Sunday, 9 November 2014
DfE: High Risk Michaela Free School will impact on Crest Academy Boys and Ark Elvin
The Department for Education has just published Impact Assessment for free schools in terms of their impact on neighbouring schools.
The full document is HERE. The assessment is for Copland before it became Ark Elvin. The Gateway Secondary Free School is also planned in the area and is recruiting pupils despite having no premises as yet.
Extract:
The full document is HERE. The assessment is for Copland before it became Ark Elvin. The Gateway Secondary Free School is also planned in the area and is recruiting pupils despite having no premises as yet.
Extract:
Michaela Community School
will provide an equal chance admission to prospective applicants living within
a 5 mile radius of the school through a lottery. The trust want to ensure that
all local pupils have an equal chance of attending the school regardless of
exactly how close to the school they live. However, it is thought that any
impact on secondary schools beyond 2.5 miles from the school will be minimal
and likely to be highly dispersed so the impact on individual schools is likely
to be very small. The free school is therefore unlikely to affect the long term
viability of any secondary school further than 2.5 miles from the free school’s
site.
Based on the assessment
above, opening Michaela Community School has the potential to have a high
impact on the following two secondary schools:
Copland Community
School has a substantial surplus (99
surplus places from a capacity of 1,585). The school has a below average level
of attainment and has an inadequate Ofsted rating. Given it is less than a mile
from Michaela Community School, it is possible that a significant number of
parents may be attracted to the new alternative provider. Lower pupil numbers
would reduce the school’s income and may make it harder to secure improvements.
However, the growing
level of basic need for secondary places in the area (basic need in Brent is
expected to rise to a 986 place shortfall by 2018/19) makes it likely that the school
will remain viable in the long term.
Labels:
Ark Elvin,
Copland Hugh School,
Crest Boys,
DfE,
Michaela
Saturday, 8 November 2014
Blood on the carpet at Brent Civic Centre as senior management jobs slashed-but what about the new jobs created?
In addition to to the posts in red, above the Head of Sports and Parks, Libraries and Heritage and Partnership and Engagement are proposed to be deleted along with the Head of Business Intelligence.
Unusually there are no authors cited on the report (which is available below) but the process will be managed by Interim Chief Executive Christina Gilbert and Human Resources Director Cara Davani.
One high profile casualty could be Fiona Ledden, Director of Legal and Procurement. Ben Spinks, Assistant Chief Executive, has only been in post a short time - since the last restructuring...
As well as the deletion of posts, new posts are to be created. Sharp-eyed insiders have pointed out that a new post of Chief Legal Officer has been ring-fenced to three Hay graded lawyers, which includes Cara Davani's partner, Andy Potts.
None of the other new posts have been ring-fenced. The two Operational Directors in Finance will have to compete for the remaining post.
The abolition of the Environment Department follows the privatisation of most of its service through the controversial Veolia Public Realm contract.
Insiders suggest that a new job, Chief Operating Officer, at Hay 2 (the lower the number the higher the salary)will be extremely sought after - perhaps by Cara Davani herself.
Other jobs created are Operational Director (Strategic Commissioing), Head of Procurement, Operational Director (Community Services), Head of Performance and Programme Management, Chief Legal Officer (see above), Head of Partnerships and Transformation, Head of Culture, Head of Digital Services, Head of Brent Customer Services.
As readers will know one of the regular allegations made by Brent Council workers in comments on this blog is that people are being eased out of their jobs by a variety of methods, often accompanied by gagging clauses, in order to make way for people who formerly worked at Ofsted and Tower Hamlets Council.
Some are asking if this is the most audacious move yet in that strategy.
Labels:
Brent Council,
Cara Davani,
Christine Gilbert,
Fiona Ledden,
restructuring,
senior management
Mahatma Gandhi House converted to flats?
Prior approval is being sought by IDM (Invest Develop Manage) East London to convert Mahatma Gandhi House, formerly Brent Council's housing office, to flats. LINK
The
proposal is for 83 apartments in a mix of unit sizes. The apartments will be
all internal alterations to the existing building with no external alteration.
The
accommodation proposed is:
Ground
floor 6 apartments
1st
floor to 7th floor 11
apartments each
There were rumours some time ago that the building had been ear-marked for the Gateway Free School but was turned down.
Labels:
apartments,
Brent Council,
conversion,
flats,
Gateway Free School,
housing,
Mahatma Gandhi House
Cheese defection to Labour no surprise
![]() |
Barry Cheese (blue lapels) with Lib Dem comrades |
He was one of those, who also included former councillor Ann Hunter, who joined the Lib Dems in disgust at Blair's war-mongering and was impressed by the Lib Dem, and particularly Sarah Teather's opposition.
He still had many 'Old Labour' and trade unionist views and was vociferous on the closure of Central Middlesex A&E and the impact of the bedroom tax. He loudly applauded the SWP's Sarah Cox on the former and spoke out on the bedroom tax when speaking with a visiting group of Swedish councillors.
In June 2013 he surprised many by voting with Labour to give Christine Gilbert an extension as Chief Executive until after the May 2014 local elections, despite the opposition of the then Liberal Democrat leader. Paul Lorber's opposition to the extension. LINK
He was defeated in his ward in the May election and told me a few months ago he had left the Lib Dems.
