Further memorandum from the Disability
Rights Commission (DDB 2)
BRIEFING NOTE ON THE NEED TO EXTEND THE DISABILITY
DISCRIMINATION ACT TO COVER LANDLORD'S CONSENT TO BUILDING ALTERATIONS
The Draft Disability Discrimination Bill's proposals
concerning landlords' duties to permit adaptations where needed
by disabled occupiers are confused, incomplete and provide an
inadequate basis for systematic action to tackle the persistent
problems in this area which can leave disabled people a prisoner
in their own homes.
PRESENT SITUATION
Sections 22-24 of the Disability Discrimination
Act (DDA) prohibit the unjustified less favourable treatment of
disabled people by persons managing or disposing of premises.
Currently, however, these premises provisions of the DDA impose
no duty on such persons to make reasonable adjustments to policies,
procedures or practices, to provide auxiliary aids or services;
or to make adjustments to premises.
DRAFT DISABILITY
BILL PROPOSALS
The Draft Bill extends the DDA's
duties on those disposing of premises to include a duty to make
some forms of reasonable adjustments. This would mean that, where
reasonable, a landlord might be obliged to:
Allow a tenant with mobility difficulties
to leave her rubbish in another place if she cannot access the
designated place.
Change or waive a term of the letting
to allow a tenant to keep an assistance dog on the premises.
Change or waive a term of the letting
which forbids alterations to the premises so that a disabled tenant
could make necessary access alterations with the consent of the
landlord.
In addition, landlords would also be placed
under a duty to take reasonable steps to provide an "auxiliary
aid or service" which would enable or make it easier for
a disabled person to rent the property or to facilitate a disabled
tenant's enjoyment of the premises. For example, a landlord might
need to read out a tenancy agreement to a visually impaired person.
A landlord would not have to provide an aid or service which is
not directly related to the premisesfor example a landlord
would not have to provide a mobility aid, such as a wheelchair,
that a disabled person would need for their general purposes.
DRC CONCERNS
The Draft Bill does not implement the Disability
Rights Task Force recommendation that, in civil rights legislation,
landlords should not be allowed to withhold consent unreasonably
for a disabled person making changes to the physical features
of the premises. The Government (in Towards Inclusion) originally
accepted this recommendation. However they now appear to reason
that this is unnecessary, because the Landlord and Tenant Act
of 1927 already applies.
OUR UNDERSTANDING
OF THE
POSITION IN
ENGLAND AND
WALES IF
THE BILL
IS PASSED
Where there is a provision in a lease or tenancy
agreement that allows the making of "improvements" but
only with the consent of the landlord, then section 19(2) of Landlord
and Tenant Act of 1927 (LTA) implies a term within the lease that
such consent can not be unreasonably withheld and that where consent
is given subject to conditions, eg reinstatement at the end of
the lease or tenancy, any conditions must themselves be reasonable[18].
Section 19(2) will not apply if the lease is
silent on the issue of alterations or improvements or if it contains
an absolute prohibition against them. It applies only if there
is a clause in a lease making the carrying out of improvements
conditional on the landlord's consent.
If a lease contains no clause governing the
tenant's ability to alter or improve the premises, and no term
is implied, the tenant may carry out alterations to the premises.
Only in two circumstances will they be prevented from doing sofirst,
if the alteration would amount to "waste" and, second,
if it would constitute a breach of an express repairing covenant[19].
Where there is an absolute prohibition on all
adjustments the LTA 1927 would not apply. However, the Explanatory
Notes for the draft Bill suggest that under the new provisions
requiring a landlord or manager to take reasonable steps to change
a policy, practice or procedure which makes it impossible or unreasonably
difficult for a disabled person to enjoy the premises a landlord
or manager may be obliged (where it is reasonable to do so) to
change or waive a term of the letting which forbids any alterations
to the premises, so as to allow a disabled tenant to make alterations
needed by reason of his disability with the consent of the landlord.
If a term in the letting prohibiting any alterations was replaced
with one permitting alterations with the landlord's consent, then
s 19(2) of the 1927 Act would apply and provide that a condition
in a lease or tenancy agreement forbidding a tenant from carrying
out improvements to the premises without the landlord's consent
should be read as one saying that such consent is not to be unreasonably
withheld.
