Thursday, 1 March 2018
Brent school closures today
Reflecting health and safety concerns regarding school sites and the difficulties some staff have in getting into work from outside London, the following schools are closed today. Most schools now have a text service to inform parents and also use Twitter and website announcements. Brent Council receive updates from schools and places them on their website HERE:
• Alperton Community School for years 7-9
• Anson Primary
• Ark Franklin Primary Academy
• Ashley College
• Barham Primary School
• Brent River College
• Carlton Vale Infants School
• Capital City for years 7-9
• Convent of Jesus and Mary Language College
• Crest Academies closed for years 7,8,9,10 and 12
• Chalkhill Primary School
• College Green Nursery School
• Curzon Crescent Nursery School and Children’s Centre
• Donnington Primary School
• Elsley Primary School
• Fawood Nursery School and Children’s Centre
• Fryent Primary School
• John Keble School
• Kilburn Grange School
• Kilburn Park Junior Foundation School
• Kingsbury Green Primary School
• Lyon Park PrimarySchool
• Malorees Infants and Juniors School
• Manor Special School
• Mitchell Brook Primary School
• Mora Primary School
• Newfield Primary School
• Newman Catholic College
• Oliver Goldmsith Primary School
• Our Lady of Lourdes RC Primary School
• Phoenix Arch School
• Preston Park Primary School
• Princess Frederica C of E VA Primary School
• Queens Park Community School for years 7-9
• Salusbury Primary school
• St Andrew and St Francis Primary School
• St Marys CE Primary School
• Sudbury Primary School
• Uxendon Manor
• Wembley Primary School
• Alperton Community School for years 7-9
• Anson Primary
• Ark Franklin Primary Academy
• Ashley College
• Barham Primary School
• Brent River College
• Carlton Vale Infants School
• Capital City for years 7-9
• Convent of Jesus and Mary Language College
• Crest Academies closed for years 7,8,9,10 and 12
• Chalkhill Primary School
• College Green Nursery School
• Curzon Crescent Nursery School and Children’s Centre
• Donnington Primary School
• Elsley Primary School
• Fawood Nursery School and Children’s Centre
• Fryent Primary School
• John Keble School
• Kilburn Grange School
• Kilburn Park Junior Foundation School
• Kingsbury Green Primary School
• Lyon Park PrimarySchool
• Malorees Infants and Juniors School
• Manor Special School
• Mitchell Brook Primary School
• Mora Primary School
• Newfield Primary School
• Newman Catholic College
• Oliver Goldmsith Primary School
• Our Lady of Lourdes RC Primary School
• Phoenix Arch School
• Preston Park Primary School
• Princess Frederica C of E VA Primary School
• Queens Park Community School for years 7-9
• Salusbury Primary school
• St Andrew and St Francis Primary School
• St Marys CE Primary School
• Sudbury Primary School
• Uxendon Manor
• Wembley Primary School
Dogs deployed at Village School as governors make decision to academise
It appears The Village School governing body decided by a majority to support academisation to form a Multi Academy Trust at last night's meeting which which was marked by the extraordinary decision to deploy dogs to keep staff and members of the public out of the meeting.
This is the statement from the NEU released late yesterday:
Today, 28th
February NEU members of staff and supporters gathered in Arctic conditions
outside The Village school in Brent to express their opposition to the proposed
academy. Despite the weather the Governors meeting to decide on whether to
convert or not went ahead. Staff were
prevented from going inside as the premises were in ‘lockdown’. This was the
description given by one of the security guards, with dogs at the ready, who
had been brought in by the headteacher, Kay Charles.
Staff governors and Reps struggled to get past the dog handlers into the governors' meeting.
Staff governors and Reps struggled to get past the dog handlers into the governors' meeting.
The NEU
strikers’ response was to sing even louder and a new song was quickly added to
their imaginative repertoire, “Who
brought the dogs in? Kay, Kay, Kay, Kay, Kay, Who paid the bill? We, we, we, we
did”. Brent Councillor Jumbo Chan addressed the protestors praising their
stand and bringing the support of the Brent Council leader Muhmmed Butt, Barry
Gardiner and Dawn Butler, both Brent Labour MPs and the local Labour Party.
The previous
day, NEU staff, both teachers and support staff were on strike yet again to
prevent their school becoming an academy. Joining them on the picket and
supporting demonstration was Kevin Courtney, Joint NEU General Secretary. He brought
solidary from the 450,000 members of NEU.
We heard yesterday
that secondary academy Heads in Brent have sent a letter supporting the
Executive Headteacher Kay Charles in her move to privatise this outstanding
special school. Perhaps they are lining up to join the Multi Academy Trust and
thereby possibly get a position in it where they earn more money?
A letter
before action has been sent to Sandra Kabir, Chair of Governors, disgracefully
defying the Labour line although still the Brent Labour Group Whip. Governors
have voted by a majority for the Multi Academy Trust. Legal action will likely
soon follow.
