Five years ago, Audit Wales flagged the culture within cyngor Gwynedd as 'destructive'.
https://www.wao.gov.uk/sites/default/files/publications/ffordd_gwynedd.pdf
At the recent extraordinary meeting of the full council, councillors Nia Jeffreys and Olaf Cai Larsen spoke of staff feeling safe to challenge.
Irony indeed - speaking to a full council meeting where councillors had been 'advised' not to challenge...
The webcast of the meeting can be found here -
https://gwynedd.public-i.tv/core/portal/webcast_interactive/1063308
Larsen, the chair of the Plaid Cymru constituency party and Jeffreys may have missed the council's recent audit on whistleblowing. Staff do not feel safe...
It is not just staff...
People who do raise concerns have been smeared by senior officers and ignored
by councillors.
Actions not words...
Safeguarding, scrutiny and culture are now buzzwords for council officers/members since Neil Foden's arrest in 2023.
The reality is somewhat different...
On April 11th, 2024, the children's department finally released their annual complaints handling report from 2022/23 to the care scrutiny committee.
Standards...
It was the first time the SS annual complaints reports had come before a scrutiny committee since 2019, after which a complaint was made against a senior officer for misleading the committee. The same officer had refused to answer questions of the care scrutiny committee at a previous meeting.
The report can be found in the agenda pack here -
https://democracy.gwynedd.llyw.cymru//documents/g4975/Public%20reports%20pack%2011th-Apr-2024%2010.30%20Care%20Scrutiny%20Committee.pdf?T=10
Page 36 mentions a historic complaint –


The Senior Manager discussed fully with the Senior Complaints Officer as ten years had passed. The social worker did not work here anymore, therefore we would need to rely on records only to investigate the complaint...
Who is the senior manager?
It is believed that Dafydd Paul was the senior complaints officer at this time.
Did the legal department give advice to the officer's on the matter..?
The Ffordd Gwynedd way...
The PSOW can investigate historic complaints.
Treating the complaint in this way may have shut down the pathway to the Ombudsman for Wales.
There was another historic complaint on page 37 –

The cabinet member for children was silent on the historic complaints and not one councillor of the committee raised concerns. The report was voted through by the committee...
Shameful...
The report - with the historic complaints of safeguarding failures - was finally released to the committee after Care Inspectorate Wales (CIW) had completed its review of the council.
5 months later, on the 26th, September, 2024, the SS departments presented their annual complaints handling reports for 2023/24 to the care scrutiny committee. The agenda pack for the meeting and the reports can be found here -
https://democracy.gwynedd.llyw.cymru/documents/g5188/Public%20reports%20pack%2026th-Sep-2024%2010.30%20Care%20Scrutiny%20Committee.pdf?T=10
During the meeting, Dafydd Paul, acting as the senior complaints officer and presenting the report gave the impression that he was the author of the children's report.
Paul, did not update the committee on the investigation that had taken place of the historic abuse from 2013/14 nor did any councillor ask...

The committee also scrutinised this complaint from the adult's learning disability team -

What was the 'relationship' between the support worker and the service user?
No proper explanation was given nor asked for by councillors.
Councillors passed the reports anyway...
The report can be found in the agenda pack here -
https://democracy.gwynedd.llyw.cymru/documents/g5260/Public%20reports%20pack%2017th-Dec-2024%2013.00%20The%20Cabinet.pdf?T=10
The contact officer for the report is Ian Jones, Head of Corporate Services.
Neither Jones nor Menna Trenholme, the cabinet member for children, explained why the report was being presented to the cabinet rather than the care scrutiny committee...

'difficult and tiresome complainants...?
So a complaint to the children's service was brought to the attention of the monitoring officer who had to remind the children and adult's SS customer care/complaint officers of the law when dealing with complaints...
It is a choice to ignore them and infringe on the rights of the residents of Gwynedd.
Again, these complaints were not presented to the education/economy scrutiny committee...

The complaints in question are on page 53 and 54 of Jones' report.
Three serious complaints - one a safeguarding issue - avoiding proper scrutiny.
Instead, cabinet members voted to accept the report without real discussion...
Many councillors continue to turn a blind eye...
For many families, seeking advice and support from Gwynedd's SS departments is traumatic -
SYSTEMS GENERATED TRAUMA
How disabled children and their families are traumatised by dysfunctional public services when they ask for support -
https://cerebra.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Systems-Generated-Trauma-Report-web.pdf
They give insight to the damage caused to children and families by the very departments that were created to support them...
Clements is a Professor of Law at Leeds University and has written an article on Gwynedd council -
‘Omg … will it never end’
https://www.lukeclements.co.uk/omg-will-it-never-end-2/
Some councillors and senior officer's have mentioned they were also groomed by Foden.
This is disingenuous...
Has the Children's Commissioner for Wales, Rocío Cifuentes, been approached?