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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 >> Elphinstone, R (on the application of) v Westminster City Council & Ors [2008] EWHC 1287 (Admin) (28 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1287.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1287 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF JENNY ELPHINSTONE | Claimant | |
v | ||
WESTMINSTER CITY COUNCIL | Defendant | |
(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR CHILDREN, SCHOOLS AND FAMILIES | ||
(2) FUTURE ACADEMIES | Interested parties |
____________________
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Mr Tim Kerr QC and Ms Karen Steyn (instructed by Westminster City Council) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
Mr Jonathan Moffett (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the 1st Interested Party
Mr John McKendrick (instructed by Lewis Silkin LLP) appeared on behalf of the 2nd Interested Party
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Crown Copyright ©
The relevant legislative background
The relevant factual background
"... having considered the representations received in response to the publication of the statutory proposals to close Pimlico Community School, it be agreed to discontinue Pimlico Community School and, it be closed with effect from 31 August 2008 subject to the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families entering into a Funding Agreement with the Future charity (or Trustees on behalf of the charity or charitable body to be established) by 31 August 2008 approving the establishment of Pimlico Academy on the same site with effect from 1 September 2008."
This decision of 17th March 2008 is the decision under challenge.
The grounds of challenge
The substance of the decision
"4.26 . Where an Academy is to replace an existing school or schools, the proposals for the closure of those schools should indicate whether pupils currently attending the schools will transfer to the Academy and, if appropriate, what arrangements will be made for pupils who are not expected to transfer."
"34. The claimant's case is that the Adjudicator had the power to insist on the funding agreement being in a specific form, either as per the draft before him, or containing specific provisions, dealing, for example, with safeguarding the rights and protections of parents and pupils in various respects. In my judgment the Adjudicator has no power to impose such a condition. The power of the Adjudicator is limited to giving approval expressed to take effect only if an event specified occurs by a specified date. The events, the occurrence of which may be specified as a condition for approval taking effect, are compendiously set out in regulation 9. The only relevant one is 'the making of any agreement under section 482(1) of the 1996 Act'. There is no power to require that the agreement be anything other than an 'agreement under section 482(1)'. There is no power to insist on such an agreement containing particular terms or being in a particular form. The legislator could have included such a power. It might have been thought to be one way of ensuring that the Secretary of State and the promoters did not, after the approval of the discontinuance, change the funding agreement so as adversely to affect the maintenance or enhancement of standards. The legislator did not, however, choose to deal with it in this way. It gave the Adjudicator the function of exercising judgment as to whether the draft agreement would maintain or enhance standards and, no doubt, exercising his judgment as to the likelihood of the draft being changed after approval and before it was formally agreed in such a way as would cut across his judgment in granting approval.
35. In this case the claimant explicitly raised the point with the Adjudicator that the draft agreement might subsequently be changed. To some extent they had grounds for that belief because of the letter of 21 December 2005, referred to above, in which the possibility of change is expressly stated. However, by the time the Adjudicator came to take his decision, he had the very clear statement of the Diocesan Board: that the draft agreement very closely followed a model agreement produced by the DfES; that there was a rigorous procedure to be followed if promoters intended to depart from the model; that in all material respects the draft agreement did follow the model; and giving the explicit undertaking that, save to the limited extent referred to in the letter, the draft would not change. In my judgment the Adjudicator was obliged to consider the extent to which he could rely on these assurances and undertakings. He did so and came to a conclusion that he could. This was a conclusion to which, in my judgment, he was entitled to come."
"Academies are all-ability independent state schools with a mission to transform education where the status quo is simply not good enough. They are established and managed by independent sponsors, and funded by the Government at a level comparable to other local schools. No fees are paid by parents."
Then a little later:
"The Government is firmly committed to establishing 400 Academies. We regard the scaling up of the programme as a national imperative, supported by the recent independent report of the National Audit Office (NAO), the parliamentary watchdog, which concluded that Academies are 'on track to deliver good value for money', that they are 'popular with parents and staff' and that they are improving educational attainment at a much faster rate than the national average.
