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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> S, R (On the Application Of) v London Borough of Camden [2018] EWHC 3354 (Admin) (11 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/3354.html Cite as: [2019] ELR 129, (2019) 22 CCL Rep 208, [2018] EWHC 3354 (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 :
Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
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THE QUEEN on the application of S (by his father and litigation friend AG) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF CAMDEN |
Defendant |
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Holly Stout (instructed by Camden BC) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Philip Mott QC :
Preliminary matters
The Statutory Framework
"In exercising a function under this Part in the case of a child or young person, a local authority in England must have regard to the following matters in particular –
(a) The views, wishes and feelings of the child and his or her parent, or the young person;
(b) the importance of the child and his or her parent, or the young person, participating as fully as possible in decisions relating to the exercise of the function concerned;
(c) the importance of the child and his or her parent, or the young person, being provided with the information and support necessary to enable participation in those decisions;
(d) the need to support the child and his or her parent, or the young person, in order to facilitate the development of the child or young person and to help him or her achieve the best possible educational and other outcomes."
"(1) Where a local authority is required to secure that an EHC plan is prepared for a child or young person, it must consult the child's parent or the young person about the content of the plan during the preparation of a draft of the plan.
…
(5) The draft EHC plan sent to the child's parent or the young person must not –
(a) name a school or other institution, or
(b) specify a type of school or other institution."
"(2) The local authority must secure that the plan –
(a) names a school or other institution which the local authority thinks would be appropriate for the child or young person concerned, or
(b) specifies the type of school or other institution which the local authority thinks would be appropriate for the child or young person.
(3) Before securing that the plan names a school or other institution under subsection (2)(a), the local authority must consult –
(a) the governing body, proprietor or principal of any school or other institution the authority is considering having named in the plan, and
(b) if that school or other institution is maintained by another local authority, that authority.
(4) The local authority must also secure that any changes it thinks necessary are made to the draft EHC plan."
"(1) This section applies where a local authority maintains an EHC plan for a child or young person.
(2) The local authority must secure the specified special educational provision for the child or young person.
…
(5) Subsections (2) and (3) do not apply if the child's parent or the young person has made suitable alternative arrangements.
(6) "Specified", in relation to an EHC plan, means specified in the plan."
Regulations
"(1) Where the local authority is considering amending an EHC plan following a review it must comply with the requirements of … sections 39 and 40 of the Act (as appropriate).
(2) Where the local authority is considering amending an EHC plan following a review it must –
(a) send the child's parent … a copy of the EHC plan together with a notice specifying the proposed amendments, together with copies of any evidence which supports those amendments;
(b) provide the child's parent … with notice of their right [to] request the authority to secure that a particular school is or other institution is named in the plan …
(c) give them at least 15 days … in which to –
(i) make representations about the content of the draft plan;(ii) request that a particular school or other institution be named in the plan;(iii) request a meeting with an officer of the local authority, if they wish to make representations orally.
(d) advise them where they can find information about the schools and colleges that are available for the child or young person to attend."
Code of Practice
"The final EHC plan can differ from the draft EHC plan only as a result of any representations made by the child's parent … and decisions made about the school or other institution (or type of school or institution) to be named in he EHC plan. The local authority must not make any other changes – if the local authority wishes to make other changes it must re-issue the draft EHC plan to the child's parent …" [emphasis in the original]
The FTT decision
"could not name a home programme of ABA although, if we were persuaded that ABA was provision that was reasonably required to meet [S's] special educational needs, it could be included in Section F. The LA would then have to find a suitable school to deliver the provision in Section F."
"30. … we do not consider that there is anything in the evidence to suggest that it would be inappropriate for [S's] provision to be made in a school where he can receive intensive and specialist intervention … There was nothing to suggest that in a specialist setting, where the environment is appropriate [,] staff have expertise and training to address needs such as [S's] and where class sizes are small, with a high staff to pupil ratio, his needs could not be appropriately met.
31. … We find from the evidence before us that [S] has made some, albeit slow, progress in some areas of his functioning since he has been following the ABA programme, while at … Primary School and since he left. We cannot say whether he would have made similar progress if he had been following the eclectic approach described by Ms Shaw in a special school with the professional support of Speech and Language and Occupational Therapists as we have no evidence of this.
