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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sheakh, R (On the Application Of) v London Borough of Lambeth Council [2022] EWCA Civ 457 (05 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/457.html Cite as: [2022] WLR(D) 170, [2022] EWCA Civ 457, [2022] PTSR 1315 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT (PLANNING COURT)
MR JUSTICE KERR
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS)
LORD JUSTICE MALES
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
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The Queen (on the application of Sofia Sheakh) |
Appellant |
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– and – |
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London Borough of Lambeth Council |
Respondent |
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And between: |
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Sofia Sheakh |
Appellant |
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– and – |
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London Borough of Lambeth Council |
Respondent |
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Timothy Mould Q.C. (instructed by Lambeth Legal Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 January 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii and the National Archive. The date and time for hand-down was deemed not before 4pm on 5 April 2022
The Senior President of Tribunals, Lord Justice Males and Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing:
Introduction
The issue in the appeal
Section 149 of the 2010 Act – the public sector equality duty
"(a) eliminate discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act;
(b) advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it;
(c) foster good relations between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it".
"(a) remove or minimise disadvantages suffered by persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are connected to that characteristic;
(b) take steps to meet the needs of persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are different from the needs of persons who do not share it;
(c) encourage persons who share a relevant protected characteristic to participate in public life or in any other activity in which participation by such persons is disproportionately low".
Relevant jurisprudence
"86. Section 149… requires a public authority to give the equality needs which are listed … the regard which is due in the particular context. It does not dictate a particular result. It does not require an elaborate structure of secondary decision-making every time a public authority makes any decision which might engage the listed equality needs, however remotely. The court is not concerned with formulaic box-ticking, but with the question whether, in substance, the public authority has complied with section 149. A public authority can comply with section 149 even if the decision maker does not refer to section 149 (see, for example, Hotak v Southwark London Borough Council [2015] UKSC 30; [2016] AC 811)."
The statutory framework for traffic regulation orders and experimental traffic orders
The three Low Traffic Neighbourhoods
The decisions taken on 9 October 2020
"1.3 … [the Secretary of State's guidance] emphasises these measures should be taken as swiftly as possible so that the change in travel habits happens before the restart takes full effect. …
1.4 To deliver the swiftest response to this emergency, the Council has made temporary traffic management orders prohibiting through traffic using a number of residential roads in roads that lie south of The Oval as well as south-east and west of Brixton town centre. Before the emergency that triggered these temporary traffic orders subsides, the Council needs to consider whether these temporary low traffic neighbourhoods should be retained. At the same time, it needs to consider whether more low traffic neighbourhoods should be created in the manner described in the Secretary of State's Guidance."
"2.1 Officers in the Transport Strategy and Highways teams have used elementary traffic modelling techniques to identify where and what traffic controls are most likely to achieve the objectives described in the new Statutory Guidance. However, narrow road widths and competing demands for kerbside space preclude the creation of significantly widened footways or physically segregated cycling lanes on most of Lambeth's roads. Yet annual attitudinal surveys undertaken by TfL evidence how people will only change their mode of travel to cycling if the road environment feels sufficiently safe to them. Whilst in the manner of London's Quietways, this can be achieved by restricting motor traffic in roads signposted as cycle-routes, in a dense urban area such as Lambeth, this route-based approach risks generating higher traffic levels on parallel routes. Unless these routes are designed for through traffic (which is generally only the case with classified roads), this outcome is at odds with the revised Network Management Duty. Consequently, it is recommended that rather than pursuing route-based traffic reduction, the Council pursues traffic reduction across areas bounded by roads that the Transport Strategy identifies as being suitable to carry through-traffic. Each of these areas would then become a Low Traffic Neighbourhood (LTN).
2.2 The priority for assessing which potential LTNs should be included in the first tranche of schemes is as stated in the TSIP. These schemes have been reviewed by ward councillors and emergency services to establish that any operational or social issues forecast to arise are not disproportionate to the scheme objectives described in paragraph 1.2.
2.3 The speed of delivery demanded by the Secretary of State's Guidance is incompatible with the timeframe required to collaboratively develop and agree a traffic management scheme with road users, members of the community and other stakeholders. Accordingly, officers consider that introducing such interventions by means of an experimental traffic order is the most appropriate legislative mechanism.
2.4 At the request of the emergency services, all physical restrictions to effect any road closures should, at least initially, include the ability for a fire appliance to pass through without the need to stop. Recognising that a physical gap will significantly lessen drivers' and motorcyclists' self-enforcement of the signed restrictions, automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras will be used to carry out enforcement if necessary. Exemptions will be made for emergency vehicles and refuse vehicles when undertaking street collection."
A description of the measures intended in each of the four Low Traffic Neighbourhoods was then set out (in paragraphs 2.6 to 2.25). It was explained that the choice of these measures had been informed by feedback from the local community and by the aim to preserve access and reduce travel disruption for local residents.
