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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> London Borough of Hillingdon, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Education & Skills [2007] EWHC 514 (Admin) (15 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/514.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 514 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of THE LONDON BOROUGH OF HILLINGDON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EDUCATION AND SKILLS |
Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Paul Brown (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 17th January 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Forbes:
Introduction.
"17 Provision of services for children in need, their families and others
(1) It shall be the general duty of every local authority … –
(a) to safeguard and promote the welfare of children within their area who are in need; and
(b) so far as is consistent with that duty, to promote the upbringing of such children by their families,
by providing a range and level of services appropriate to those children's needs.
"31 Power to pay grant
(1) A minister of the Crown may pay a grant to a local authority in England towards expenditure incurred or to be incurred by it.
(2) ….
(3) The amount of grant under this section and the manner of its payment are to be such as the person paying it may determine."
The Grounds of Challenge.
(i) The terms of the UASC leaving care grant for 2005-06 breached Hillingdon's legitimate expectation that the grant in question would provide Hillingdon with a level of funding support comparable to the level of support which had been made available in respect of the preceding financial year, i.e. by means of the UASC leaving care grant for 2004-05 ("Legitimate Expectation");
(ii) Further or alternatively, the Secretary of State thwarted her espoused policy of providing funding assistance to those local authorities "most affected by the Hillingdon judgment" ("Thwarting the Policy").
The Relevant Legal Principles.
"19. In all legitimate expectation cases, whether substantive or procedural, three practical questions arise. The first question is to what has the public authority, whether by practice or promise, committed itself; the second is whether the authority has acted or proposes to act unlawfully in relation to its commitment; the third is what the court should do."
(1) where a public authority has issued a promise or adopted a practice which represents how it proposes to act in a given area, the law will require the promise or practice to be honoured unless there is good reason not to do so;
(2) a public body's promise or practice as to future conduct may only be denied in circumstances where to do so is the public body's legal duty or is otherwise a proportionate response, having regard to a legitimate aim pursued by the public body in the public interest; and
(3) this approach makes no distinction between procedural and substantive expectations, though statutory duty may more often dictate the frustration of a substantive expectation.
"Parliament must have conferred the discretion with the intention that it should be used to promote the policy and objects of the Act … In a matter of this kind it is not possible to draw a hard and fast line, but if the Minister, by reason of his having misconstrued the Act or for any other reason, so uses his discretion as to thwart or run counter to the policy and objects of the Act, then our law would be very defective if persons aggrieved were not entitled to the protection of the court."
Factual Background.
"4. As a consequence of the [Hillingdon] judgment … the claimant (and other local authorities) found that they faced an unexpected increase in their financial obligations. The Department for Education and Skills decided that it would provide financial assistance to local authorities towards meeting those additional costs. This financial assistance was provided under section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003, which enables a Minister to "pay a grant to a local authority towards expenditure incurred or to be incurred by it".
5. The Rt. Hon. Margaret Hodge MP, then Minister for Children, Young People and Families, met Councillor Ray Puddifoot, the leader of the claimant council, on 11 February 2004 to discuss the matter. In this meeting, which I attended, Councillor Puddifoot described the anticipated impact of the [Hillingdon] judgment, in financial and other terms, on his local authority. …"
"UNACCOMPANIED ASYLUM SEEKING CARE LEAVERS
Following our meeting on 11 February, I thought that it might be helpful to set out my suggestions about a possible way forward, given your concerns about the financial uncertainties that may impact unhelpfully on your local authority.
I know that you are in the process, through your senior officers, of providing my officials with further information about the actual and anticipated numbers of young people during 2003/04 and 2004/05. Prior to the arrival of this information, I thought that I should explore with you the idea of providing you with certainty about a £140 a week rate (not £130 as previously advised), on the basis that it would be guaranteed for up to 300 full-time equivalent additional Hillingdon care leavers, above and beyond the 253 (of which 209 will be funded) that we have already estimated that you will have next year. This would mean that the £1.4 million already notified to you would rise to £1.5 million. In addition, if the extra 300 eventually fell to your responsibility, we would guarantee an additional £2.2m, in addition to the £1.5 million. All payments would be made in arrears on the basis of verifiable claims
This now means that we would be guaranteeing, at this time, to meet the costs of up to 509 (i.e. 253 – 44 + 300) young people, thus matching your base case scenario of 542, given that we are expecting all local authorities to fund up to the first 44 young people. We are further considering your concern about the rate of payment if numbers exceed this level, and will confirm our intentions in the circular we will issue shortly.
