Post‑Tribunal: What Happens When Local Authorities Don’t Deliver on SENDIST Orders?

by SEN Parent Support Group

Winning at the SEND Tribunal is often described as a “huge relief” for families it’s an acknowledgment that their child’s needs were not being met and a legally binding order requiring the Local Authority (LA) to put things right.

But what happens when the Tribunal is over, the decision has been issued… and the LA still doesn’t deliver?

Unfortunately, this is a common experience. The good news is that parents are not powerless. There are clear legal duties, strict timelines, and escalation routes when an LA fails to comply.

This guide explains what must happen after a Tribunal, what to do when the LA delays or refuses, and how to escalate using complaints, pre‑action letters, and Judicial Review.

1. What the LA Must Do After a Tribunal Order

SEND Tribunal orders are legally binding. The LA must implement the decision in full.

Statutory Timelines After a Tribunal Decision

Under the SEND Regulations:

  • The LA has 2 weeks from the Tribunal decision to issue the final amended EHC plan.
  • Provision ordered by the Tribunal must be arranged immediately  there is no “grace period”.
  • If the Tribunal orders a placement (e.g., a specialist school), the LA must name it in the final plan within 2 weeks and secure the placement.

These timelines are not optional. They are law.

For a deeper breakdown of the Tribunal process, see:
🔗 Navigating the SEND Tribunal Process
https://senparentsupportgroup.org/navigating-the-send-tribunal-process/

2. Common Ways LAs Fail to Comply

Parents often report:

  • Delays issuing the amended EHC plan
  • Issuing a plan that does not reflect the Tribunal order
  • Failing to arrange therapies (e.g., SALT, OT, MH support)
  • Delaying naming the ordered school
  • Claiming “funding issues” or “capacity issues”
  • Ignoring deadlines entirely

None of these excuses are lawful.

3. Step‑by‑Step: What to Do When the LA Doesn’t Deliver

Step 1: Write to the LA Immediately as a Stage 1 complaint

State clearly:

  • The Tribunal decision date
  • The legal deadline that has passed
  • What has not been implemented
  • That they are in breach of statutory duty

Keep everything in writing. Use our SEN Support Tracker for digital tracking and evidential timelines

Step 2: Escalate to the LA’s Director of Children’s Services

This is often enough to prompt action.

Under Section 42 of the Children and Families Act 2014, the LA must secure the provision in Section F of the EHC plan. Failure is unlawful.  We recommend the DOC’s are included in your stage 1 complaint above. To find out who your DOC’s is click here

Step 3: Use the LA Complaints Process

This creates a paper trail and shows you have attempted resolution.

However, complaints can take weeks or months so they should run in parallel with legal escalation, not instead of it.

Step 4: Consider a Pre‑Action Protocol Letter (PAP)

If the LA continues to delay, the next step is a Judicial Review pre‑action letter.

Judicial Review is the legal mechanism used to challenge unlawful inaction by public bodies.

Our resource explains this clearly:
🔗 Judicial Review: What It Is
https://senparentsupportgroup.org/judicial-review-what-it-is/

A PAP letter:

  • Sets out the breach
  • Gives the LA 14 days to respond
  • Signals that you are prepared to take legal action

Many LAs comply quickly once a PAP letter is issued. This can be initiated as part of a Mentor Support Call outcome. Book here

Step 5: Judicial Review (JR)

If the LA still fails to act, Judicial Review can be issued in the High Court.

JR is appropriate when:

  • The LA misses statutory deadlines
  • The LA refuses to implement Tribunal‑ordered provision
  • The LA delays naming the Tribunal‑ordered placement
  • The LA issues an unlawful EHC plan after Tribunal

JR is fast cases can be heard within days or weeks because children’s education is time‑sensitive.

Your guide on JR is essential reading for parents:
🔗 https://senparentsupportgroup.org/judicial-review-what-it-is/

4. Why Judicial Review Is Often the Only Effective Route

SEND Tribunal decisions are binding, but the Tribunal itself cannot enforce its own orders. You can of course advise the Tribunal of the LA’s failure to enact and cc the LA in on this letter. However, a response is not guaranteed. That means enforcement falls to the courts via Judicial Review.

Parents often feel frustrated that they must “fight again” after winning. But JR is designed specifically for situations where public bodies:

  • Act unlawfully
  • Delay unlawfully
  • Ignore statutory duties

And importantly: Legal Aid is available for JR, even when it is not available for Tribunal appeals. Check if you are eligible here Legal aid: Check if you can get legal aid – GOV.UK

5. Training and Support for Parents and Advocates

Understanding the Tribunal process and enforcement options empowers parents to act quickly and confidently.

Your training resource is ideal for families and professionals:
🔗 CPD Training on SENDIST Tribunals
https://senparentsupportgroup.org/docs/training-cpd-training-on-sendist-tribunals/

This training helps parents:

  • Understand Tribunal evidence
  • Prepare for hearings
  • Recognise unlawful LA behaviour
  • Know when to escalate to JR

6. Summary: Your Post‑Tribunal Action Plan

If the LA fails to implement the Tribunal order:

  1. Day 1–14:
    LA must issue the amended EHC plan and begin provision.
  2. Day 15:
    If nothing has happened, write to the LA and Director of Children’s Services.
  3. Day 15–30:
    Submit a formal complaint and prepare a Pre‑Action Protocol letter.
  4. Day 30+:
    If still no action, proceed to Judicial Review.

You do not need to wait months. You do not need to accept excuses. You do not need to “give them more time”. As frustrating as this situation might be, the LAW IS ON YOUR SIDE!

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