Independent status is crucial in enabling Academies to succeed. Strong, ambitious leadership, effective management, high aspirations for all pupils and good teaching are essential ingredients in their success.
.
Each Academy is unique. Because of the programme's focus on fitting each Academy to its community and circumstances, the success of Academies has been sustained as the programme has expanded and there is every reason to believe that this will continue to be the case."
"Evidence shows that Academies are bringing about strong and sustained improvements in pupil attainment and behaviour. They are also creating a culture shift in ethos and expectations. Where Academies replace highly challenging schools, it will inevitably take time to transform standards, but almost all Academies are demonstrating good year on year improvement."
There is then reference to what is called "key achievements", appearing from the National Audit Office (NAO) executive summary. Then, a little later on, under the heading "Sponsors", the following is, among other things, said:
"Sponsors challenge traditional thinking on how schools are run and what they should be like for students. They seek to make a complete break with cultures of low aspiration which afflict too many communities and their schools. We want this to happen, and it is why we entrust the governance of Academies to them."
"... of the five potential options available, Academy status has the most potential both for the sustained raising of standards and the preservation of diversity of choice for parents, particularly those seeking non-denominational places [see paragraph 4.2]."
That report in turn was before the cabinet when, on 9th July 2007, it declared that it was minded to pursue Academy status for the school from September 2008, and to plan, accordingly, given:
"... the clear potential for this route to provide strong and decisive leadership and governance in the pursuit of higher pupil attainment, and the opportunity this status provides to secure diversity and choice through the preservation of a non-denominational, non-selective admissions policy." [see paragraph 4.10 under the heading "Reason for Decision]
"At this point in the process in the creation of a potential academy, it is possible for Members [that is of the Council] to have confidence in the preparations and capacity of the proposed sponsor to lead the project and deliver enhanced educational opportunity for the Pimlico pupils and parents. The Secretary of State will be considering the range and depth of the sponsor's proposals as part of his judgement on the award of a Funding Agreement."
Governance
"In order to determine the ethos and leadership of the Academy, and ensure clear responsibility and accountability, the private sector or charitable sponsor always appoints the majority of the governors. This is the case even when a local authority is acting as a co-sponsor for wider purposes. The number of governors on an Academy governing body is not prescribed, but the expectation is for the body to be relatively small."
"The Academy's governing body will seek to demonstrate the Academy's ethos both through its membership and its dynamic governance of the Academy. The Sponsor intends that there will be strong representation secured from the local community and business, as well as parent and staff representation. The Academy will appoint an outstanding Principal who will work with a strong team of staff to develop and implement the Sponsor's vision."
Admissions
"Future has stated its willingness to commit to the key criteria which the Overview and Scrutiny Committee set out and Cabinet affirmed in its July 9th report:
• the school will remain a community school in ethos, if not in designation, with a non-denominational and comprehensive admissions policy predicated on the needs of its locality.
• the school will adopt admissions criteria consistent with Westminster's Community Schools admissions criteria and abide by the Hard to Place Pupils protocol."
"2.77. Banding, like other oversubscription criteria, only operates when the number of applications exceeds the number of places. Schools which use banding must not apply another test of ability once applicants are allocated to bands; they must not give priority within bands according to performance in the test. The admission authority must apply its other oversubscription criteria (such as random allocation) to each band to allocate places.
2.78. Banding is permitted by section 101 of the School Standards and Framework Act 1998, as amended by section 54 of the Education and Inspections Act 2006. The Education and Inspections Act 2006 removed the need for approval of statutory proposals before the introduction of banding arrangements, and this can now be done as part of the annual admissions consultation process.
2.79. Pupil ability banding is used by some admission authorities to ensure that their intake includes a proportionate spread of children of different abilities. Banding arrangements are good practice, provided the arrangements are fair, objective and not used as a means of unlawfully admitting a disproportionate number of high ability children."