…
In addition, we will continue, in the light of the information that you will provide, to look sympathetically at the representations that you have been making in relation to 2003/04. Given the retrospective (quarterly) nature of payment, following audited claims, we will have the means, after April, to respond to such representations, provided that our contingency reserve has not been exhausted. Our initial consultations about anticipated pressures, above and beyond those anticipated by you, have been encouraging.
I am sure that you will wish to consider these proposals carefully and hope that your response will be prompt, given the time pressures that you have described which affect your budget setting process. …".
"Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children – Leaving Care Costs: 2004-05
SUMMARY
1. This letter sets out the arrangements for the funding of local authorities most affected by the recent Hillingdon Judgment on the status of unaccompanied asylum seeking children, to assist in meeting the costs of supporting additional numbers of ("former relevant") children under the provisions of the Children (Leaving Care) Act 2000.
2. The grant is to be paid under Section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003.
3. KEY FEATURES
The key features of the grant for 2004-05 are:
a. £12m is available to those local authorities most affected by the Hillingdon Judgment
b. no payment will be made to any local authority in respect of its first 44 … care leavers (based on claims made to the Home Office as at 31 March 2003)
c. for the remaining care leavers above this number, local authorities may claim a flat rate of £140 per week per care leaver, up to the level set out in annex A (this is based on the best estimates available to the Department, as we have no previous experience of costs in this area)
d. …
e. all flat rate payments, based on the number of care weeks, will be made to local authorities quarterly in arrears on receipt of audited returns
f. a contingency fund of £5m has been set up by the Department to assist those local authorities that have to support significantly higher numbers of care leavers than we have estimated.
g. This fund will be distributed among those authorities, who, at the end of the financial year, have provided support to significantly … larger numbers than the indicative figures for their authority, as set out at paragraph 3
4. The Department has decided to focus the available resources on those local authorities with significant numbers of care leaver unaccompanied asylum seeking young people (i.e. former relevant children, within the meaning of s23C of the Children Act 1989). Therefore, only those authorities who support, on average throughout the 52 weeks of the year, 45 or more such care leavers will be eligible to receive payments, and only in respect of young people above the eligibility point of 44. If an authority, in the event, has fewer young people than the indicative numbers and/or for a smaller number of weeks (i.e. fewer than 52), the payments that will be made will be reduced at a rate of £140 per week per child.
5. In addition, beyond the indicative figures in the attached table, we have set aside a contingency provision of £5 million to assist any authority who, in the event, has a greater number of young people than the indicative figure, in particular those who seek support as care leavers. It is recognised that the distribution of young people, and the levels at which they may remain in contact with local authorities as care leavers, or return to seek support as care leavers, is difficult to predict with any confidence. Thus, our intention is that the contingency sum that will be available at the end of the financial year will be focused mainly on those authorities that have experienced, on average, significantly higher numbers … of young people seeking support, above and beyond the indicative figures. …
6. Annex A lists those local authorities where Departmental estimates indicate that the number of care leavers requiring support in 2004-05 will exceed 44 and details the level of funding to which these local authorities are estimated to be eligible. Where local authorities support fewer young people than the number estimated in annex A, funding will be based on the actual number of young people supported, subject to point 3(b) above.
7. …
NEXT STEPS
8. Guidance detailing procedures for claiming funding will be issued to local authorities in March 2004.
9. …
CANCELLATION OF CIRCULAR
10. This Circular should be cancelled on 31 March 2005."
(i) it incorporated a "main grant" of £12 million and a "contingency fund" of £5 million, the latter to be allocated to those authorities "that have to support significantly higher numbers of care leavers" than had been previously estimated by the DfES;
(ii) it set a qualifying threshold of 45 full time equivalent former UASCs (i.e. local authorities would not qualify for assistance in respect of the first 44 eligible former UASCs); and
(iii) provided that funds from the main grant would be distributed on the basis of a flat rate of £140 for every eligible former UASC, but only in respect of a maximum number of eligible former UASCs (in Hillingdon's case the number was 209).