OUR UNDERSTANDING
OF THE
POSITION IN
SCOTLAND IF
BILL IS
PASSED:
The Bill would have no effect on the present
legal position in Scotland which is as follows.
Public sector housing
Most public sector housing in Scotland is now
governed by the Housing (S) Act 2001. This introduced the concept
of registered social landlords eg local authorities, housing associations
etc. The majority of RSL tenants were transferred on to a new
form of Scottish secure tenancy on 30 September 2002.
The Housing (S) Act 2001 section 28 states:
It is a term of every Scottish secure tenancy
that the tenant is not to carry out work, other than interior
decoration, in relation to the house without the consent in writing
of the landlord, which must not be unreasonably withheld.
In this section and Part 1 of schedule 5, "work"
means
(a) alteration, improvement or enlargement
of the house or of any fittings or fixtures;
(b) addition of new fittings or fixtures;
(c) erection of a garage, shed or other structure;
but does not include repairs or maintenance
of any of these.
(3) The provisions of Part 1 of schedule
5 have effect as terms of every Scottish secure tenancy.
The Scottish Ministers may issue guidance to
landlords as to the standards to which different descriptions
of work should be carried out and as to the matters to which landlords
should have regard in considering imposing conditions under paragraph
2(b) of schedule 5 as to the standard of work.
Schedule 5 then sets out how tenants should
apply for the right to make alterations. The landlord can consent,
consent with conditions, or refuse. When deciding whether to impose
conditions, the landlord must have regard to:
(a) the age and condition of the house;
(b) the cost of complying with the condition;
and
(c) any guidance issued under section 28(4).
It the tenant is unhappy with the landlord's
decision she can apply to the courts to have it overturned. The
court must overturn the refusal, or remove the condition, unless
it considers it to be reasonable. When considering what is reasonable
the court must have regard to:
the safety of occupiers of the house
or of any other premises,
any expenditure which the landlord
is likely to incur as a result of the work,
whether the work is likely to reduce
the value of the house or of any premises of which it forms part,
or to make the house or such premises less suitable for letting
or for sale, and
any effect which the work is likely
to have on the extent of the accommodation provided by the house.
It is perhaps unfortunate that in such new legislation,
there is no express right to alterations to accommodate disability.
However, it is likely that both the landlord and the court would
take the disability of a tenant or family member into account
when considering the reasonableness of a decision to refuse consent.
While there are a number of cases dealing with disrepair, there
is no case law in the area of alterations.
The experience of the DRC Scotland office however,
is that landlord's consent may not be the problem for those living
in flats who require adjustments to common parts. Two case studies,
one brought to our legal surgery and one request for help by a
local MSP, indicated that the real area of difficulty was the
consent of neighbour owner-occupiers. Since right to buy legislation
was introduced it is common that a local authority does not own
all of a block of housing. In both cases reported to us, the landlord
had consented to necessary adjustments, but other owners in the
block refused. The housing legislation does not deal with this
issue at all and the tenant could not make the necessary.
Private rented sector
In essence there is no right to carry out alterations
of any kind in private rented accommodation. There has never been
a common law right to have repairs carried out or to be permitted
to carry out alterations. A statutory right to repairs was introduced
in 1962 but no right to make alterations. An individual tenancy
may contain the right, if negotiated between landlord and tenant,
but there is no other right.
The Office of Fair Trading have produced guidance
in relation to unfair contract terms in tenancy agreements, but
only for England and Wales. There is no Scottish version and no
present intention to produce one.
Scottish Executive plans
A Housing Improvement Task Force was set up
by the Executive two years ago and it reported in March 2003.
The report contains a number of findings relating to disabled
people's housing difficulties, for example they are likely to
be in lower socio-economic groups and therefore in worse housing,
they have particular difficulties in accessing reliable contractors,
and it is particularly difficult to find adapted accommodation.
The report was consulted upon and Scottish Ministers responded
in December 2003.
The Task Force report contained 151 recommendations,
one of which states:
"The provisions of the Housing (Scotland)
Act 1988 should be amended to the effect that private sector tenants
should have a right to carry out adaptations to their home to
meet any particular needs arising from a disability. This right
should be subject to the consent of the landlord but such consent
should not be unreasonably withheld. The proposed Tribunal should
have a power, on application from a tenant, to determine if such
a refusal is unreasonable."
