Local authorities could save 95% of the typical cost of taking cases to court by turning to specialist arbitration, according to a not-for-profit organisation providing such services.

The London-based Centre for Justice said public bodies are losing up to 10% of their budgets annually in handling complaints and disputes through the courts, and that an alternative approach could cut these losses. It estimates it saved the London borough of Havering £240,000 in resolving three cases. The cases, which were all resolved within two months, involved sums ranging from £20,000 to more than £4m.

Centre director Anthony Hurndall said: ‘Our form of ­arbitration does not rely on an adversarial approach to arrive at a result. ‘Our trained arbitrators deal directly with the parties and usually achieve an amicable ­settlement without the need for a formal award. If the parties are unable to agree a result, the ­dispute is decided by the assessor and the outcome is legally binding,’ he said.