"Our discussions with your department have reassured us to the extent that the contingency of £5 million will, given the estimates in the circular, be available to Hillingdon to defray the certain costs we have communicated to you as being due to the Hillingdon Judgment (this is in addition to the £140 per equivalent week rate for the 209 full time equivalents already guaranteed).
…
As discussed with your department it will also be hoped that an early confirmation of the release of the contingency or a reasonable proportion thereof will be made, this is so that the uncertainties in regard to final accounts and budget setting at this time next year will not leave us in a totally uncertain position. …
I would also appreciate some early further guidance on 2003/04 monies, as we are looking at a substantial shortfall this year. … I would be interested in what the DfES can advise on this matter now that we have settled the 2004/05 situation.
… The Hillingdon Judgment has proved a problem for us all and I hope that we may be able to work together during the coming year to deal with the 2004/05 situation as it evolves, but also to work together with the Home Office on this matter in general and specifically on funding for the future."
"1. SUMMARY
1.1. This circular sets out the arrangements for the payment of the UASC Leaving Care Grant, in respect of the year to 31 March 2005, to Local Authorities most affected by the Hillingdon Judgment. Payment is to assist towards meeting the costs of supporting additional numbers of "former relevant children" under section 23C of the Children Act 1989.
1.2 The grant as described in the LAC(2004)6 … is intended to assist local authorities towards meeting additional costs arising from the impact of the Hillingdon Judgment in the 2004/05 financial year.
1.3 There is a total provision of £17 million for 2004/05. This will be allocated to those authorities facing the greatest need. £5 million out of the £17 million total has been set aside into a contingency reserve with £12 million remaining as the Main Grant.
…
KEY FEATURES
1.7 The key features of the guidance are as follows:
A. Main Grant (Authorities listed in Annex A)
…
1.10 No payment will be made to any local authority … in respect of its first 44 FTE [full-time equivalent] eligible care leavers.
1.11 The maximum number of FTE former relevant UASC for whom each local authority may claim is set out in column 3 of Annex A. Local authorities will receive a flat rate of £140 per week, per FTE care leaver, up to the indicated number. The £140 payment is intended to help those authorities most affected by the Hillingdon Judgment and enable the Department to apportion the funds available...
…
B. Contingency Fund
1.13 Payments from the Contingency Fund will be made after the end of the financial year, in arrears, on receipt of certified returns.
…
1.15 As a result of representation from local authorities and local authority representative bodies, the Department will review the criteria for allocating the Contingency Fund outlined in LAC (2004)6. This review will be based on FORM 2, which needs to be received by 12th November 2004. The Department will issue further guidance and Grant Determination on accessing the Contingency Fund following review. …"
"The support offered through the UASC Leaving Care grant is intended to help local authorities to meet additional costs that are being incurred as a consequence of the Hillingdon Judgment. If the current £140 rate were to be reduced, on the basis that it should be related to the levels of cost actually being experienced by local authorities, net of accommodation costs, it would then be possible for the same quantum of grant to be spread across a larger number of young people/local authorities, especially if the qualification threshold were also to be reduced. The rationale for making such a change would be the recognition that the local authorities are able, in a number of cases, to recover housing costs from housing benefit or NASS. However, at this early stage, such representations have not been made to the DfES by local authority representative bodies.
…
It was noted that, although accommodation costs could be covered "in part" by either NASS or housing benefit, in practice there are difficulties experienced by local authorities when accessing benefits, particularly administration difficulties in accessing housing benefit. In addition there are currently time delays associated with NASS payments.
…
Local authority representatives expressed the hope that they would be in a position to feed back to DfES officials early in the New Year, as it was recognised on all sides that it was desirable to arrive, as early as possible, at a conclusion about the use of this year's contingency provision and next year's grant arrangements."
