News

EXCLUSIVE: Early years provider fined for running illegal nursery

Inspection
Ofsted has prosecuted a provider for operating a nursery in East London illegally, after a tip-off.

It has subequently come to light that the nursery received more than £40,000 in local authority funding from the London Borough of Newham, which was under the impression that the setting was still registered.

Michael Munilu Senyonjo was found guilty of running Winsor Park Nursery between November 2014 and April 2016.

It is the first time for a number of years that Ofsted has taken an unregistered provider to court.

The case was heard at Thames Magistrates’ Court on 30 May. The defendant was charged with two offences: providing childcare for children aged from birth to five, and providing childcare for children aged five to eight.

The defendant entered not guilty pleas to both charges but was found guilty after trial. Mr Munilu Senyonjo was fined £100 for each offence and ordered to pay £1,000 costs.

The judge stressed to Ofsted that he wanted to impose a heavier fine but this was not possible because of the defendant’s financial situation.

Ofsted became aware of the situation after an anonymous source reported that the business had been dissolved, thus invalidating its registration and insurance. It was dissolved in November 2014 but the nursery continued to operate until it was closed by Ofsted in June 2016.

Mr Munilu Senyonjo had previously run Keystone Nursery on the same site. This setting was rated ‘requires improvement’ at its last inspection in March 2013. Mr Munilu Senyonjo had resigned the registration for this setting and then registered the Winsor Park Nursery at the premises.

On visiting the nursery, Ofsted found out that the registration for Winsor Park was no longer valid and closed it down with immediate effect. The inspector told the provider that he had to stop operating immediately and he complied.

The nursery contacted the children’s parents to make them aware of this. Ofsted then visited again to check the setting was not still operating.

Ofsted is looking into various reports of people providing unregistered care.

Register now to continue reading

Thank you for visiting Nursery World and making use of our archive of more than 35,000 expert features, subject guides, case studies and policy updates. Why not register today and enjoy the following great benefits:

What's included

  • Free access to 4 subscriber-only articles per month

  • Unlimited access to news and opinion

  • Email newsletter providing activity ideas, best practice and breaking news

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here