I think he will find himself on the left of Brent Labour Party on many issues and I hope he will galvanise his new comrades to act on the current Human Resources scandal at Brent Council.
Labels:
Ann Hunter,
Barry Cheese,
Brent Council,
Christine Gilbert,
Labour,
Liberal Democrat,
Paul Lorber
Brent Council CEO Christine Gilbert Announces ‘Whistle Blowing Hotline’
![]() | |||
Christine Gilbert |
Confidential hotline for
concerned staff’ planned.
Guest Blog by 'Gilbert Harding'
Christine Gilbert, perpetual
‘interim’ CEO of Brent Council which, together with HR lead and interpersonal
staff relations role-model Cara Davani, was recently found guilty of racial
discrimination, victimisation and workplace bullying, has announced her plans to set up ‘a confidential whistle-blower hotline so that any staff who
had serious concerns’ could communicate their worries to their bosses.
This would be a great relief to those
many Brent Council employees who have, openly on this blog, privately to Martin
Francis, and most recently and publicly to Private Eye, expressed their
‘serious concerns’ about bullying, victimisation, threats of dismissal,
cronyism, gagging clauses and corruption
at Brent Council’s Civic Centre. Such a
move would be welcomed as an appropriate intervention by a leader wanting to
find out what was really going on in her organisation with a view to turning a
troubled situation round in an open and transparent way.
Slightly disappointingly, however, Ms
Gilbert made the whistle-blower announcement quoted above not recently but a
whole 6 years ago on December 10th 2008 to a Commons Select Committee
and in relation to her then job as Head of Ofsted (the previous employer also
of Cara Davani, Clive Heaphy and Ark Academies employee Dame Sally Morgan).
(Details HERE )
Nevertheless, Brent Council staff will be feeling
confident that Ms Gilbert’s passionate desire to let some light into the
murkier corners of institutional malpractice will not have faded since her
earlier statement and that her principles remain intact.
Indeed, one
hooded and masked Civic Centre employee was relaxed enough yesterday to tell me, in an unsigned
encrypted message smuggled out past a cordon of G4S security personnel and
hidden in a camouflage-pattern green and
brown envelope : ‘I think I can
speak for all my anonymous colleagues when I say that I believe Ms Gilbert’s
earlier interest in openness and transparency and her very real and publicly
declared desire to tap into the honest, uncensored and unintimidated experience
of the people she leads, still burn as brightly
now in 2014 as they did in 2008.’
A statement from Ms Gilbert on plans for a new
updated whistle-blower hotline is now expected. But perhaps not for another 6
years.
Alternatively, less patient Civic Centre
whistle-blowers may find it more productive to communicate their serious
concerns more urgently to Private Eye's 'Rotten Boroughs' contact here:
(Ms Gilbert was unavailable for comment).
Labels:
Brent Coluncil,
Cara Davani. Clive Heaphy,
Christine Gilbert,
confidential,
Ofsted,
Private Eye,
Sally Morgan,
Tower Hamlets,
whistle blower
Friday, 7 November 2014
FA cap ticket sales for England Women's match at Wembley due to line closures
With ticket sales at 55,000 for England vs Germany on Sunday November 23rd the FA have stopped sales of tickets for what will be the highest attendance ever for an England women's football match in the UK, although more than 75,000 watched the Great Britain women's team during the 2012 Olympics.
The cap is a result of both the Metropolitan and Jubilee lines being closed on that weekend and their replacement by buses.
This normally results in confusion on normal weekends with tourists from Wembley's many hotels trying to lug multiple heavy suitcases on to the replacement buses.
Brent Council needs to ensure that TfL is publicising alternative public transport routes well ahead of the match.
One can't but think that the women's game fans are getting second class treatment from TfL and the FA.
Comments requested on changes to Old Oak/Park Royal Development Corporation area
Message from proposed Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation
The
Mayor of London held a public consultation on the proposed
establishment of a new Mayoral Development Corporation for Old Oak and
Park Royal, which ran from June 18 to September 24, 2014.
The proposed Mayoral Development Corporation would support regeneration
across the area including delivery of new transport infrastructure,
24,000 new homes, 55,000 new jobs and the protection of Wormwood
Scrubs.
During this public consultation over 300 comments were received and in response two boundary amendments are now proposed.
These
proposed boundary amendments include removal of land to the west of the
A406 in the London Boroughs of Brent and Ealing, and land to the south
of the Wormwood Scrubs in the London Borough
of Hammersmith and Fulham.
More
information on the proposed Mayoral Development Corporation and the
proposed revisions to the boundary are available on the Greater London
Authority website at
https://www.london.gov.uk/priorities/planning/consultations
You can provide your comments either via email to
oldoakmdc@london.gov.uk,
or in writing to the proposed Old Oak & Park Royal Development
Corporation, Post
Point 18, Greater London Authority, City Hall, Queens Walk, London SE1
2AA. Paper copies are available upon request by contacting either of the
addresses above.
This additional consultation will run from November 5 until 5pm on Wednesday November 26, 2014.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)