When the
management of a school calls in dog vans because staff are peacefully
protesting against academisation, you know they have lost the argument.
Democracy and consultation academy style.
Labels:
academy conversion,
Brent Council,
dogs,
MAT,
NEU,
The Village School
London Mayor supports plans for West London Orbital Rail that will run through Old Oak, Harlesden, Neasden and Cricklewood
Click on images to enlarge |
The West London Orbital has now been incorporated into the revised Mayor''s Transport Strategy.
Congratulations John.
Labels:
Brent,
John Cox,
London Mayor,
Overground,
Sadiq Khan,
TfL,
West London Orbital Rail
Wednesday, 28 February 2018
Dog units deployed at The Village School as governors meet to make academisation decision
The Village School in Kingsbury appear to have hired dog units which are on site now, allegedly to keep staff off the premises when tonight's governing body meeting makes a decision on whether to convert the school into an academy to form a Multi-Academy Trust with Woodfield School.
Brent North MP, Barry Gardiner, had previously urged the governing body to hold their decision making meeting in public.
Labels:
Barry Gardiner,
dogs,
The Village School,
Woodfield School
Tonight's Wembley Central and Alperton Residents' Association meeting cancelled.
The meeting of the Wembley Central and Alperton Residents' Association that was to be held tonight LINK has been cancelled because of the cold and icy weather.
I will post details of the new date when I have them.
I will post details of the new date when I have them.
Brent Council answers Cllr Duffy's asbestos queries
Brent Council has responded further to Cllr Duffy's queries about the Paddington asbestos issue following the statement made at Monday's Full Council meeting:
The
independent testing that was done confirmed that the level of asbestos at the
site is below the scientific detection level at 0.001%. This is consistent with
background levels for this substance in soil in urban areas. The asbestos that
you refer to as having been removed in May was found in a total of 30kg of
mixed soil that was taken for testing. This subsequently confirmed the presence
of asbestos at that time. It would be very inaccurate and misleading to suggest
the low levels that were subsequently recorded over the wider site had been
engineered as a consequence of the removal of this 30kg of mixed soil in May.
The
extended audit investigation that is underway is seeking to establish the
pathway, if any, of the asbestos that has been detected in the soil at trace
levels at Paddington Old Cemetery. This will also determine whether there were
any operational failings with respect to the transfer of the soil from
Carpender’s Park in 2015 and whether that is actually relevant.
Your
reference to 60kg of asbestos having been found at Carpender’s Park must again
be challenged. A total of 60kg of mixed soil was removed at that time. It was
thought the soil might contain a piece of asbestos.
It
would also be misleading and potentially very hurtful to suggest that customers
have paid £3k to have their relatives buried in builders’ rubble at Paddington
Old Cemetery. The re-opening of graves has been undertaken by specialist teams
as a precaution until the facts of this matter have been firmly established. We
are now clear that the level of asbestos in the soil at the graves is at
background levels, similar to that likely to be found in any garden in Brent.
The
council has committed to consulting with the school and the workers at the site
and to concluding this matter in a measured and transparent way. Further
decision making will be based on the facts that have been established and we
will seek to implement pragmatic solutions that are agreed with the various
stakeholders.
The
council has no plans for compensating grave owners. Asbestos is a
naturally-occurring substance which has been detected at the cemetery at levels
that are below 0.001%, and which would not draw regulatory sanction or be of
any interest to the HSE. Given the concentrations encountered are typical of
urban background levels, the council will carefully consider what action is
merited in this case and any other cases where the contamination is present at
such low concentrations. This will be considered in the context of previous
decisions where Local Authorities have, under their statutory powers (Part 2A
of the Environmental Protection Act 1990) determined that other sites including
those with much higher concentrations of asbestos do not meet the threshold for definition as
Contaminated Land.
Labels:
asbestos,
Brent Council,
John Duffy,
Paddington Cemetery
Mili Patel accuses Cllr Warren of abusing his position, fueling fear and intimidating nursery
If the last Full Brent Council meeting was a curtain raiser was the May local elections it looks as if things are likely to get pretty nasty.
Cllr Mili Patel, lead member for children and families, is not well known for speaking at council meetings, but used the presentation of a petition about the College Green open space to launch an excoriating attack on Cllr John Warren, leader of the Conservative group.
College Green is, after all, in Warren's ward and he had made a speech in support of residents after Jim Hogan had spoken to the petition. Cllr Warren said that residents felt they had welcomed the College Green Nursery School into the open space but it now seemed to them that the nursery was stabbing them in the back by wanting to erect a screen around the open space. He said residents hadn't wanted to set up a petition but the nursery had refused to engage with them about the issue. The petition had been a last resort. In a conciliatory tone he asked for Mili Patel to agree to a meeting between the scouts who use the open space, the nursery and the College Green Preservation Society to resolve the issue as residents felt that this was a potential land grab. Residents didn't want a 'Berlin Wall' around the space. He asked that in her response Cllr Patel constructively engage so that residents fears could be put to rest.
