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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> MH [2009] UKUT 178 (AAC) (16 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2009/178.html Cite as: [2009] UKUT 178 (AAC) |
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MH [2009] UKUT 178 (AAC) (16 September 2009)
Special educational needs
Other
IN THE UPPER TRIBUNAL Case No. S/778/2009
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER
Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE WARD
Attendances:
Appellant: Mr and Mrs H in person
Respondent: Mr Jonathan Auburn of Counsel
Decision:
The decision of the First-Tier Tribunal sitting at Chesterfield on 26 November 2008 under Reference 08-01992 and issued on 11 December 2008 involved the making of an error of law (for the reasons advanced by the respondent rather than those advanced by the appellant) and is set aside. I substitute an order that: "Part IV should be amended to read "Both Ash Lea and Foxwood maintained special schools are appropriate for L's needs. L's parents have expressed a preference for L to attend Foxwood, to which the local authority gives effect. L is to attend Foxwood from September 2008. Foxwood is further from L's home than Ash Lea and it has been determined by the respondent, applying Part IX of the Education Act 1996, that L's parents are responsible for her transport to and from Foxwood."
REASONS FOR DECISION
"The Local Authority believes that [L's] needs could be met at her local maintained school, Ash Lea School, therefore [L] will attend the Local Authority maintained special school, Foxwood, from September 2008 on the basis of parental preference. As such, L's parents will be responsible for transporting her to and from this placement."
Provisions of this type are not uncommon – see for example Re C (a minor) [1994] ELR 273 at 274 (CA).
"It follows from the above that the Tribunal is not persuaded that Ash Lea could not reasonably provide the level of provision required to meet [L's] needs. The Tribunal's conclusion, therefore, is that both schools could clearly meet those needs and the issue therefore turns on parental preference."
The tribunal went on to examine Schedule 27 and section 9 of the 1996 Act (to which I return below) before conducting an assessment of the additional costs that would be involved in transporting L to Foxwood. It concluded that funding transport for L to Foxwood would not be an efficient use of the local authority's resources and would amount to "unreasonable public expenditure". It concluded that:
"This is purely a matter of parental preference and whilst the Tribunal acknowledges and respects Mr and Mrs [H's] reasoning in reaching that decision, it seems to the Tribunal that it cannot be justified in terms of either Schedule 27 or section 9 unless they meet the full additional costs involved."
(a) the issue of transport costs was irrelevant to the decision the tribunal had to make and unnecessary for its decision;
(b) but (in the event that point (a) did not succeed), the tribunal did not err in its approach to the evidence relating to transport costs.
The respondent's point (a) was in the nature of a cross-appeal, alleging that the tribunal erred in law on a ground other than that advanced by the appellant, and logically fell to be determined first.
"On an appeal under this section, the Tribunal may –
(a) dismiss the appeal,(b) order the authority to amend the statement, so far as it describes the authority's assessment of the child's special educational needs or specifies the special educational provision, and make such other consequential amendments to the statement as the Tribunal think fit, or(c) order the authority to cease to maintain the statement."
The provision of transport is not "educational provision": R v. LB Havering, ex parte K [1998] ELR 402, 404 and R v. Islington BC, ex parte GA, unreported, Mr Jack Beatson QC 8 September 2000 at paragraphs 6 and 17. There is no provision within the special educational needs legislation saying that the naming of a school carries with it the right to transport to that school and indeed, on the authorities, the converse is the case: see R v. Essex CC, ex parte C [1994] ELR 54 at 63D-G and 65G. (Though that case was decided on previous legislation, it remains relevant for this purpose; and the observations in it on the present point are unaffected by the subsequent appeal in Re C (above).) It follows that the First-tier Tribunal does not have jurisdiction as such to order that transport be provided. I return below to whether and to what extent the areas in which it does have jurisdiction may bear indirectly on this question.
"(1) A local education authority in England must make, in the case of an eligible child in the authority's area to whom subsection (2) applies, such travel arrangements as they consider necessary in order to secure that suitable home to school travel arrangements, for the purpose of facilitating the child's attendance at the relevant educational establishment in relation to him, are made and provided free of charge in relation to the child.
