Tuesday 7 June 2016

MAT used unapproved loans to cover slow EFA payments

Unauthorised loans with a value of £150,000 were taken out by Chapel Street Schools, a multi-academy trust (MAT) which runs six schools. Another loan of £85,000 was also borrowed around the time the initial loans were repaid.

MATs: don't build, it's easier to take over schools

A story in the Manchester Evening News from May says: ' ...the Co-op trust, which had initially expressed an interest, has now told the town hall it would rather take over existing schools under the government’s forced academisation policy, announced in March’s budget. Building a new school is ‘labour intensive’ compared to simply taking over existing ones, it said. It is understood other trusts have taken a similar view.'

MATs to build homes for teachers?

Harris calls for right to build homes for its teachers:
The Guardian (April 16, 2016): 'changes to planning regulations and the offer of government finance would allow Harris and others to build low-cost housing"
And more recently in the Evening Standard (May 24, 2016): 'We want to be empowered by government to build housing on the surplus land some of our schools have, which is currently totally unused.'

FT: MAT model rolled out in prisons

The FT said: 'The introduction of semi-autonomous “reform prisons” will result in groups of prisons being run by a single governor in the same way that academies have turned into chains of schools.' (May 18, 2016)

Supply teacher spending: academy Vs maintained


Figures supplied by DfE in response to a parliamentary question.

Supply teacher spend by local authorities in maintained schools in England
Vs
Supply teacher spend by academy schools in England:

Year
10/11
11/12
12/13
13/14
14/15
Maintained
£906m
£766m
£743m
£812m
£821m
Academies
-
£99m
£211m
£354m
-