32. We could not disregard that some progress had been made and that it appears that the ABA programme followed by [S] has worked for him … We conclude in the absence, to date, of any alternative proposals for provision, that it should be included in the provision of Section F … As set out in paragraph 30, we do not consider that the programme needs to be delivered in the home environment but is likely to be beneficial to [S] if carried out in a school setting where he would have opportunities for social interaction."
The proposed amendment in March 2018
April to August 2018
"home educated at parental expense. Therefore there is no obligation to do anything. This was pointed out to you at the hearing. As parents are now not able to maintain this arrangement, the Local Authority will be proposing a school. As advised, the Local Authority will be issuing a revised EHC Plan and has proposed Swiss Cottage School. I understand that your clients have not formally proposed [sic] to the Draft. Thus, I will chase this up with the Local Authority and subject to any representations will ask that this is finalised."
The issues
i) What duty was owed by Camden after the amendment of the EHC plan in April 2018? Was it in breach of duty?
ii) Was Camden entitled to amend the EHC plan so soon after the FTT decision, so as to overturn the amendment ordered? Was it an abuse of process?
iii) What was the effect of the FTT decision and the April 2018 EHC plan on the March 2018 draft EHC plan? Could the process be continued after the FTT decision as if that had not happened?
iv) Was the process compliant with Regulation 22? If not, does that render the amendment unlawful and liable to be quashed?
v) Would it have made any difference? Does section 31(2A) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 apply?
vi) Is a further appeal to the FTT available as a suitable alternative remedy?
vii) What remedies should be granted if the Claimant succeeds?
The duty owed by Camden from April 2018
"There is no best endeavours defence in the legislation … In a margin of intractable cases there may be reasons why a court would not make a mandatory order, or more probably would briefly defer or qualify its operation."
Abuse of process
The effect of the FTT decision and the April 2018 amended EHC plan
Was the process compliant with Regulation 22?
Would it have made any difference?
"7. … At Swiss Cottage, we have staff who are trained in ABA and who act as ABA facilitators outside school (i.e. who work with individuals such as the Claimant). The Lead for the Early Years department who has overall responsibility for the teaching and learning within the Foundation Stage also previously worked in an ABA provision and therefore has a good level of knowledge and understanding around the practices and how learners make progress using the approach.
8. ABA is thus one ASD approach that we can use at Swiss Cottage School, although in practice we do not do this because we consider that other approaches, including in particular SCERTS, works better in a School environment and is also better at improving children's social skills and generalisation of skills from one context to another.
…
13. Subject to meeting and assessing the Claimant and discussion with his family, we would propose a very individual curriculum that would place a lot of emphasis on the kind of intensive adult interaction that he has had at home with ABA."
Would a further FTT appeal be a suitable alternative remedy?
Remedies
Postscript
i) Paragraphs 87 and 88 of my Judgment recognise that Camden should secure the currently specified provision unless and until a second FTT panel decides otherwise, or S's parents do not pursue an appeal against the amendment.
ii) Camden has sought to use the amendment process to thwart the decision of the FTT, and there is every reason to suspect that it will try to do so again. There is no new evidence which would justify an amendment.
iii) Camden has been in breach of its duty since 16 April 2018. As a result S's parents have suffered considerable uncertainty and financial losses.
iv) There would be a significant emotional and financial cost if they had to return to the FTT to re-litigate the same issue on which they succeeded last time.
"The Defendant shall with effect from the date of this Order fund 30 hours ABA provision for the Claimant at home for each of the 38 weeks of the normal school year. Such funding will continue unless or until the Defendant amends the Claimant's Education and Health Care Plan ("EHCP") in the exercise of its relevant powers under the Children and Families Act 2014 and the Special Educational Needs and Disability Regulations 2014 so as to identify different provision and/or so as to name a school or type of school in the Claimant's EHCP. This paragraph of this Order shall lapse and cease to have effect upon the issuing of such an amended EHCP or, in the event of that EHCP specifying that the different provision will commence from a date in the future, with effect from that specified date."