DEFICIENCIES OF
PROPOSED LEGISLATIVE
FRAMEWORK
(a) Complexity
As will be apparent from the above discussion
the resulting provisions will be very complex. They would require
a term (such as one prohibiting alterations) to be adjusted only
if this is considered "reasonable" and if none of the
specific justification defences apply. Thus, a disabled tenant
needing physical alterations which are prohibited by the lease
would have to show first that it would be reasonable to amend
the term prohibiting alterations (as well as rebutting any alleged
justification for adherence to the term) and then, second, they
would have to show that the landlord's refusal of consent to the
proposed alterations was unreasonable under LTA s19.
This is complex and care would have to be taken
to keep inconsistencies of approach to the meaning of "reasonableness"
in the two contexts to a minimum. Even if such inconsistencies
could be avoided, anachronistic results may still occur. The first
issue would fall under the DDA whereas the second would not. Thus,
a tenant who successfully argued that a term should be amended
would have established that they had been the victim of unlawful
discrimination and may be awarded damages for injury to feelings
etc. They may also receive support from the DRC in respect of
this claim. Such damages and support would not be available in
respect of the s 19 claim.
(b) Lack of a rights based approach
Whilst the LTA 1927 (where it applies) states
that the landlord will not be able to withhold consent unreasonably,
it cannot be assumed that "reasonable" will be assessed
by courts and landlords along the principles applying to reasonableness
under the DDA . And of course for tenants the way in which the
reasonableness test is applied will be extremely important.
In the context of LTA s 19 2, most of the cases
on reasonableness have concerned the sum required by the landlord
by way of compensation for damage to the premises (or neighbouring
premises owned by the landlord) or for diminution in their value.
According to Woodfall[20],
there is "surprisingly little authority as to what other
grounds for refusing consent may be upheld as reasonable".
The Court of Appeal in Lambert v Woolworth [21]
considered it important that landlords should be able to rely
on aesthetic, artistic or sentimental grounds. Whether such grounds
would make it reasonable for a landlord to withhold consent to
an alteration in any particular case is likely to be decided by
reference to the same principles which apply, at common law, to
determine whether consent to an assignment has been unreasonably
withheld[22].
In that context three "overriding principles"
were identified by Lord Bingham in Ashworth Frazer v Gloucester
CC[23].
First, the withholding of consent will not be reasonable if it
is based on grounds irrelevant to the relationship of landlord
and tenant with regard to the subject matter of the lease[24].
Second, the question is essentially one of fact depending on all
the circumstances of the particular case[25].
Thus, according to Lord Bingham, "care must be taken not
to evaluate a decision made on the facts of a particular case
into a principle of law"[26].
Third, the landlord need not prove that their reasons for withholding
consent were justified provided that they were reasons which might
have influenced a reasonable man in the circumstances[27].
Thus, a tenant must prove, not simply that other landlords might
have given consent, but that a reasonable man would have done
so in the particular circumstances[28].
There are some indications that, though generally
a landlord need consider only their own interests, a refusal to
consent may be unreasonable if the consequent detriment to the
tenant is disproportionate to the benefit gained by the landlord[29].
It is not clear how these principles would be applied in a case
where a disabled tenant required their landlord's consent to alterations
which would facilitate access. Whilst there is a possibility that
the courts would develop the last mentioned principle, based on
disproportionate benefit and detriment, in favour of disabled
tenants in these circumstances, it is by no means certain that
this would occur. Even if it were to occur, comparisons between
aesthetic, sentimental or even financial benefits to landlords
and access detriments to tenants would be like comparing apples
and Thursdays. It is not difficult to imagine a judge with a keen
aesthetic sense[30]
deciding in favour of a landlord even though this would require
a tenant to find alternative accommodation.
As the law currently stands, there is no specific
direction as to the weight to be given to securing access in housing
for people with impairments as compared with the property interests
of others. Nor would the Disability Rights Commissionor
anyone elsehave the ability to produce a statutory Code
for guidance.