Cllr Patel responded by justifying the fence on safeguarding grounds and claiming that the council had engaged with residents but they and the Preservation Society had not attended the last meeting about the positioning of the fence. The issue was now that of the screening off of the area.
She then went on:
A somewhat stunned Cllr Warren pointed out that he had never said he regarded safeguarding as 'crumbs.'
Cllr Patel by concentrating her attack on Cllr Warren failed to address the issues that Jim Hogan of College Green Preservation Society had made in a cogent speech. He said the open space had been there for more than 100 years and enjoyed by the scouts for 50 years. In 1995 they had supported a nursery (now College Green Nursery School) moving on to the open space to preserve it. A 6ft 8inch fence had been erected around the open space by the nursery and they then fixed a screen around the perimeter of the fence - residents had got them to remove the screen.
Hogan said residents were vehemently opposed to any attempt to screen off the space and wanted the council to make an agreement that this would not be done. Hogan said that a screen would run counter to the council's own guidelines and cited:
Cllr Mili Patel, lead member for children and families, is not well known for speaking at council meetings, but used the presentation of a petition about the College Green open space to launch an excoriating attack on Cllr John Warren, leader of the Conservative group.
College Green is, after all, in Warren's ward and he had made a speech in support of residents after Jim Hogan had spoken to the petition. Cllr Warren said that residents felt they had welcomed the College Green Nursery School into the open space but it now seemed to them that the nursery was stabbing them in the back by wanting to erect a screen around the open space. He said residents hadn't wanted to set up a petition but the nursery had refused to engage with them about the issue. The petition had been a last resort. In a conciliatory tone he asked for Mili Patel to agree to a meeting between the scouts who use the open space, the nursery and the College Green Preservation Society to resolve the issue as residents felt that this was a potential land grab. Residents didn't want a 'Berlin Wall' around the space. He asked that in her response Cllr Patel constructively engage so that residents fears could be put to rest.
Cllr Patel responded by justifying the fence on safeguarding grounds and claiming that the council had engaged with residents but they and the Preservation Society had not attended the last meeting about the positioning of the fence. The issue was now that of the screening off of the area.
She then went on:
However the agenda for Cllr Warren was to bring it full Council rather than having a meeting outside. Brent Labour takes its responsibility for safeguarding very seriously. We know from previous comments that you see safeguarding as 'crumbs'. You are taking the opportunity to take advantage of the impending local elections, perhaps you're running scared. I ask you to stop abusing your position and fuelling the residents with fear and also the College Green Nursery with intimidation and actually working with your community and get the group together.More calmly she agreed with Warren that they could get the group together and organise a meeting.
A somewhat stunned Cllr Warren pointed out that he had never said he regarded safeguarding as 'crumbs.'
Cllr Patel by concentrating her attack on Cllr Warren failed to address the issues that Jim Hogan of College Green Preservation Society had made in a cogent speech. He said the open space had been there for more than 100 years and enjoyed by the scouts for 50 years. In 1995 they had supported a nursery (now College Green Nursery School) moving on to the open space to preserve it. A 6ft 8inch fence had been erected around the open space by the nursery and they then fixed a screen around the perimeter of the fence - residents had got them to remove the screen.
Hogan said residents were vehemently opposed to any attempt to screen off the space and wanted the council to make an agreement that this would not be done. Hogan said that a screen would run counter to the council's own guidelines and cited:
- reduction of the sight lines of pedestrians crossing the busy junction
- impact of the loss of outlook by residents
- traffic safety
- effect on pedestrians
- effect on the character of a protected area
- effect on open spaces and nature conservation
Let's not let that happen at College Green. The nursery refused to meet residents to discuss their concerns. Let College Green Nursery School show some respect for their neighbours. Let us enjoy the view of the open space which has never been part of their property. Let's get an agreement signed by Brent Council preventing the screening of the open space. It won;t cost the council a penny. We don't want to have to start another petition after waking up to find a screen has been put up around the open space.Let's hope that the upcoming election does not stop this issue being resolved.
There are very few open spaces left in Brent and they are constantly under attack. Most of our front gardens have disappeared as a result of off-street parking. Our open space contributes to the well-being of local residents.
We want to walk around College Green to enjoy looking at the sun going down behind the magnificent oak tree planted by the scouts in 1967. We want to watch the crows, foxes etc.
What is the meaning of community? We don't want College Green hidden from our view or stolen from us. We want to enjoy it. A simple agreement between the scouts, the nursery school and Brent Council.
Labels:
College Green,
College Green Nursery School,
Jim Hogan,
John Warren. Brent Council,
Mili Patel
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