UK Parliament / Open data

Education Bill

Proceeding contribution from Kevin Brennan (Labour) in the House of Commons on Monday, 14 November 2011. It occurred during Debate on bills on Education Bill.
The Government made it clear during the Commons stage that they wished the academies to be subject to the admissions code. We welcomed that at the time and I am happy to welcome it now, because any state school should have a fair admissions policy. Any school funded by the taxpayer should admit pupils on a fair basis in accordance with the code. We therefore welcome the extension of the code to academies and the clarification of that by the Government, rather than relying on funding agreements in order to achieve that. One of the innovations of the Bill that we debated is the change to the powers of the schools adjudicator. Currently, when an admissions authority is found to be in breach of the code, the adjudicator can rectify any flaws with immediate effect, but following the passage of the Bill, the adjudicator will be able to make only ““binding”” decisions, which the admissions authority will be obliged to implement. Ministers have already made it clear that the purpose of that change is to emphasise the importance of schools taking responsibility for their own actions, but it should not allow them the scope to avoid those responsibilities or to frustrate parents who have made a successful complaint and have a legitimate expectation that matters will be put right promptly. The draft version of the admissions code was pretty clear. Paragraph 3.1 stated:"““The admission authority must revise their admission arrangements immediately to give effect to the Adjudicator's decision.””" That was the original version of the code issued by the Minister, which was pretty clear and unambiguous, as it should be. However, I was dismayed to read in the revised version of the draft code, published 10 days ago, that paragraph 3.1 has been changed. It now states:"““The admission authority must where necessary revise their admission arrangements as quickly as possible and no later than 15 April following the decisions (i.e. the deadline for determination of admission arrangements) to give effect to the Adjudicator's decision.””" It is not clear from reading out those two sentences, but there is an important difference in their visual presentation. In the first sentence the word ““must”” is rendered in bold, whereas in the second sentence it is in plain text and ““15 April”” appears in bold. The proper sense of urgency and compulsion seems to have been replaced by one of contingency and delay. Although the second sentence states ““as quickly as possible””, which is a weaker statement, the eye is drawn to ““15 April””. Bearing in mind that the deadline for objections has been brought forward by a month to 30 June—a sensible change that we support—that means that there could be a delay of 10 months or more before a decision is implemented, which is simply unacceptable. It is not necessarily for the legislation or the new code to undermine the effectiveness of the office of the adjudicator in a wholly unnecessary attempt to provide for circumstances that have not proved problematic under previous arrangements, so our amendment would put it beyond doubt that, where changes are required in response to valid objections, they must be implemented in time to benefit those who made them. On constituting governing bodies, to which the Minister referred, it might be helpful if he offered some clarification. Our amendment was intended to make it absolutely clear what the Government's amendments mean in relation to staff on governing bodies. In Committee, the Minister said:"““I am cautious about prescribing centrally the basis on which governing bodies should appoint people.””––[Official Report, Education Public Bill Committee, 31 March 2011; c. 811.]" Having had time to consider the matter, the Government and the Minister appear to have changed their minds completely. If that is the case, we welcome it. Will the Minister confirm that he now thinks that more than one member of staff could be a member of a governing body, which might help us in relation to our amendment? If he does so now, he might not need to later.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
535 c599-600 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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