Your Child is Not Naughty. They are Burnt Out.

Threatening a neurodivergent child with attendance fines or forcing them into the car during an autistic meltdown does not cure EBSA; it causes trauma. You must shift the narrative with the school from "unauthorized absence" to "medical inability to attend."

Truancy vs. EBSA: The Legal Reality

Schools and Local Authorities are under immense pressure from the government to hit attendance targets. This often leads them to aggressively pursue parents of neurodivergent children for fines. Here is the legal defense you need to know:

"Unauthorized" Absence

If the school registers the absence as "Unauthorized" (Code O), they are treating it as truancy. This is what triggers the threat of £160 fines and eventual prosecution. You must fight to change this code.

Illness (Code I)

Mental health and severe anxiety are legally classified as an illness. If your child is suffering from EBSA, their absence should be marked as Illness (Code I). A school cannot fine you for a child who is medically unwell.

The Ultimate Shield: Section 19 of the Education Act 1996
If your child is out of school for 15 days or more (consecutive or cumulative) due to illness, the Local Authority has a strict legal duty to step in and provide suitable, full-time alternative education. It is not your job to home-school them unless you formally deregister them (Elective Home Education).

The EBSA Action Plan

If your child is refusing school, you must build a "paper shield" to protect yourself from attendance officers while forcing the system to provide accommodations.

Step 1: Secure Medical Evidence Immediately

A school will argue with a parent, but they rarely argue with a doctor. You need written evidence that your child is suffering from severe anxiety/EBSA.

  • Book an urgent GP appointment (request a double appointment).
  • Explain that the child's mental health is deteriorating due to the school environment.
  • Ask the GP to write a "To Whom It May Concern" letter stating that the child is currently medically unfit to attend school full-time due to severe anxiety/neurodevelopmental burnout.
Step 2: Demand a Reintegration Plan (Reasonable Adjustments)

Under the Equality Act 2010, the school must make "reasonable adjustments" for disabled pupils. If your child has an autism/ADHD diagnosis (or is on the pathway), this applies to them.

Refuse a "forced return" and ask for an EBSA meeting to agree on adjustments, which could include:

  • A temporary part-time timetable (legally, this requires your explicit consent).
  • A "soft start" (arriving at 9:30 AM to avoid the noise of the playground).
  • A permanent "Time Out" pass to leave loud classrooms without asking permission.
  • Dropping non-essential subjects (like assembly or languages).
Step 3: Escalate to an EHCP & Consider EOTAS

If the school cannot make the environment safe, or if the child's burnout is absolute, SEN Support is no longer enough. You must apply for an EHCP (Education, Health and Care Plan).

What is EOTAS?
Education Otherwise Than At School (EOTAS) is a legal package within an EHCP. It means the child remains on the school roll, but the Local Authority pays for them to be educated elsewhere—such as through online tutoring, equine therapy, or specialized mentoring at home.

EBSA Legal Letter Builder

If you have received an aggressive letter from the Attendance Officer or need to officially request a medical absence code, use this tool to generate a legally robust response.

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