Council urged to apologise to city over tree-felling sagapublished at 11:46 British Summer Time 14 October 2020
Sheffield City Council should apologise to the people of the city because of the way it removed street trees, the local government ombudsman has said.
Workers and campaigners clashed during long-running protests about the future Sheffield's street trees.
Thousands of trees have been felled since the start of a £2.2bn 25-year programme of works, having been assessed as either dangerous, dead, diseased, dying, damaging or discriminatory.
A compromise between campaigners and the council was agreed two years ago.
A new report from the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman says at times the council did not act with "openness and transparency".
An investigation from the ombudsman found the council "at fault" for the way it corresponded with a man about complaints from 2016.
It was after contractors started work at 05:00, something the council was criticised for.
Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman Michael King said: “This case highlights the imperative for councils to act with honesty, openness and transparency – without this people can lose faith in their integrity and not trust they are doing the right thing.
“I welcome the hard work the council has since done to restore people’s faith, and publish more information to increase transparency. Apologising to the people of Sheffield for its past actions and acknowledging what went wrong will help build that trust further."