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Overview
The
Office of Children's Ombudsman is an independent government agency established
by Public
Act 204 of 1994. This Act gives the Ombudsman authority to investigate
complaints about children in Michigan's child welfare system. We are an
administrative remedy; that is we investigate the actions, decisions, policies
and protocols of the Department of Human Services (DHS) and child placing agencies
as they relate to a particular child. The Ombudsman also makes recommendations
to the Governor, Legislature, and DHS for changes in child welfare laws, rules,
and policies.
Michigan’s Children’s Ombudsman is appointed by the Governor and is supported by
a multi-disciplinary team of investigators. The current Ombudsman, Lynne
Martinez, was appointed by Governor Granholm March 19, 2003.
Mission Statement
The mission of the Office of the Children's Ombudsman is to assure the safety
and well-being of Michigan's children in need of foster care, adoption, and
protective services and to promote public confidence in the child welfare
system. This will be accomplished through independently investigating
complaints, advocating for children, and recommending changes to improve law,
policy, and practice for the benefit of current and future generations.
History of the Office of Children’s Ombudsman
(From
the United States Ombudsman Association)
For as long as government has existed, guaranteeing citizens fair and equitable
treatment under the law has been an issue and various protections have been
utilized over the years. In modern times the public sector Ombudsman, where
instituted, has been a successful and valuable guarantor of citizens' rights. By
impartial and independent investigation of citizens' complaints, it has provided
an informal and accessible avenue of redress.
The first public sector Ombudsman was appointed by the Parliament of Sweden in
1809. The Swedish Constitution divided and balanced power between the King and
Parliament with the King having executive powers and Parliament retaining
legislative power. The Ombudsman, who was appointed by and responsible to
Parliament, was to protect individual rights against the excesses of
bureaucracy.
Since its creation, this first Ombudsman Office has been the model for the
public sector ombudsman. and set the definition that is still accepted today: a
public official appointed by the legislature to receive and investigate citizen
complaints against administrative acts of government. These acts may or may not
include the administrative acts of the judiciary or the legislature, depending
upon the statute. Ombudsman is a gender-neutral term, used throughout the world
by women and men who hold the office.
The Ombudsman concept spread through Europe, and to this continent with the
first offices being established in the United States in the 1960's. This was a
time in the U.S.A. when exposure of government secrecy and scandal, and when
movements such as civil rights and good government created a political
atmosphere more favorable to openness, and to establishing recourse for the
aggrieved.
Hawaii established the first office in 1967. Since then a number of states,
counties and municipalities have followed suit by establishing offices of
general jurisdiction. The Ombudsman movement in the U.S.A. has also been
characterized by offices that represent a departure from the Swedish model.
These variations would include offices with general jurisdiction but appointment
by a governor or mayor, legislative offices with special jurisdiction such as
corrections, and single agency Ombudsman with statutory authority.
Characteristics of the Ombudsman
In 1961, the American Bar Association recognized the value of the
institution and wrote the criteria for creating an Ombudsman Office. These
criteria are still accepted today.
The American Bar Association recommends:
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That state and
local governments of the United States should give consideration to the
establishment of an Ombudsman authorized to inquire into administrative
action and to make public criticism.
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That each statute
or ordinance establishing an Ombudsman should contain the following twelve
essentials:
(1) authority of the Ombudsman to criticize all agencies, officials,
and public employees except courts and their personnel, legislative bodies
and their personnel, and the chief executive and his personal staff;
(2) independence of the Ombudsman from control by any other officer,
except for responsibility to the legislative body;
(3) appointment by the legislative body or appointment by the
executive with confirmation by a designated proportion of the legislative
body, preferably more than a majority, such as two-thirds;
(4) independence of the Ombudsman through a long term, not less than
five years, with freedom from removal except for cause, determined by more
than a majority of the legislative body, such as two-thirds;
(5) a high salary equivalent to that of a designated top officer;
(6) freedom of the Ombudsman to employ assistants and to delegate
work to them, without restraints of civil service and classification acts;
(7) freedom of the Ombudsman to investigate any act or failure to act
by any agency, official, or public employee;
(8) access of the Ombudsman to all public records deemed relevant to
an investigation;
(9) authority to inquire into fairness, correctness of findings,
motivation, adequacy of reasons, efficiency, and procedural propriety of any
action or inaction by any agency, official, or public employee;
(10) discretionary power to determine what complaints to investigate
and to determine what criticisms to make or to publicize;
(11) opportunity for any agency, official, or public employee
criticized by the Ombudsman to have advance notice of the criticism and to
publish with the criticism an answering statement;
(12) immunity of the Ombudsman and staff from civil liability on
account of official action.
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That for the
purpose of determining the workability of the Ombudsman idea within the
Federal government, the Federal government should experiment with the
establishment of an Ombudsman or Ombudsman for limited geographical area or
areas, for a specific agency or agencies or for a limited phase or limited
phases of Federal activity.
-
That
establishment of a Federal government-wide Ombudsman program should await
findings based on the experimentation recommended.