"Please provide any further details known about the proposed oversubscription criteria and admission policy. In particular, how the policy will lead to a balanced intake and whether fair banding will be considered."
The answer began with this statement:
"During Feasibility, the Sponsors will work with the Local Authority to define the admissions policy for the Academy within the overall framework being developed for the City, as part of BSF planning.
The basis for this definition will be the following criteria..."
There was then set out the existing admission criteria for the school, to which I have referred and which did not include banding as an oversubscription criterion. After that description came the following statement:
"The Sponsor and Local Authority are of the view that this policy would facilitate a balanced intake without the need for banding. The tests related to banding can add considerable stress for parents and students going through the already complex secondary admissions process in London as well as incurring significant expense for the academy.
It is [a] condition of the Local Authority support for the Academy proposal that the admissions policy will be agreed with the Local Authority in the Feasibility stage and that the issue of all-ability intake, on which the Council and the Sponsor are entirely agreed, is resolved satisfactorily with the DCSF in the form of long-term agreements during the Feasibility stage, either through conditions of lease or a binding Memorandum of Understanding."
"5. The admission policy for the Academy shall be governed by the statutory Admissions Code for the time being in force but subject thereto the principles underlying the admissions policy for the Academy will ensure that places at the Academy will not be allocated to pupils:
5.1 in accordance with any faith-based requirements; or
5.2 (except in the event that fair banding should be applied) in accordance with academic ability.
6. The admissions criteria applicable to admissions to Year 7 for the academic year starting in September 2008 will be those set out in Annex 1 to this document."
"Subject specialisms
The specialist schools programme has demonstrated the positive effect that specialist centres of excellence can have on a school's performance. All academies have at least one specialism.
Each sponsor agrees with the Department which specialism or specialisms their Academy will adopt. Sponsors and their principals are rightly focused on transforming achievement in English and Maths and other core curriculum subjects as their overriding priority. Normal practice is for at least one of an Academy's specialisms to be in a core curriculum area, for example Maths, Science or Modern Foreign Languages. Other common specialisms include Business and Enterprise and Sport. Many Academies have two specialisms, but this decision lies with the sponsors."
"Within Key Stage 3 all students will follow a broad range of core and foundation subjects - to guarantee a sound basis for making informed choices later in Key Stage 4. The main focus of the curriculum will be to develop literacy and numeracy skills to provide access to essential areas of knowledge and understanding. It is intended that students will have individualised learning plans incorporating challenging targets which they own and understand. In a culture of high expectation, success and achievement, they will be given the responsibility and opportunity to achieve or surpass their targets both in school time and out of hours. Key Stage 3 will also be characterised by the use of 'accelerated' programmes - to challenge and progress those students whose levels of achievement are ahead of expected norms.
At Key Stage 4, the Academy will offer both academic and vocational pathways and will play an active [role] within the City in determining with local schools and colleges the choice and provision of appropriate Diplomas to be made available to all pupils by 2013. High performance in core subjects will be a particular early priority of the sponsor in KS4 and these subjects will remain a vital element of all students' study at GCSE level. The Academy will develop leading practice in its support for vocational provision once its future specialism are fully determined though the Feasibility process.
The Academy Sixth Form will be designed with a key focus on academic qualifications and vocational programmes in the Academy's areas of specialism. The detail of the post-16 programmes will be developed during Feasibility in close dialogue with the LSC and the local authority and the Sponsor intends to expand the range of provision and its links with other providers as the Academy develops."
In my view, these indications and the expressed intention as regards specialisms gave the Council sufficient information regarding a likely future curriculum upon which it could reach a rational decision on closure.
Consultation
"To be proper, consultation must be undertaken at a time when proposals are still at a formative stage; it must include sufficient reasons for particular proposals to allow those consulted to give intelligent consideration and an intelligent response; adequate time must be given for this purpose; and the product of consultation must be conscientiously taken into account when the ultimate decision is taken." [R v North and East Devon Health Authority, Ex parte Coughlan [2001] QB 213 at page 258]
Delay