The Ministry of Education misunderstood its consultation obligations leading to an injustice when it considered closing Aorangi Primary in Christchurch, the school's board of trustees claimed in legal action before the High Court yesterday.
The board is trying to head off the decision by the Education Minister to close Aorangi, Prime Minister John Key's old school, on January 27.
It is seeking a judicial review of the decision in a hearing in Christchurch before Justice Christine French that could take up to three days.
The board's lead lawyer, Paul Cowey, said: "It is the plaintiff's case that the ministry misunderstood its consultation obligations. What may have been done in good faith, has nonetheless produced an injustice."
The school is questioning the method of the consultation process, saying it breached natural justice, and the timing was not reasonable.
John Caldwell, also acting for the trustees, told Justice French: "Essentially, the board feels it did not have the benefit of fair play in action.
"The decision to close the school on January 27, with the school holidays intervening, is simply unfair or unreasonable."
The decision was dealing with the rights, education, and welfare of 88 children on the roll, and the rights and careers of the staff and principal.
He said a proper consultation process was indispensable to a decision on closure, but the ministry had not disclosed all the information available. The board needed the reasoning of the ministry, and the data it held, rather than just the closure proposal itself.
Mr Cowey said the consultation process had as much bearing on the quality of the minister's executive decision as it did on the issue of fairness to the school board.
He contended the ministry's letter to the board had set up a parallel consultation process which "effectively required the board to undertake a wild goose chase".
- NZPA
Trustees: Save PM's old school
AdvertisementAdvertise with NZME.