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The Hidden Traps in Tribunal & Working Documents and How Parents Can Protect Themselves.

3 min read

by SEN Parent Support Group

Most parents walk into Tribunal thinking the biggest challenge will be the hearing itself. In reality, the real battle happens long before you ever sit in front of a panel. It happens in the Working Document. It happens in the deadlines. It happens in the quiet, subtle breaches that chip away at your confidence and your case and lead to additional unnecessary stress.

And because parents aren’t told what to expect, these issues feel personal like you’re disorganised, behind, or “not doing it right”. You’re not. These are predictable patterns and tactics by the LA’s. They happen to almost every parent, and once you know what to look for, you stop being blindsided.

Here are the most common issues that arise during Tribunal preparation and Working Document exchanges and how to stay one step ahead.

The Working Document is supposed to be a collaborative, evolving record of what is agreed, what is disputed, and what evidence supports each point. In practice, many LAs don’t send it on time, don’t update it properly, or quietly revert to older versions. This isn’t a mistake. It’s a tactic and creates confusion, delays progress, and forces you to work twice as hard.

If your WD is late, incomplete, or missing your amendments, call it out immediately and keep your own version control. Your version is the authoritative record of what you submitted.

Deadlines in the Tribunal process are not optional. They are statutory. Yet parents are often left waiting for Working Documents, evidence bundles, late amendments, or responses that should have been provided weeks earlier. When deadlines slip, it compresses your preparation time and increases your stress. If the LA misses a deadline, you record it, notify the Tribunal if needed, and keep moving. Their delay should not become your crisis.

One of the most common breaches is the LA failing to amend the EHCP in line with the evidence. Instead of updating Sections B, F, and I properly, they lift vague wording from old plans, ignore professional recommendations, or claim the wording “isn’t in the reports” even when it is. This is where parents start doubting themselves. Don’t! If the evidence says it, it goes in. If the LA refuses, you highlight the breach and keep your version lawful. Click here to understand what SEND Reg applies and where!

Another tactic is the LA quietly working from an older version of the WD, skipping over the amendments you’ve already made. This creates the illusion that your changes were never submitted. It’s a tactic designed to confuse and exhaust you. You shut it down by stating clearly which version is current, when it was submitted, and that all earlier versions are obsolete and you communicate this to both LA and Tribunal.

Parents often worry about what they’ll be asked at Tribunal, but the questions are predictable. Panels want to understand your child, why mainstream isn’t suitable, and why your preferred placement is. They are not there to interrogate you. They are there to understand the reality of your child’s needs. When you know this, the fear drops away. This will help you understand what a Hearing actually looks like – Click here. Click here to check your bundle!

Transport is another area where parents get caught out. If the LA names a school that is unrealistic, unsafe, or geographically impossible, transport becomes part of the argument. If the journey is excessive, unmanageable, or incompatible with your child’s needs, you raise it early and clearly. Transport can and should be named in Section F when it is necessary for the child to access education. Click here for an easy Transport Guide.

Parents often feel powerless when the LA delays, ignores, or manipulates the process. But the truth is: the Tribunal sees these patterns every day. They know the difference between a parent trying to navigate a broken system and an LA failing to meet its legal duties. Your job is to stay organised, keep your evidence tight, and document every breach. Their behaviour becomes part of your case and can actually aid your success!

The most important thing to remember is this: none of these issues mean you’re failing, it means the system is behaving exactly as it behaves for almost every parent. Once you understand the patterns, you stop taking them personally and start responding strategically.

How to Protect Yourself Throughout the Process

• Keep your own version control of every WD you submit

• Label each version clearly with date and time

• Keep a running log of missed deadlines and breaches

• Anchor every amendment to evidence in Section K

• Don’t rely on the LA to maintain the document accurately

• Treat your version as the authoritative record

• Stay factual, organised, and consistent – the Tribunal does notice!

For Parental CPD Training on the SENDIST Tribunal and our training offer, click here.

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