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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> W & Anor v Harrow Council & Anor [2004] EWHC 2810 (Admin) (26 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2810.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2810 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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MR AND MRS W | Claimants | |
-v- | ||
(1) HARROW COUNCIL | ||
(2) THE SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS AND DISABILITY TRIBUNAL | Defendants |
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(Computer-Aided Transcript of the Palantype Notes of
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J FRIEL (instructed by Messrs SEN Legal Ltd, Bury St Edmunds IP33 1HE) appeared on behalf of the Claimants
MR A SHARLAND (instructed by Harrow Council, PO Box 7, Civic Centre, Station Road, Harrow HA1 2UL) appeared on behalf of the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
"• [A] requires a small school with teachers who are experienced and have training in teaching pupils with Down Syndrome and on site State Registered Speech & Language Therapists and Paediatric Occupational Therapists."
"• a sizeable peer group of students with moderate learning difficulties."
"I. An individual session of Speech and Language Therapy on a weekly basis for a minimum of 40 minutes per week focusing on development receptive and expressive language skills.
II. A communication programme devised and supervised by a Speech and Language therapist. delivered throughout the school day.
III. The programme should also be followed up on a twice weekly basis by [a Learning Support Assistant], trained and instructed by the Speech and Language Therapist. ...
V. Regular input on a regular basis throughout the school day."
"... the Tribunal is required to satisfy itself that the proposed school put forward by the LEA, namely Oak Lodge School, is able to offer appropriate provision. The provision that is considered necessary is contained in Part 3 of the statement. We noted the amendments that had been agreed to the existing Part 3 of the statement. If the Tribunal concluded that Oak Lodge School would be able to deliver the appropriate provision, it would be an unreasonable use of public expenditure for [A] to attend St Mary's School, in view of the considerable difference in costs."
It is not suggested by Mr Friel, on behalf of the claimants, that the Tribunal erred in law in thus identifying its task.
"The only remaining issue for the Tribunal to decide upon was placement in Part 4. Mr Friel withdrew the remaining grounds of appeal against Part 3 relating to training and monitoring."
The Tribunal then set out in the succeeding paragraphs a summary of the arguments advanced by Mr Friel for the claimants and by their representative for the Council, as well as the gist of the evidence which they received, in particular the evidence which they received orally, including that from Mrs Jackson, the headmistress of Parayhouse School Mrs Shaffer for the claimants, and Mrs Dingwall called for the Council.
"I would consider it imperative that [A] continues to receive speech and language therapy, occupational therapy and to be monitored by a physiotherapist regularly. In my experience therapeutic strategies can be reinforced across the curriculum much more effectively when the therapists are based on site in an educational setting, and this is clearly an advantage at St Mary's school."
"b) A sizeable peer group of students with moderate learning difficulties [and] ...
e) Speech and language therapists and Occupational therapists on site ..."
"[A] needs direct and regular speech and language therapy intervention with a programme as follows:
• An individual session of speech and language therapy on a weekly basis for a minimum of forty minutes focused on [certain matters].
• A communication programme that is set up by the speech and language therapist and integrated throughout his school day in liaison with teaching staff with opportunities for follow up activities which can be carried out by an LSA [learning support assistant] on a twice weekly basis.
• Input into IEP targets and regular review of his progress.
• Annual formal reassessment."
Then paragraph 4.8:
"It is important that speech and language therapy is provided on site to enable effective liaison with teaching staff."
"The advice received in relation to speech and language therapy indicates that children with learning difficulties have difficulties applying skills and that therefore support should be integrated across the school day and not carried out on a 1:1 withdrawal sessions. The LEA would not advocate individual sessions or communication 'activities' to be carried out by an LSA, as best practice shows language and communication work for students at this age and level is most effective when it is incorporated across the entire curriculum and in everyday situations which helps generalisation."
"This being a lay tribunal and there being a duty to give reasons only in summary form, it seems to me that the essence of the requirement is that the parties should indeed know why they have either won or lost, as the case may be, and what the tribunal's conclusion has been in relation to the major issues that have been put before it. It may, in certain circumstances, be perfectly obvious why the tribunal has dealt with a particular discrete issue without necessarily having specifically mentioned it. It is obviously desirable and sensible that the tribunal should in all cases, however briefly, refer to the main arguments that have been put forward and explain, it may be only in a short sentence, why they have decided either to accept or reject the particular submission that is made. The one thing, as it seems to me, that should not happen in these cases is that a fine toothcomb should be used and a detailed dissection made of the reasons given in order to try to tease out an apparent error or inconsistency and to try to assert that full reasoning has not been given. The approach must, in my view, be broader than that, provided always that sufficient reasons are given for the parties to know why they have either won or lost on the main issues that they have put forward."
"Reasons must, first, deal with the substantial points that have been raised so that the parties can understand why a decision has been reached."
Then, having referred to a number of authorities, he records Grigson J in the case of H v Kent County Council and the Special Educational Needs Tribunal [2000] ELR 660, stating that what was necessary was that the aggrieved party should be able to identify the basis of the decision.
"... a specialist tribunal, such as SENDIST, can use its expertise in deciding issues, but if it rejects expert evidence before it, it should say so specifically. In certain circumstances, it may be required to say why it rejects it."
Thirdly he says:
"... mere recitation of evidence is no substitute for giving reasons: ..."
He then set out a fourth point concerning the specialist tribunal's expertise which is not relevant for the purposes of today.
"The LEA had agreed to increase the amount of Speech and Language Therapy and Occupational Therapy that would be available for [A] at Oak Lodge School. The therapies will be delivered at the school. The amendment sought to the statement was that the therapist should also be 'on-site'. We concluded that the therapists will be 'on-site' for the delivery of the therapies and will liaise with the learning support assistant."
"[A] will be in a sizeable peer group of students with moderate learning difficulties. We heard that the peer group [is] largely at the same level as [A]. Although there were concerns regarding the verbal ability of the other students, it would appear that they have moderate learning difficulties."
"Although we understood the arguments put forward regarding the reservations of Oak Lodge School, we concluded that the school would be able to make the provision that had been identified in Part 3 of his statement as being appropriate to meet his special educational needs. Having concluded this, it would be unreasonable use of public expenditure for [A] to attend St Mary's School."
They therefore dismissed the appeal.