"4.16 Section 149 of the Equality Act 2010 sets out the public sector equality duty in relation to race, sex and disability and extending the duty to all the characteristics i.e. race, sex, disability, age, sexual orientation, religion or belief, pregnancy or maternity, marriage or civil partnership and gender reassignment. The public sector equality duty requires public authorities to have due regard to the need to:
- Eliminate unlawful discrimination, harassment and victimisation
- Advance equality of information and
- Foster good relations between those who share a protected characteristic and those who do not.
Part of the duty to have "due regard" where there is a disproportionate impact will be to take steps to mitigate the impact and the Council must demonstrate that this has been done, and/or justify the decision, on the basis that it is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim. Accordingly, there is an expectation that a decision maker will explore other means which have less of a disproportionate impact.
4.17 The Equality Duty must be complied with before and at the time that a particular policy is under consideration or decision is taken – that is, in the development of policy options, and in making a final decision. A public body cannot satisfy the Equality Duty by justifying a decision after it has been taken."
"5.1 The history and outcome of non-statutory consultation undertaken for each scheme to date is described in section 2 of this report. The inherent uncertainty in terms of how drivers will reroute or change their mode of travel has informed the recommendation to proceed by way of an experimental traffic order whereby full public consultation on the precise design of the scheme is carried out after installation.
5.2 As detailed in paragraph 4.13, the recommendation of this report is that for the duration of the first six months of each LTN's operation, ongoing formal public consultation shall be undertaken to inform whether the changes should be withdrawn, modified or made permanent."
"7.1 A separate Equalities Impact Assessment has not been completed for this decision but prior to making the recommendations detailed in this report, regard has been given to the Public Sector Equality Duty and the relevant protected characteristics (age, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, and sexual orientation).
7.2 The Assistant Director for Highways, Capital Programmes & Sustainability has approved the project team's assessment that there is a reasonable expectation that the measures will not disproportionately affect people with one or more of the above protected characteristics. The veracity of this conclusion will be explored as part of the six-month post-implementation consultation period.
7.3 Within the designs consideration has been given to the needs of all road users."
Subsequent events
The proceedings
The judgment of Kerr J.
"158. That method of proceeding accorded with the statutory procedure for making an [experimental traffic order]. Four such [experimental traffic orders] had already been made, for [the] Oval Triangle [Low Traffic Neighbourhood], using that procedure. The statutory context was that the traffic authority is not equipped with all the knowledge it needs to decide whether a traffic order should be made permanent.
159. The claimant's assertion of a lack of adequate Tameside enquiries is correspondingly weakened. I do not accept that it is made out by reason of inadequate consultation. …
160. In my judgment Mr Mould is right to submit that the director incontestably had some regard to the equality objectives and the question is whether the regard he had was sufficient to qualify as due regard. He was not aware of the detailed findings made up to that point but I do not think that unawareness is sufficient to condemn his regard for equality objectives as less than what was due.
161. In my judgment, there was enough consideration of equality objectives in the October report to qualify as due regard to those objectives. That included, legitimately, consideration of the point that the same equality objectives would be looked at further, in much more detail and with a sharpened focus, at later stages in the statutory process.
162. That does not mean, as the claimant would have it, that performance of the duty was put off to another day, when it was too late to perform it because the relevant function had already been exercised. In the present context, I find that the duty was performed at the time of the October report and that part of the performance was the director's acknowledgment of his expectation that there would be detailed future [equality impact assessments] before any decision about permanence.
163. There is nothing in section 149 of the 2010 Act which prevents, in an appropriate case, performance of the duty by means of a conscious decision to undertake equality assessment on a "rolling" basis. A decision to do that is not, as a matter of law, contrary to the pre-requisites of performance identified in McCombe LJ's judgment in Bracking at [26]."
"165. So that this judgment is not misunderstood, I should make it clear that I am not deciding that equality impact assessment on a rolling basis is always acceptable where the function being exercised is to initiate an experiment, as in the case of a decision to make an [experimental traffic order]. It may or may not be on the facts, depending in each case whether such regard (if any) that was had to the equality objectives in section 149(1) of the 2010 Act was sufficient to pass the test of being "due regard" to those objectives.
166. Here, it was acceptable because of unusual factual features: the urgency expressed in the statutory guidance, the near stasis of public transport and the need to restrain vehicle traffic in residential areas to allow walking and cycling to flourish. Those factors (all caused by the prevalence of the virus) propelled [the council] to curtail its research and truncate the timescale, using [experimental traffic orders]. Had those factors been absent, Mr Dosunmu's approach to equality assessment might not have passed the "due regard" test."
Did the council lawfully discharge the public sector equality duty?
The effect of paragraph 37 of Schedule 9 of the 2004 Act
Conclusion