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School must accept wheelchair user

Posted: 04 September 2003 | Subscribe Online


A disabled teenager will begin his sixth-form studies next week after winning a landmark injunction against a college that had refused to admit him on safety grounds.

The case, backed by the Disability Rights Commission (DRC), is the first time a mandatory injunction has been used to enforce the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 in the education system.

The injunction, granted last week, means that 17-year-old Anthony Ford-Shubrook, who has cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair, can start his A level studies on time. Despite having seven GCSEs at grades A* to C, he was refused a place at St Dominic's Sixth Form College in Harrow, Middlesex, because the IT room was only accessible by a stairway.
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Liz Sayce, DRC director of policy, said: "Colleges and universities must be aware that barring a disabled person on the grounds of their disability is discrimination."

The full claim, under the DDA, is set to be heard after October 10 at Central London County Court.

St Dominic's was unavailable for comment.


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