Academy chain axed in head's pay scandal
Ted Woodley, Birmingham Central Socialist Party
The poster boy for the 'academy' system has fallen from grace, in a scandal which exposes the dangers of Tory backdoor privatisation plans.
Birmingham's most famous 'super-head', Liam Nolan, is rarely out of the news. But this latest scandal has rocked his firm, 'Perry Beeches the Academy Trust', which runs several schools in the city.
Perry Beeches had been due to open two more schools by 2017. Now, the Department for Education is going to strip the firm of five of its schools. But, having learned nothing, it will hand them over to yet another academy chain - this time run by a senior Coventry Labour councillor, Blairite David Kershaw.
Teachers and the Socialist Party have warned from the off that academies and 'free schools' hand our children's education over to unaccountable profit-seekers.
There is no credible evidence that standards are higher than in council-run schools. Academies also place senior managers, often anti-union bullies, on a pedestal, and pay them bloated salaries.
One of Nolan's free schools was placed in 'special measures' by schools inspector Ofsted - only 20 months after opening. Despite this, the Tories and wider political establishment continued to laud him as an educational crusader, single-handedly driving up standards.
Prime Minister David Cameron has praised him, and Birmingham Labour MP Jack Dromey described him on Twitter as "one of Britain's finest heads".
However, following an investigation, the government's Education Funding Agency has revealed the lengths to which Nolan has gone to line his own pockets.
For his role as 'executive headteacher', Nolan gets £120,000 a year.
But he is also the chief executive officer of the multi-academy trust. Instead of drawing a salary for this role, during the last two years the trust made payments totalling £160,000 to a company called 'Nexus' to supply a CEO.
Nexus then subcontracted this 'work' to another company called Liam Nolan Ltd - whose sole director is... you guessed it!
It gets worse. The report goes on to reveal that the trust handed over £1.3 million to Nexus over two years "without a written contract or a formal procurement exercise to demonstrate value for money."
How can all this be explained? You need to ask the trust's accounting officer. However, this post is also held by the same Liam Nolan. How does he find the time to teach anything?
Stink
The stink continues as even the trust's chair of governors had "joint business interests" with a director of Nexus. This was not disclosed in the register of interests.
Nolan defended himself by telling the BBC last week: "I'm a teacher not a businessman." You'd be forgiven for thinking otherwise.
He has even stated in the past that he considers himself underpaid. "Compared to other industries whose bosses run similar budgets I would say the salary is low in comparison," he told the Birmingham Mail in 2014.
In a separate case, the trust has been ordered to repay over £118,000 after wrongly claiming money for free school meals.
The Tories intend to scrap democratically elected governors and council oversight of schools entirely by 2022. The Socialist Party opposes this. We fight for schools to be publicly owned and run, under the democratic control and management of teachers, parents, students and the local community.
Donate to the Socialist Party
Finance appeal
The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.
The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.
The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.
- The Socialist Party's material is more vital than ever, so we can continue to report from workers who are fighting for better health and safety measures, against layoffs, for adequate staffing levels, etc.
- When the health crisis subsides, we must be ready for the stormy events ahead and the need to arm workers' movements with a socialist programme - one which puts the health and needs of humanity before the profits of a few.
Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.
We therefore urgently appeal to all our viewers to click here to donate to our Fighting Fund.
In The Socialist 30 March 2016:
Socialist Party news and analysis
Teachers and school students march against forced academies
Academy chain axed in head's pay scandal
Disabled activists shame tory cutters
International socialist news and analysis
Belgium: Far right attack vigil for Brussels victims
Kazakhstan: Treatment of political prisoners condemned
European Union referendum
Why socialists should vote to leave the EU
Vote against the EU - but no unity with Tories or UKIP
Socialist Party workplace news
Solidarity with junior doctors
NUT to ballot for action over academies
Museum workers strike to defend pay
Greenwich labour councillors given the red card
Lambeth: Librarians walk out over cuts and privatisation
Tube workers' strike shuts Piccadilly Line
Socialist Party reports and campaigns
'No forced academies' demonstrations
Swansea: Fascist thugs made to look pathetic
All you need is love - and a stall!
Socialist Party comments and reviews
Featured letter: 'Universal Jobmatch' con: 'Rabbit trail' of recurring, non-existent job ads
Enter Shikari review: A kaleidoscope of colour
Socialist Party feature
Fighting the great tax robbery: taxes and regulation or socialist nationalisation?
Home | The Socialist 30 March 2016 | Join the Socialist Party
Subscribe | Donate | Audio | PDF | ebook



Printable version
01/05/21


|



