The Amended Final EHCP
The Amended Final EHCP
As a result of that decision, in the Amended Final EHCP of 9 March 2022, 5 hours of mentoring per day were included in Outcome 2 in Section F:
“A will have up to 5 hours per day with a specialist worker from an organisation such as I-support and/or autism mentors and/or a personal assistant/companion to assist A in accessing her education and travelling independently, helping her with her organisational and planning skills including management of her educational commitments and homework and helping A put into practise strategies she learns as part of her SALT and OT, as well as other independence and communication skills”.
However, that appeared to duplicate the already existing social care provision in Section H2 which read:
“Up to 5 hours of support per day with a specialist worker from an organisation such as I-Support, and/or Autism Mentors and/or a personal assistant/companion, who will work on:
• Assisting A to be more independent of parents, including accessing educational setting and travelling independently”.
- Heading
- Introduction
- Parties
- Test for Permission
- Background
- The Tribunal’s Decision
- The Amended Final EHCP
- Application For Permission To Appeal
- Review
- Written Submissions Before The Review Hearing
- The Review Hearing
- The Post-Review Decision
- Ground 1: The Tribunal erred in its conclusion that the mentoring support during term time constituted special educational provision. Alternatively, to the extent that the Tribunal was entitled to con
- Judicial Review
- Ground 1: the Tribunal erred in its conclusion that the mentoring support during term time constituted special educational provision. Alternatively, to the extent that the Tribunal was entitled to con
- Ground 4: in relation to the Review Decision, Judge Tudur acted in a procedurally improper way and/or in a way which was ultra vires, by setting aside only part of the Decision Grounds 3 and 4
- The Council’s Submissions
- in East Sussex County Council v KS [2017] UKUT 275 (AAC) at [89] the Upper Tribunal held that, even if medical and nursing support was essential for a child to be educated, that did not make it specia
- in East Sussex County Council v JC [2018] UKUT 81 (AAC) at [29] the Upper Tribunal recognised that the provision of a powered wheelchair could only be special educational provision to the extent that
- Ground 2
- A’s Submissions
- Overall Approach (1)
- Overall Approach (2)
- Ground 1 – mentoring as special educational provision
- Ground 2 – mentoring every day
- The Council’s Reply
- what A failed to address was that the Tribunal did not say whether it was applying s.21(1) or s.21(5) . As the Council had previously pointed out, it was much more likely that the Tribunal was applyin
- A wrongly proceed on the assumption that the Tribunal found that the provision was s.21(1) special educational provision. But, for reasons already set out, the Council did not accept that that was a r
- a need for consistency was generally not to be equated with a need for special educational provision: Learning Trust v MP [2007] EWHC 1634 at [41]. The cases showed that cases where consistency alone
- consistency across settings and consistency of development were not necessarily materially distinct. That still went to the point raised by the Upper Tribunal in Hampshire County Council v JP [2009] U
- Analysis
- at least some of the mentoring support constituted respite, which was not special educational provision (paragraph 40 above)
- Ground 2
- The Exercise Of The Power To Review
- Conclusions
![[2023] UKUT 177 (AAC)](https://backend.juristeca.com/files/emisores/logo_3a2BKne.png)