The United States Ombudsman Association (USOA), the national organization of
public sector Ombudsman, has incorporated these criteria in its Bylaws. They are
also integral to the USOA annotated Model Statute for Ombudsman Offices which is
built on 30 years of experience with the concept in the U.S.A.
An Ombudsman's Power and Responsibilities
The essential characteristics of an Ombudsman Office are independence, the
ability to investigate complaints which often includes subpoena power, the
ability to criticize government agencies and to recommend changes that may
be issued in public reports. An Ombudsman, however, has no enforcement or
disciplinary powers.
The Ombudsman Office is a paradox, being both powerful and powerless at the same
time. They can investigate complaints, choosing which are the most important,
and initiate investigations without complaints. They set an agenda by what they
choose to investigate. They can determine whether a complaint is justified and
seek remedies for it. They can compel people to talk to them and produce
records, subject to the protections witnesses have in court. They cannot,
however, make an agency do anything, but can make their reports public. Aside
from choosing what questions to ask and issuing subpoenas, their powers are
mainly persuasion and publicity.
An Ombudsman generally does not have the power to investigate the people who
appoint the Ombudsman and other elected officials, or have the power to look at
judicial acts of courts. Voters, however, do have remedies such as recall or
impeachment for elected officials. Unfavorable court decisions can be appealed
to a higher court. Complaints about judicial misconduct may result in an
administrative sanction of a judge or rejection of an incumbent at the polls.
The Ombudsman is not an alternative to these traditional remedies.
Ombudsman Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction varies according to the law which creates an office. For a
general jurisdiction Ombudsman, the administrative acts of most, if not all,
agencies in a local or state government are within an Ombudsman's mandate. A
specialty Ombudsman looks at the acts of a single agency or a group of agencies
that work in a single area of concern such as children's issues.
Appointment of an Ombudsman
Enabling legislation will determine the appointment process of an
Ombudsman. As the office of an Ombudsman is one that must operate with the trust
and respect of the community, it is recommended that the selection process be
one that is not unilateral but is shared by appropriate legislative and/or
administrative committees and bodies. The efficacy of an office is largely
dependent on a widely held view of the Ombudsman as a person of integrity, who
works with non-partisan fairness and ethical behavior.
Confidentiality
Enabling legislation for many Ombudsman Offices requires the complainant's
identity be kept confidential. People need to be able to talk to the Ombudsman
and staff in confidence. After discussion, some choose not to file complaints
and others want their complaints recorded but not pursued. Confidentiality is
critical to creating confidence that complainants can talk to the Ombudsman
without their identity being disclosed against their will.
Complaint Handling
Complaints that come to an Ombudsman Office are screened to determine if
the complaint is in the jurisdiction of the Ombudsman, whether the complainant
has utilized the government agency's established complaint process, and whether
there is validity under the law to the complaint. The Ombudsman helps citizens
understand how government agencies operate, what are the appropriate laws,
rules, policies, or how citizens may handle complaints themselves. Complaints
that are accepted are objectively investigated by the Ombudsman. Informal
resolution is often attempted with the agency. When this is not possible, the
full power of the office may be utilized, which could result in a public report
containing recommendations to the agency or to the legislature. Many
jurisdictions provide whistleblower protection for both complainants and
witnesses who may contact or be interviewed by the office. This is done to
ensure the Ombudsman has access to all the facts in a matter and to prevent
retaliation against those who seek help from the office.
In resolving complaints, it is also the responsibility of the Ombudsman to
identify patterns of abuse of power or negligence by government that would
require legislative attention.
Reporting
Most public sector Ombudsman are required to report annually to the
appointing authority. With much of the Ombudsman's work being done quietly and
in confidentiality, the Annual Report is an opportunity for the Ombudsman to
speak publicly on issues of concern. Annual Reports will contain statistical
information on the contacts by citizens during the prior year, an analysis of
those statistics, and recommendations that flow from this analysis.
Advocacy
The Ombudsman Office performs an unusual role in government. While it
receives complaints from the public, its job is not to become an advocate for
the complainant or the governments that it has jurisdiction over. The Ombudsman
is charged with collecting and evaluating all the facts regarding a matter as a
neutral investigator. It determines if there was an error, unfairness or harm by
the agency involved, or if there is no basis to the complaint. The Ombudsman may
make recommendations to correct wrongs done to individuals and to improve the
administration of government. If its recommendations are not accepted and good
reasons not given, the Ombudsman may become an advocate for their
implementation.
Summary
With an Ombudsman Office, people who have problems with government have a
place to seek solutions, independent explanations, investigations and
recommendations.
An Ombudsman Office, by providing a direct and informal avenue for the mediation
of citizen grievances, is a valuable tool for enhancing the relationship between
a government and its citizens and ultimately for improving the administration of
government itself.
The
mission of the USOA is to promote and support fairness, accountability and
equity in government through the public sector Ombudsman.
The above is for informational purposes only.
It is an except of the webpage of the Michigan Children's Ombudsman Office and
can be found at
www.michigan.gov/oco.
Any and all questions pertaining to its content as well as
references being made to this information should credit the Michigan Office of
the Children's Ombudsman and NOT the Michigan Child Death Review Program. |