Commenting on the announcement that 11 of the 21 academies
currently run by the failed Wakefield City Academies Trust have
been re-brokered to new sponsors, Dr Mary Bousted,
Joint General Secretary of the National Education
Union, said:
“Once again the Department for Education has shown complete
disregard for the views of parents and staff in the school
communities that have been so badly let down by the collapse of
the Wakefield City Academies Trust (WCAT). Despite being told
that their school’s sponsor has spectacularly failed, parents
have not been consulted throughout the process. The so-called
‘engagement’ exercise for parents and staff to meet the proposed
new sponsor does not constitute meaningful consultation, with one
trust holding its parents’ meetings in just one location, many
miles from the schools affected. It is no surprise that parents
and staff have no confidence in the academy system and do not
believe that their legitimate concerns are being listened to.
“There are many unanswered questions. We need to know whether the
deficits run up by WCAT have been paid off. Those schools that
loaned money to WCAT, much of it raised by the voluntary activity
of parents, need to be told whether these funds will be
reimbursed. Parents and staff must be given assurances that going
forward the schools will have sufficient funds to provide a high
quality education to all pupils with the staff and resources in
place to do so.
“It is to be hoped that the new Secretary of State for Education,
, looks closely at the events
leading up to WCAT’s failure and asks probing questions about the
failure of the Regional Schools Commissioners to step in sooner.
In addition, there must be a new mechanism for dealing with such
situations in the future. Parents and staff should have the right
to meaningful consultation over the identity of the new sponsor
and they should also have the option of the school being returned
to the local authority family of schools, where democratic
oversight of both academic quality and financial probity can be
better assured.”