Decisions in other areas of land law suggest
that very little weight will be attached to the desirability of
facilitating access for disabled people and that they will be
easily overridden. In Drury v McGarvie[31],
for instance, it was held that badly constructed gates did not
amount to an obstruction of a disabled person's right of way across
farmland to their home because they would not have constituted
a "material inconvenience" for a "person of average
strength and agility" or "the ordinary, able-bodied
adult"
Amending the DDA along the lines recommended
by the DRTF would retain the use of a reasonableness test. It
would, however, draw attention to the importance of facilitating
access for disabled occupiers. Guidance as to the weight to be
attached to this consideration as against contrary ones could
be provided in the Code of Practice which already exists in relation
to Part III of the DDA.
(c) Role of DRC
Other advantages, the value of which should
not be underestimated, would result from bringing the issue of
alterations to premises by tenants into the realms of anti-discrimination
law. It would enable disabled tenants to call on the support of
the Disability Rights Commission (DRC) in connection with proceedings
against their landlordssuch assistance being restricted
to cases brought under the DDA[32].
It would entitle disabled tenants, in appropriate
cases, to compensation for injury to feelings on the same basis
as victims of other forms of disability discrimination[33].
It would facilitate a coherent information campaign
by the DRC aimed both at housing advisers, landlords and property
management agents and disabled people, about the rights of disabled
people in relation to housing
(d) Limited coverage
Access to a dwelling
In many case the disabled occupier needs alterations
to the exterior of the building (such as the installation of a
grab rail) or to its approach (such as the installation of a ramp
or additional lighting). Such areas do not constitute part of
the "dwelling-house" leased to them.
The LTA 1927 will not apply, as it only applies
where the proposed improvements are to the premises comprised
in the lease. Thus, in Tideway Investment and Property Holdings
v Wellwood[34],
it was held not to apply where the installation of hot water systems
necessarily entailed trespassing on property retained by the landlord.
Currently, the right to make alterations in
many leases will be confined to the actual premises leased. This
will not assist a disabled tenant confronted by physical barriers
in the approach to the property where that is not included in
the lease[35].
A totally accessible flat may be of little use to a person who
needs to negotiate a short flight of steps in order to enter it.
Privately owned flats
Many of the calls on this subject to the DRC
Helpline (see below for recent examples) involve owners of private
flats who have not been permitted to make alteration to the areas
of a building outside their occupation, owned by a freeholder,
over which they have a right of access. Such situations will be
excluded both for the reasons outlined in the paragraph above
and because the Bill only applies to the property occupied under
a leasenot privately owned premises.
It is vital that these gaps are dealt withand
remedies provided to the often desperate people living with these
problemsin some cases "prisoners in their own homes".
CONCLUSION
Failure to amend the DDA along the lines suggested
by the Disability Rights Task Force would perpetuate inconsistency
within the Act itself. Under it landlords are already prevented
from unreasonably withholding consent to physical alterations
designed to facilitate access by disabled people when their tenants
are employers[36],
service providers[37]
or educational establishments[38].
Why not when their tenant is a disabled person?
The result of a continued exclusion of this
type of case from the scope of anti-discrimination legislation
is a law which appears to undervalue the importance of accessible
housing. It is appropriate to end with the quote which begins
the relevant chapter of the report of the Disability Rights Task
Force[39]:
"Adaptations to housing are a matter of
equal opportunities in the most basic aspects of human life. In
a well adapted house, a disabled person can move about, cook,
or go into the garden, turn on lights, have a shower or bath or
put a child to bedwhen and how they want to, with minimum
help from other people. Without adaptations, these people may
be condemned to isolation, frustration."
EXAMPLES FROM
DRC HELPLINE
The queries to the Helpline below would not
be assisted by the Disability Bill or the Landlord and Tenants
Act 1927 as they all require changes to be made to the "common
part" of blocks of flats Most of the calls are from owner
occupiers who will not be covered by any of the Disability Bills
provisions.
1. Caller has a client who lives in a block
of flats. He owns the flat but it is on a leasehold basis. He
is a wheelchair user and would like a ramp to be put in. Caller
would like to know if the company who owns the building could
refuse this request.
2. Caller was phoning on behalf of her boyfriend's
father who following an accident is now paralysed. He is still
in rehabilitation and is preparing to come home. He lives in a
block of flats and he along with the other residents own their
flats. He has put forward proposals for a lift to be installed
to enable him to gain access to his flat but two members of the
management board have refused it. There is going to be a ballot
for all the residents in the block of flats concerned and the
surrounding blocks to decide whether the permission should be
granted. The two members of the board that are refusing to give
permission are saying that the lift will restrict access and bring
down the property values. Some residents who live in the block
of flats next to the proposed flat are not happy because they
say it will look like an old people's home!