"16. … I chaired this meeting. The meeting discussed the implications of the findings of an analysis of the local authority returns from the Form 2 Survey … for the 2004-05 contingency fund and the 2005-06 UASC leaving care grant. …
17. The Form 2 survey undertaken by the Department in the period before the meeting revealed that accommodation costs accounted for 53% (54% in London) of the overall cost to local authorities. As stated above, the support offered through the UASC leaving care grant, from its inception, has been intended to assist local authorities towards meeting additional costs incurred as a result of the [Hillingdon] judgment. At the meeting on 7 December 2004 there was some discussion as to whether the current rate of £140 should be reduced to reflect the level of costs actually incurred by the local authorities, net of accommodation costs. The rationale for such a reduction was stated by me at the meeting to be to avoid "double funding" of these costs (i.e. funding both from the UASC leaving care grant and from other sources such as housing benefit or the National Asylum Support Service ("NASS"), thus enabling more local authorities/young people in future to receive support through the UASC leaving care grant. In many cases it was possible for housing costs to be recovered from housing benefit or NASS. All those over 18 years old are, subject to means and certain other criteria, eligible for housing benefit, provided they are not in full time education. NASS provides funding for those young adult asylum seekers who are not in receipt of benefits and who would otherwise be destitute. … [The Form 2 survey return completed by Hillingdon] shows Hillingdon's average costs, net of accommodation costs, to be £77 per week per full-time equivalent care leaver. The costs incurred, net of accommodation, by local authorities ranged from £25 per week per full-time equivalent care leaver in Luton to £316 in the London Borough of Wandsworth. …"
"Steve Liddicott and I have just been catching up on next steps following the meeting in December. Are you expecting individual responses to the issues raised at the meeting (in particular the issue of stripping out accommodation costs)? Or was the intention to see what came out of the meeting with the Minister on the 15th?
As you can imagine, we will be completely opposed to any proposal to remove accommodation costs from the amount payable and would view this as a departure from the conditions set out in the circular with very serious financial consequences for LB Hillingdon. However, I want to be clear on how you foresee the next steps before I start the formal representation process to DfES on this issue."
"The DfES is expecting this month to hear from representative bodies, such as the LGA, the ALG and the ADSS. Individual local authority members of these bodies might, of course, make additional or separate representations.
The issues about which we expect to hear are the handling of contingency matters this year and next year's grant. There is currently no DfES proposal to alter the terms of LAC (2004)6, in relation to the removal of accommodation costs which, I hope, you find reassuring. However, the issue of "double funding" needs to be considered in the context of contingency payments and the future of the grant."
"The Department has arrived at the view that the rate of £100 per week reflects the reasonable costs incurred in supporting UASC care leavers, on the basis of returns from 62 local authorities that completed a FORM 2 as requested in LAC (2004)21."
"3 The purpose of this grant is to provide additional funding support to those local authorities most affected by the [Hillingdon judgment], to assist towards the costs of supporting additional numbers of eligible care leavers, as defined in the Schedule to this Determination.
4. Pursuant to section 31 of the 2003 Act the Secretary of State hereby determines that the local authorities to which these grants are to be paid and the manner in which the amounts of these grants are to be calculated, are the local authorities and the manner of calculation described in the Schedule to this Determination and that the conditions which the Secretary of State intends to impose on the payment of these grants are the conditions set out in that Schedule."
"1.2 The UASC Leaving Care Costs Grant … is intended to assist local authorities towards meeting leaving care costs of supporting unaccompanied asylum seeker children (UASC) who are "former relevant children" under section 23C of the Children Act 1989.
…
1.4 The key features of the guidance are as follows:
(a) Payment will be made retrospectively to those local authorities that have supported more than 25 full time equivalent … eligible UASC care leavers, based on actual audited numbers of these young people.
(b) Payment will be made at a flat rate of £100 per week per FTE care leaver over the threshold of 25.
…
…
1.7 The total £11 million funding set out in this guidance is in addition to other sources of support that may be available to individual former relevant young people aged 18 or over. It will not impact on individual entitlement to any other assistance.
1.8 Other sources of funding may include benefits provided by the DWP. Such benefits include income-based Jobseeker's Allowance, Income Support, Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit. Alternatively, some young people may qualify for support from NASS (provided they are not eligible for mainstream DWP benefits and have an outstanding asylum claim) and NASS may provide the relevant local authority with financial assistance towards the cost of providing accommodation, utilities and support to such young people."
"DfES Asylum Support Grants
Local Authority Circulars (2005)15 published 17/10/05; and
(2006)1 published Jan 2006
I refer to the above circulars which set out the basis of reimbursement by the DfES of the costs incurred by this Council for 2004/05 and being incurred in 2005/06 for this national service in respect of Leaving care support to Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking children.
Applying the terms set out in these circulars would result in the council tax payers of Hillingdon themselves needing to fund £1.6m for the year 2004/05 now past and not planned; £3.7m in 2005/06, and an estimated on-going future annual impact of £4.8m. DfES paying this grant in full some 6 months after the end of the financial year will cost the council tax payers of Hillingdon some £250k per annum in financing costs.
