate service to residents.

    Reply
  4. Sally says:
    3 years ago

    Don’t worry. They are all staffed up at the city council. The planning officers are carefully making sure no one violates any aspect of the conservation area rules. My neighbour installed the wrong front door (composite; not wood) and this was swiftly dealt with. Perhaps they had to redirect some funds and staff from the hospitals and schools to this type of thing.

    Reply

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