3. The caller had a general query with regards
to letting and selling of land and property. He stated that he
resides in a block of flats that are approximately 35 years old;
these flats are privately owned and are governed by a board of
directors made up of the residents in the block. He stated that
they have one resident that has recently become disabled and is
currently in hospital, when he comes out of hospital he will require
a stair lift. The caller stated that if 75% of the residents approve
this they will be able to install this, the caller feels that
they will not approve and wanted to know if the DDA could assist
in this matter.
4. Caller lives in a housing association
flat and there is a communal stairway for the residents who live
on the upper floors. Caller has severe arthritis that has affected
her mobility and she finds climbing up and down the stairs to
get to her flat difficult. Caller has had a quote for a stair
lift to be fitted and has consulted a fire officer who has confirmed
that it would not be a fire hazard. Caller is unable to go ahead
with the installation of the stair lift because one of her neighbours
has complained about the proposal claiming that it would be a
fire hazard. Caller wanted to know whether the housing association
should allow the stair lift to be fitted.
5. Caller contacted on behalf of her father
who lives in sheltered accommodation. He has chronic emphysema
and is increasingly housebound, and unable to climb stairs. He
has asked for a stairlift and offered to pay for the installation
and maintenance of it. His neighbour has objected and the management
committee have said that they cannot overrule the objection, and
that all four people in the block must agree.
6. Caller wanted to know whether a housing
association is breaking the law by removing an accessible entrance
to a block of flats because of complaints by the tenants that
they stayed open too long. Then replace them in another area with
an automatic closing gate but with steps making it difficult for
those using scooters to access. When the housing association was
challenged on this, their response was to say that they do not
house severely disabled people.
7. Caller asked on behalf of a lady who
is living in a flat. There is a flight of steps from the main
building to the street and as a wheelchair user the lady is unable
to use the steps, which means she is completely house bound. He
asked if there is anything which can be done to make the landlord
put in a ramp.
HOW MIGHT
A DDA RIGHT
TO MAKE
ADAPTATIONS OPERATE?
The landlord (or person controlling the property
in the case of privately owned premises) would not be able to
unreasonably refuse consent for adaptations. When the Government
originally accepted this Taskforce recommendation it stated that
it would consult on what factors should be taken into account
when determining the reasonableness of the consent, and what conditions
might reasonably be imposed in relation to that consent. Such
a consultation would be an essential step in issuing guidancewhether
through regulations or in the statutory Codeas to reasonableness.
In relation to the issue of whether landlords of commercial premises
can reasonably withhold consent to service providers adjustments
under s 27 DDA the statutory Code of Practice on Rights of Access
Goods, Facilities and Services gives the following guidance. "Whether
withholding consent will be reasonable or not will depend on the
specific circumstances. For example, if a particular adjustment
is likely to result in a substantial permanent reduction in the
value of the lessor's interest in the premises, the lessor is
likely to be acting reasonably in withholding consent. The lessor
is also likely to be acting reasonably if he withholds consent
because an adjustment would cause significant disruption or inconvenience
to other tenants (for example, where the premises consist of multiple
adjoining units). A trivial or arbitrary reason would almost certainly
be unreasonable. Many reasonable adjustments to premises will
not harm the lessor's interests and so it would generally be unreasonable
to withhold consent for them.
The 2001 Disability Discrimination (Providers
of Services) (Adjustment of Premises) Regulations provide that
a lessor may reasonably require a service provider to meet the
following conditions:
obtains any necessary planning permission
and other statutory consents;
carries out the work in accordance
with any plans and specifications approved by the lessor;
allows the lessor a reasonable opportunity
to inspect the work (whether before or after it is completed);
reimburses the lessor's reasonable
costs incurred in connection with the giving of consent; or
obtains the consent of another person
required under a binding obligation or superior lease.
These provisions are also likely to apply in
respect of residential property. In many situations it will also
be reasonable for a landlord (or property manager) to make consent
subject to re-instatement of the property when the disabled occupant
leaves.