(2) This subsection applies to an eligible child if–
(a) no travel arrangements relating to travel in either direction between his home and the relevant educational establishment in relation to him, or in both directions, are provided free of charge in relation to him by any person who is not the authority, or
(b) such travel arrangements are provided free of charge in relation to him by any person who is not the authority but those arrangements, taken together with any other such travel arrangements which are so provided, do not provide suitable home to school travel arrangements for the purpose of facilitating his attendance at the relevant educational establishment in relation to him.
(3) "Home to school travel arrangements", in relation to an eligible child, are travel arrangements relating to travel in both directions between the child's home and the relevant educational establishment in question in relation to that child.(4) "Travel arrangements", in relation to an eligible child, are travel arrangements of any description and include–
(a) arrangements for the provision of transport, and
(b) any of the following arrangements only if they are made with the consent of a parent of the child–
(i) arrangements for the provision of one or more persons to escort the child (whether alone or together with other children) when travelling to or from the relevant educational establishment in relation to the child;
(ii) arrangements for the payment of the whole or any part of a person's reasonable travelling expenses;
(iii) arrangements for the payment of allowances in respect of the use of particular modes of travel.
(5) "Travel arrangements", in relation to an eligible child, include travel arrangements of any description made by any parent of the child only if those arrangements are made by the parent voluntarily.(6) "Travel arrangements", in relation to an eligible child, do not comprise or include travel arrangements which give rise to additional costs and do not include appropriate protection against those costs.(7) For the purposes of subsection (6)–
(a) travel arrangements give rise to additional costs only if they give rise to any need to incur expenditure in order for the child to take advantage of anything provided for him in pursuance of the arrangements, and
(b) travel arrangements include appropriate protection against those costs only if they include provision for any expenditure that needs to be incurred for the purpose mentioned in paragraph (a) in the case of the child to be met by the person by whom the arrangements are made.
(8) Travel arrangements are provided free of charge if there is no charge for anything provided in pursuance of the arrangements.
(9) Schedule 35B has effect for the purposes of defining "eligible child" for the purposes of this section.
(10) References to a "relevant educational establishment", in relation to an eligible child, are references to–
(a) in the case of a child who is an eligible child by virtue of falling within any of paragraphs 2, 4, 6, 9, 11 and 12 of Schedule 35B, the qualifying school (within the meaning of that Schedule) at which the child is a registered pupil referred to in the paragraph in question, and
(b) [not material]
(11)[not material]"
"A child falls within this paragraph if–
(a) he is of compulsory school age and is a registered pupil at a qualifying school which is not within walking distance of his home,(b) [not material], and(c) no suitable arrangements have been made by the local education authority for enabling him to become a registered pupil at a qualifying school nearer to his home."
A community special school, such as both Foxwood and Ash Lea, falls within the definition of "qualifying school" in paragraph 15 of the Schedule.
"Where a local education authority make a statement in a case where the parent of the child concerned has expressed a preference in pursuance of such arrangements as to the school at which he wishes education to be provided for his child, they shall specify the name of that school in the statement unless—
(a) the school is unsuitable to the child's age, ability or aptitude or to his special educational needs, or
(b) the attendance of the child at the school would be incompatible with the provision of efficient education for the children with whom he would be educated or the efficient use of resources."
However, in this case, the respondent had specified the parents' preferred school in the statement. The respondent did not seek to argue that it was entitled not to name Foxwood on either of the available grounds under the above provision. Likewise under section 9, the respondent had had regard to the parents' preference and duly arranged for L to attend the preferred school. Once it had concluded that Ash Lea was suitable and thus that the respondent was entitled to name it also, the tribunal had decided all matters which were within its jurisdiction. Had this been a case where the local authority was overriding parent preference, a comparison of costs, including transport, would have been necessary, but it was not.
(Signed on the original)
C G Ward
Judge of the Upper Tribunal
16 September 2009