This is an update to a recent post I made here:
https://wirralinittogether.wordpress.com/2014/06/09/wirral-council-wins-in-court-vulnerable-people-lose-again/
Near to the end of the blog post, I promised to contact the Judge, Melanie Carter, to highlight some concerns and to see if her decision could be challenged. Here’s the exchange that followed:
From: Paul Cardin
Sent: 13 June 2014 00:47
To: Melanie Carter
Subject: Wirral Council ruling
Dear Judge Carter,
I do hope you don’t mind me contacting you ‘out of the blue’ but I would like to raise an important concern regarding a recent ruling you made in a case involving Wirral Council and the ICO, a link to which is here .
I’m the person who made the original freedom of information request in February 2012, although I was not a joined party to the case. I was quite surprised to see the recent judgment describe the contents of most of the withheld information as follows:
“particularly anodyne and insofar as it contained anything of substance, did not, on the face of it, contain anything of particular public interest which might otherwise call for disclosure”
My initial concerns were centred upon:
-
financial abuse, which took the form of an unlawful removal of £736,756.91 over 8 years from the bank accounts of a number of learning disabled Wirral Council tenants
-
a subsequent admission to ‘unacceptable’ abuse of learning disabled people, made by Far Right Councillor Steve Foulkes, the portfolio holder for Social Services (now Mayor of Wirral) (See 7.1 here)
-
a subsequent complaint to my local MP, Angela Eagle, followed by confirmation of disability discrimination on the part of the council – given by the Equalities and Human Rights Commission in early 2011,
-
a seeming desire on the part of the authorities at the time to ignore the EHRC finding, by not exploring the potential extent of it as requested, and by distancing themselves from the notion of disability discrimination



Pingback: Wirral Council Wins in Court. Vulnerable People Lose. | Wirral In It Together
The Registrar is only partially correct. Section 11 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 in subsection (2) states “Any party to a case has a right of appeal, subject to subsection (8)”, subsection (8) states “The Lord Chancellor may by order make provision for a person to be treated as being, or to be treated as not being, a party to a case for the purposes of subsection (2)”
The current Lord Chancellor is the Rt Hon Chris Grayling MP and has a legal duty to be “responsible for the efficient functioning and independence of the courts”. His contact details are here, which include as well as his contact details:
House of Commons, London, SW1A 0AA
Tel: 020 7219 8194
Fax: 020 7219 1763
graylingc@parliament.uk
the contact details of the Ministry of Justice too:
Ministry of Justice, 102 Petty France, London, SW1H 9AJ
Tel: 020 3334 3555
general.queries@justice.gsi.gov.uk
You may also wish to contact your own MP about this. Personally I think it would be wrong for an FOI requester not to have a right of appeal to a first tier tribunal decision about their FOI request. Hopefully if you explain what’s happened either the Lord Chancellor himself can add you as a party (so that you have a right of appeal), point you in the direction of an order that means you are treated as a party or give a proper explanation as to why not!
LikeLike
Oh I got a letter back from the First-Tier Tribunal (Information Rights) yesterday. Although appeals made to First-Tier Tribunal decisions can be made to the Upper Tribunal (which is a court), the first-tier tribunal isn’t a court. So you might want to change your headline from “court decision” to “tribunal decision” to be more accurate. 🙂
However the First-Tier Tribunal (Information Rights) did say that the tribunal was subject to the FOI legislation and data protection legislation.
Doesn’t that mean you could make a subject access request or FOI request for the “closed” bundle (or even the open bundle)?
LikeLike
Have amended thanks John. I may give that a try after I’ve had a response from the ICO solicitor.
LikeLike
Pingback: UK Labour’s Tories are Running Away From Their Own Proven Human Rights Abuses, and Worse… | Wirral In It Together
Pingback: Corporate abuse of disabled people needn’t sound the death knell for your career | Wirral In It Together
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants. An external investigation followed this, the Martin Morton whistleblow. The Council covered it up and
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants. An external investigation followed this, the Martin Morton whistleblow. The Council covered it up and
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants. An external investigation followed this, the Martin Morton whistleblow. The Council covered it up and
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants. An external investigation followed this, the Martin Morton whistleblow. The Council covered it up and
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants. An external investigation followed this, the Martin Morton whistleblow. The Council covered it up and
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants, an external investigation followed this, “the Martin Morton whistleblow”. The Council cove
Pingback: When Wirral Council stole £736,756.97 from the bank accounts of 16, but a far greater, unspecified number of its own learning disabled Council tenants, an external investigation followed this, “the Martin Morton whistleblow”. The Council cove