rustbucket
Registered User
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1. A complaint to the council enforcement about a structure already built or being built by a person(s) cannot be made anonymously. That is you can't send a letter in without a contact and address. The council usually will not make these complaints part of the public record.
Typically that information is not readily available but as you point out it is a grey area. The person(s) submitting the complaint may request that their identity be withheld but this may be overturned by the FOI act or a court requesting the information.Woodie, that's interesting. If somebody were make complaint to the local authority that a development contravened planning regulations, would the public not have access to the information on file? Wouldn't an FOI request defeat any refusal by the authority to facilitate such access?
The answer is depends on which type of submission is made;
1. A complaint to the council enforcement about a structure already built or being built by a person(s) cannot be made anonymously. That is you can't send a letter in without a contact and address. The council usually will not make these complaints part of the public record.
2. An objection or observation about a specific planning application is public record as the previous posters have stated, most councils have the full records online.
So it is kind of pointless arranging to go an see it if it is not possible to see who made the complaint I guess.
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