…
Clearly the funding of this service cannot be provided locally. The Council finds itself in a very serious financial position for which there is cross party agreement in this matter. I therefore request confirmation that this shortfall and associated financing costs until payment will by funded by the DfES. …
This is a serious strategic financial matter needing your personal attention to resolve satisfactorily and as quickly as necessary."
"Thank you for your letters of 3 November 2005 and 31 January 2006, in which you describe funding pressures currently being experienced by Hillingdon. I am of course aware of your concerns.
In the interests of fairness to all local authorities, I do not consider that there is scope in the UASC Leaving Care grant to provide Hillingdon with any additional funding in relation to 2005-06, beyond the existing terms of the grant determination.
The terms of the UASC Leaving Care grant, as set out in LAC (2004)6 and subsequent Local Authority Circulars, make clear that this grant is intended to help towards the costs of supporting additional UASC care leavers, as a result of [the Hillingdon judgment], rather than to meet the full costs.
My Department continues to work collaboratively with local authority representative bodies in refining the future/basis of the UASC Leaving Care grant, within the £12 million boundaries of the 2006-07 UASC Leaving Care grant … We are currently working with the LGA and the ALG to ascertain the actual costs that are being experienced by local authorities in supporting the UASC care leavers, building on the similar exercise carried out in Autumn 2004. We also continue to work, with the Home Office and the local authority representative bodies, to develop an improved model for forecasting future numbers of UASC care leavers. I expect that the survey will again enable the terms of the grant to be adjusted as necessary, in the way that the earlier survey led to the lowering of the qualification threshold for the contingency element of the 2004-05 grant, to the benefit of Hillingdon and other local authorities."
The Parties' Submissions
(1) Taken as a whole, the Secretary of State's conduct over the period February 2004 to December 2005 plainly amounted to an implicit promise, alternatively an adopted practice, that the funding formula adopted in the 2004-05 UASC leaving care grant would not be altered to the detriment of "the most affected authorities" like Hillingdon.
(2) In the course of his oral submissions, Mr Goudie accepted that the Secretary of State's promise/practice upon which he relied could be broken down into the following constituent elements, namely: (i) that an appropriate UASC leaving care grant would be provided by the Secretary of State on an annual basis, (ii) that the Secretary of State's decision with regard to each annual grant (in particular, the funding formula to be adopted) would be announced/published in advance of the commencement of the financial year in respect of which the grant was to be provided and (iii) that in calculating the grant, the Secretary of State would not depart from the currently adopted funding formula unless an appropriate announcement to that effect had been incorporated into the published decision referred to in (ii) above.
(3) The discussions that took place at the meeting of 7th December 2004 did not culminate in a change in the current representation/practice in question (i.e. in particular, the funding formula adopted in LAC 6 of 2004) because:
(a) the speculative possibility of a change in the current funding formula which was raised at the meeting was stated to depend on: (i) what any reliable data revealed about local authority funding arrangements and (ii) local authority representations on the funding formula;
(b) in fact: (i) there was no reliable data that would have warranted the potential change in the formula and (ii) the formula which local authority representatives supported was a move to a full reimbursement model and not to a model that gave limited protection to a wide range of authorities at the expense of the most affected authorities; and
(c) at no point was there any concrete notification of any change in the crucial elements of the funding formula, i.e. the use of the qualifying threshold of 45 coupled with a rate of £140, prior to the publication of the UASC Grant Determination 2006 and LAC 1 of 2006, which came long after the commencement of Hillingdon's 2005-06 financial year.
(4) The Secretary of State has failed to honour the representation/practice in question because the grant for 2005-06 represents a significant departure from the funding formula adopted in the grant for 2004-05, a departure that was not announced or published before the commencement of the financial year 2005-06 and thus could not be taken into account by Hillingdon when setting its budget for that year. The changes in the funding formula have been very detrimental to the most affected local authorities like Hillingdon.
(5) There is, in this case, no good or overriding reason why the representation/practice made/established by the Secretary of State should not have been honoured.
(6) In the circumstances of this case, 2005-06 is the only financial year that has been directly affected by the Secretary of State's failure to honour the representation/practice in question. However, the detailed breakdown of the representation/practice set out in (2) above shows that its proper observance has significant implications for future financial years.
Conclusion