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England and Wales Care Standards Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Care Standards Tribunal >> MP v OFSTED [2005] EWCST 618(EY-SUS) (23 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCST/2006/618(EY-SUS).html Cite as: [2005] EWCST 618(EY-SUS) |
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Heard at Penkridge
On 17 January 2006
Appeal
Representation
Preliminary
Restricted Reporting Order
The Law
(1) No person shall -
(a) act as a child minder in England unless he is registered under this Part for child-minding by the Chief Inspector;b. Section 79H(1) of the 1989 Act states that:
Regulations may provide for the registration of any person for acting as a child minder or providing day care to be suspended for a prescribed period by the registration authority in prescribed circumstances.
c. By Section 79B(1) of the 1989 Act the registration authority In England is the Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Schools in England, the Respondent, OFSTED.
d. The Regulations made under Section 79H(1) of the 1989 Act are the, Child Minding and Day Care (Suspension of Registration)(England) Regulations 2003. Relevant paragraphs:
3(1) The Chief Inspector may, in accordance with regulations 4, 5, 6 and 7, suspend the registration of any person acting as a child minder or providing day care if he has reasonable cause to believe that the continued provision of child minding or day care by that person exposes or may expose one or more of the children to whom it is or may be provided to the risk of harm and the purpose of the suspension is for one or both of the purposes set out in paragraph (2).
3(2) The purposes of the suspension are
(a) to allow time for the circumstances giving rise to the Chief Inspector's belief to be investigated:
(b) to allow time for steps to be taken to reduce or eliminate the risk of harm.
4(1) .. The suspension shall have effect for a period of 6 weeks
4(2) Subject to paragraph (3) the exercise of the Chief Inspector's power to suspend a person's registration shall not prevent any further exercise of that power, at any time, on the same or different grounds and in particular where
(a) the investigations being carried out or the steps to be taken under sub-paragraphs (2)(a) or (2)(b) respectively of regulation 3 are incomplete, or
(b) the Chief Inspector has decided to take action against the registered person under section 79K (emergency application to court).
Facts
Submissions
(i) the information provided to the Respondent was such as to give it reasonable cause to believe that the continued provision of child minding by the Applicant may expose one or more children to the risk of harm; and
(ii) the continued suspension is for the purpose of allowing time for investigation of the circumstances giving rise to the belief that children may be exposed to a risk of harm.
The risk of harm is present. If the allegation is found to be correct, the Applicant will have acted in a manner which gives rise to a risk of harm in children under her care. It is not appropriate to at this stage seek to prove the factual allegation which OFSTED are in the course of investigating and deciding upon. It is neither possible nor appropriate for the CST to seek to determine that issue now. The issue is only as to whether OFSTED have reasonable cause to hold the belief described above."
Tribunal's conclusions with reasons
We have carefully considered the written and oral evidence and submissions.
Our conclusions are:
a. The parties accept that police are investigating allegations involving injury to a child. It is clear there has been multi-agency interest and involvement, initially led by Social Services, now led by police. We note from Mrs White that OFSTED will initiate their own investigation but have in accordance with the inter-agency protocol decided that it cannot be undertaken until such time as police indicate it appropriate. We accept the underlying concern that a parallel investigation by OFSTED at this time might prejudice police enquiries.
b. We conclude from the details given that the allegations could lead to criminal charges and are relevant to compliance with National standards and suitability for registration as a child minder. We accept that the allegation is serious and if proved indicates that children for whom child minding is provided, are at risk of harm. We note that a further allegation is included in the enquiry.
c. We have noted the length of time the enquiry has been in hand and the acknowledged delay. At the time of the hearing some interviews have been completed and the enquiry continues. We accept the enquiry is neither frivolous nor that the allegations are bound to fail. We would, however, draw attention to Lord Justice Scott Baker's judgement in Regina v Powell, Court of Appeal reported in The Times on 17 January 2006.
d. MP contests the allegation and has provided evidence which she considers indicates it is unfounded. However, as noted at c. the investigation continues and statements have been taken from individuals directly involved, including the children. It is neither possible nor appropriate at this stage for us to reach a conclusion about the underlying allegation.
e. Following our conclusions about the gravity of the allegation, the continued appropriateness of the enquiry and the prospect of additional allegations being made, we conclude there is reasonable cause to believe that continued provision of child minding by MP may expose a child to risk of harm. We accept that the suspension was properly and lawfully made to allow time for circumstances giving rise to allegations to be investigated and its continuation is appropriate.
f. Our unanimous decision is that the suspension should continue in accordance with the Notice of suspension dated 14 December 2005.
Order
MP's appeal dismissed.
Date: 23 January 2006
Signed:
Mr Laurence J Bennett
(Chairman)
Ms Bridget Graham
Mr David Allman