[2024] UKUT 128 (AAC)
Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber

[2024] UKUT 128 (AAC)

Fecha: 20-Mar-2023

The Council’s Further Submissions

The Council’s Further Submissions

R(L) v (1) Waltham Forest LBC and (2) Staffordshire CC

113.

R(L) concerned a looked after child based in one local authority area attending a residential placement in another.

114.

By reference to paragraph 7 of the decision, it could be seen that s.321(3) of the Education Act 1996 (“the 1996 Act”) was not drafted in directly equivalent terms to s.24 of the 2014 Act, in that the 1996 definition partially referred to registration of the pupil at a school. S.24 removed the reference of the term ‘pupil’, replacing it with ‘child’ or ‘young person’ and did not incorporate any reference to ‘school’ – in a sense streamlining the statutory language.

115.

Paragraph 11 of the decision referred to s.579(4) of the 1996 Act, which stated that

“For the purposes of this Act a person shall be treated as belonging, or as not belonging, to the area of a particular local authority in accordance with regulations; and any question under the regulations shall, in the case of a dispute, be determined by the Secretary of State.”

At paragraph 12, it is explained that the regulations made pursuant to s.579(4) were the Belonging Regulations.

116.

Paragraph 12 of the decision cited regulations which came into force in 2001 under the 1996 Act which dealt with the transfer of responsibility for a statement of special educational needs between local authorities. In broad terms, that was a predecessor to what was now contained in regulation 15 of the 2014 Regulations.

117.

At paragraph 15 of the decision, it could be seen that Waltham Forest argued that the Belonging Regulations were concerned solely with financial recoupment and not with any wider question of which local authority was responsible for a statement of special educational needs. However, at paragraph 17 the Court preferred the submissions of Staffordshire, giving a wider interpretation to their relevance. The effect of the decision was that Waltham Forest was responsible for the child, even though he resided at a placement in Staffordshire.

118.

The Council submitted that the Court’s approach in R(L)to the Belonging Regulations was wrong, but, in any event R(L)had been overtaken by events and/or could be distinguished from the present case: