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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 >> AB v Social Work England [2024] EWHC 1862 (Admin) (19 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/1862.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1862 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AB |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SOCIAL WORK ENGLAND |
Respondent |
____________________
Michael Standing (instructed by BATES WELLS & BRAITHWAITE LONDON LLP) for the RESPONDENT
Hearing dates: 9th July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SWEETING :
Introduction
a. Removal Order: Complete disqualification from practising social work.
b. Suspension: Temporary ban from practising social work.
c. Condition of Practice: Restrictions placed on a social worker's ability to practise, potentially requiring supervision or retraining.
d. Warning: A formal reprimand.
Background
a) dismiss the appeal,
b) quash the decision,
c) substitute for the decision appealed against any other decision that the adjudicators or the regulator (as the case may be) could have made,
d) remit the case to the regulator to dispose of in accordance with the directions of the court,
e) and may make any order as to costs as it thinks fit
"1. In or around July 2017 you did not communicate appropriately with a social worker who was allocated to work with you/your family
2. On one or more occasions you dealt with service user information inappropriately, namely by:-
a. In or around September 2020, retaining a safeguarding alert relating to Service User A (a service user you had worked with at Kent County Council), in circumstances where you did not have written consent to do so from the Council and/or the service user
b. On or around 5 October 2020, disclosing the safeguarding alert referred to at 2a. above without consent;
c. On or around 20 September 2020, accessing Child X's records without a legitimate and/or professional reason to do so
d. In or around March 2021, retaining one or more records and/or case notes relating to service users you had worked with at Surrey County Council, when you did not have permission to do so
3. While working as a social worker for Surrey County Council, you provided inaccurate and/or misleading information with respect to one or more child protection visits in that you:-
a. recorded information on the Council's systems on one or more occasions in February and/or March 2021, suggesting that a home visit to Family B and/or Family E had taken place, when that was not the case;
b. on or around 10 March 2021, informed your manager that a visit to Family B on 9 March 2021 was not a virtual visit, which was untrue
4. While working as a social worker for Surrey County Council, you failed to ensure that one or more service users were appropriately safeguarded, in that you:-
a. on one or more occasion in February and/or March 2021, did not complete child protection visits in respect of Family B and/or Family E as required
b. failed to escalate to your manager that you had not seen Child E for more than 10 working days due to a lack of parental engagement
5. Your actions as set out at paragraph 3(a) and/or 3(b) were dishonest."
Allegations 3,4 and 5
Allegation 1 - Inappropriate Communication with a Colleague
a. A high volume of emails (29 in 9 days).
b. An inappropriate and disrespectful tone.
c. The presence of threats within the emails.
d. Unsubstantiated serious allegations against Ms. Higgins, including racism and corruption.
"124. Taking all of these matters into account, the Panel concluded that AB's communications with Ms Higgins had been inappropriate because: they had been particularly numerous in a short period of time; their tone had been insulting and rude; and the content had been threatening and made serious allegations without evidence to substantiate them.
125. The Panel rejected AB's explanation that she was simply raising concerns about the way in which Ms Higgins was dealing with her case. The Panel accepted that AB's may have had legitimate concerns. However, it did not consider that the need to raise those concerns provided any or any adequate explanation for the number of emails sent, nor the inappropriate tone and content.
126. The Panel rejected AB's assertion that her thinking was irrational at that time, impacted by her mental health conditions of anxiety and depression. Although the Panel accepted that AB's was suffering from anxiety and depression at the relevant times, it was not convinced that those conditions were the reason that the emails were numerous, nor the reason for the inappropriate tone and content of the emails."
Allegation 2 - Data Handling and Access
Conclusions
END