What to make of the judgement?
First, that the law is applied using common sense rather than strictly "legalistically". While Enfield Council clearly failed to follow all the procedures properly, the judge's sole interest was in assessing whether or not these failures had materially affected the claimant's ability to learn about about the proposals, experience how they affected her during the trial period, and register her views with the council. He concluded that they hadn't.
That doesn't of course excuse the council for these failures, which by the look of it arise from carelessness or sloppiness.
In my view there are a couple of key questions when dealing with controversial proposals:
1. How to balance the benefits of a scheme against its disbenefits (often, but not always, the advantages for one group of people against the disadvantages for another group of people)
2. How relevant is the proportion of supporters of a scheme versus the proportion who oppose it?
Some people take the view that the first question can be answered by collecting and analysing a large amount of data (eg traffic volumes and speeds before and during a trial) and the second by treating a consultation as a vote or referendum.
The judge clearly does not agree with this.
In Para 71 he writes:
The issue was whether it was appropriate to reduce the amount of traffic using the unclassified roads in the QN area and in particular to reduce the amount of traffic using those roads to cross the area and to act with a view to diverting that traffic to the surrounding A roads. Similarly, the advantages and disadvantages of taking that course could be readily identified in general terms. The task of balancing of those advantages (primarily to those living in the area) and disadvantages (primarily but not exclusively to those who sought to cross the area or to drive in and out of it) was a matter of broad judgement rather than of precise mathematical analysis.
And in Para 74 he says:
As already noted the relevant exercise was one of assessing arguments and not of counting heads and there is no basis for concluding that further objections to the same general effect as those already made would or should have caused the Council to exercise its discretion to hold a public inquiry.
After all, even if you had the most complete possible collection of relevant information, it's not possible to devise a mathematical way of, for instance, comparing the effect on someone's mental and physical health of noise and danger from traffic in the streets they have to walk through with the effect on a driver of their journey taking five minutes longer than before. In reality, decision makers can only make a broad judgement based on the priorities that have been set at a political level.
As for a consultation being a vote or referendum, the judge is saying that what matters isn't the number of consultation respondees putting forward a particular objection or argument but how strong or weak that particular argument is compared with other, opposing, arguments.
So, in theory at least, if 99% of respondees said they approved of a proposal, but a single respondee came out with a strong enough reason not to proceed with the proposal, then that single objection should be enough to stop a council going ahead or at the very least force them to revise it.
(There's another reason, not discussed by the judge, why a consultation shouldn't be treated as a vote or referendum, and that's because it's not an accurate way of assessing public opinion. Why this is so is
clearly explained in this article by Dave Hill on his website OnLondon
.)