A state-aided Charedi school in Hackney which insists on a strict dress code for parents of applicants has been told it cannot ask them to avoid “brightly coloured” clothing because the definition is not clear enough.
The Office of the Schools Adjudicator partly upheld a complaint against the entry policy of the Yesodey Hatorah Senior Girls School because some conditions did not meet the requirements for these to be objective, clear or fair.
In his published decision, the OSA’s Dr Bryan Slater said “I think it probable that most people would agree that some objects one could imagine were brightly coloured, but that it is not possible to know where the dividing line between ‘bright’ and ‘not bright’ would be drawn by all people.”
He dismissed several objections against the school made by an unidentified complainant, including that its admissions policy breached equalities law.