🪞 SWANK Evidentiary Catalogue
When ‘Help’ Becomes Harm: How Section 20 Accommodation Was Rewritten as Retaliatory Removal
📌 Filed by: Polly Chromatic
📅 Filed Date: 13 July 2025
🗂 Reference Code: SWANK-A15-S20
📄 Court File Name: 2025-07-13_Addendum_Section20_DisabilityMisuse
📝 One-line Summary:
The statutory support duty under Section 20 was never activated — because Westminster preferred retaliation over relief.
I. What Happened
Section 20 of the Children Act 1989 is a statute of assistance. It permits local authorities to offer accommodation where needed, especially when disability — of the child or parent — is a key factor. But in this case, Westminster did not offer Section 20 support. They weaponised its absence.
Despite my known disabilities — eosinophilic asthma, muscle dysphonia, and PTSD — no lawful, voluntary accommodation offer was made. What I received instead was:
Surveillance disguised as assessment
Threats masquerading as care
And eventual removal, under the guise of urgency, despite no lawful threshold being met
There was no partnership.
There was only punishment for documenting my needs.
II. What the Complaint Establishes
As cited in The Law on Child Care and Family Services, Section 20 provides:
“Accommodation may be provided because of the disability of the child as well as the disability of the parent.”
Further, the law states:
The authority does not acquire parental responsibility
Wishes of the child must be considered
Accommodation must promote welfare — not override it
Yet in my case:
No children were consulted
No disability-specific support was offered
No consent was documented or obtained
No safeguarding rationale was met
Instead, Westminster manufactured justification and ignored every procedural expectation tied to Section 20 — acting as though its purpose was to remove, rather than relieve.
III. Why SWANK Logged It
Because statutory silence is often the loudest form of institutional abuse.
Because refusing to activate legal support mechanisms — and then penalising the parent for asking about them — is retaliatory omission masquerading as due process.
Because I was not punished for non-participation — I was punished for participation: for emailing, asking, citing, and filing. For invoking the very statutes they now pretend don’t exist.
IV. Violations
Children Act 1989, s.20(1)(c), s.20(4), s.20(5) – Failure to provide lawful support or engage consent
Equality Act 2010, s.20–21 – Discriminatory failure to accommodate a disabled parent
Human Rights Act 1998, Art. 8 – Interference in family life without necessity or proportionality
Care Act 2014, s.1 – Failure to promote wellbeing and autonomy of a disabled carer
UN CRPD – Violations of Article 23 (respect for home and the family)
V. SWANK’s Position
What Westminster Children’s Services conducted was not accommodation.
It was administrative vanishing under legal pretext.
Section 20, in all its legislative clarity, was never activated lawfully — because lawful use would have meant supporting, not seizing. But I was not a quiet parent. I was a visible one. And so, instead of engaging me, they orchestrated around me.
There is no white paper, no paragraph in Bromley, no judgment from Lady Hale that grants social workers the right to rewrite statute in the name of internal convenience. And yet — they did exactly that.
This post is now filed as formal record and rebuke.
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