BACKGROUNDTENURE
TYPES
A substantially lower proportion of disabled
people live in the owner occupied sector than is found for the
total household population62% compared to 73% from the
Survey of English Housing (SEH)2001/2. SEH shows that 33% of disabled
people in England (3.5million) are "social renters";
of this total 2.5 million (73% ) are council tenants and 954,000
(27%) are RSL tenants.[40]
Approximately 600,000 disabled people are private renters. 120,000
of these require specially adapted accommodation, of which 58%
reported that their accommodation was suitable.
February 2004
"In all leases whether made before or after
the commencement of this Act containing a covenant condition or
agreement against the making of improvements without licence or
consent, such covenant condition or agreement shall be deemed,
not withstanding any express provision to the contrary, to be
subject to a proviso that such licence or consent is not to be
unreasonably withheld; but this proviso does not preclude the
right to require as a condition of such licence or consent the
payment of a reasonable sum in respect of any damage to or diminution
in the value of the premises or any neighbouring premises belonging
to the landlord, and of any legal or other expenses properly incurred
in connection with such licence or consent nor, in the case of
an improvement which does not add to the letting value of the
holding, does it preclude the right to require as a condition
of such licence or consent, where such a requirement would be
reasonable, an undertaking on the part of the tenant to reinstate
the premises in the condition in which they were before the improvement
was executed."
"No court, as I hope and believe, will
ever hold that under s 19(2) a landlord must consent to the hideous
degradation of the front of his building by a sheet of plate glass
and be satisfied by a money payment for the loss of graceful eighteenth
century buildings."
18 This subsection reads as follows: Back
19
For further discussion, see Woodfall (supra, note
3) para 11.254. Back
20
Supra, note 3, para 11.262. Back
21
[1938] Ch 883 at 907 per Slesser LJ and 911 per
McKinnan LJ. Back
22
Woodfall (supra, note 3) para 11.262. Back
23
[2001] 3 WLR 2180 at 2182-3. For further discussion, see Woodfall
(supra, note 3) paras 11.140 and 11.141. Back
24
International Drilling Fluids v Louisville Investments
(Uxbridge) [1986] Ch 513 at 520 per Balcombe LJ and Houlder
Bros v Gibbs [1925] Ch 575 at 587 per Sargant LJ. Back
25
Bickel v Duke of Westminster [1977] QB 517 at 524
per Denning MR. Back
26
Ashworth Frazer v Gloucester CC [2001] 3 WLR 2180
at 2183. See also ibid at 2201 where Lord Rodger observed
that: "Seeing that the circumstances are infinitely various,
it is impossible to formulate strict rules as to how the landlord
should exercise his right of refusal". Back
27
Pimms Ltd v Tallow Chandlers Co [1964] 2 QB 547
at 564 per Danckwerts LJ. Back
28
Shanly v Ward [1913] 29 TLR 714. Back
29
Shepherd v Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corp
[1872] 20 WR 459, Houlder Bros v Gibbs [1925] Ch
575, Leeward Securities v Lilly Heath Properties
[1984] 2 EGLR 54 and Viscount Tredegar v Harwood
[1929] AC 72. Back
30
See, eg, the passionate words of McKinnan LJ in Lambert
v Woolworth [1938] Ch 883 at 911, though there was no issue
of disability: Back
31
[1993] SLT 987. See also Middletweed v Murray [1989]
SLT 11, where a similar approach was adopted. For more general
discussions of the treatment of disabled people in Land Law cases
see R Edmunds and T Sutton. Who's Afraid of the Neighbours? in
E Cooke (ed) Modern Studies in Property Law: Volume 1, Property
2000 (Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2001) p 133 and A Lawson Land
Law and the Creation of Disability in A Hudson ed New Perspectives
on Property Law: Human Rights and the Family Home (Cavendish,
London, 2003). Back
32
Section 7 of the Disability Rights Commission Act 1999. Back
33
See, eg, ss 8 and 25 of the DDA 1995. Back
34
[1952] Ch 791. Back
35
This point was not addressed by the DRTF but see s 12 of the
Disability Discrimination (Amendment) Bill 2002. Back
36
Section 16. Back
37
Section 27. Back
38
Section 28W (inserted by s 31 of the Special Educational Needs
and Disability Act 2001). Back
39
Chapter 8 "Environment and Housing". The quote is taken
from F Heywood Managing Adaptions (Joseph Rowntree Foundation,
1996). Back
40
ODPM 2003 ibid. Back
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