Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government cuts more red tape to simplify college funding

    PRESS RELEASE : Government cuts more red tape to simplify college funding

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 20 July 2010.

    Further moves to reduce bureaucracy and red tape in 16 to 19 education have been announced by the government.

    Schools Minister Nick Gibb said the current funding processes were too complex and had too many layers.

    The new measures will simplify the system by * freeing up LAs to focus on their strategic role in 16 to 19 education * scrapping the need for LAs to set up sub-regional groups and regional planning groups * paying further education colleges, sixth-form colleges and other training providers direct from the Young People’s Learning Agency (YPLA), the change coming in from August

    Nick Gibb and Education Secretary Michael Gove outlined the changes in letters to Councillor Shireen Ritchie, Chair of the Local Government Association’s Children and Young People Board, Marion Davis, President of the Association of Directors of Children’s Services, and other stakeholders.

    Ministers added that further simplification would be introduced for the allocations round for the 2011 to 2012 academic year, with education institutions’ annual funding shares for 16 to 19 being based on the previous year’s student numbers. This will ensure funding follows the student and will end the need for drawn-out planning involving lengthy local negotiations. Institutions will be free to decide on their curriculum, responding to the needs of students and employers.

    Nick Gibb said:

    These measures will cut red tape and allow local authorities to focus on their strategic role as champions of young people, taking action where they identify significant issues in terms of gaps in supply or quality, particularly in ensuring access amongst the most vulnerable groups.

    These moves further underline our principle of freeing up schools and colleges to focus on providing an excellent education to their students.

    Martin Doel, Chief Executive, Association of Colleges, said:

    These changes will be welcomed by colleges as a means by which the funding arrangements for 16- to 18-year-olds can be simplified and in the process costs contained to the benefit of front-line services to students. They are also entirely consistent with the wider government policy of ‘setting colleges free’.

    Local authorities must be key partners in influencing and informing college provision to young people, and in particular vulnerable learners. We look forward to discussing with local authority partners how this might best be achieved.

    Mark Bramwell, Principal of Totton College and Chair of the Sixth-form Colleges’ Forum stated:

    I welcome this announcement. Sixth-form colleges value the relationship they have with local authorities but these decisions tick all the right boxes in terms of a simpler system achieving better value for money. The decisions also reflect the fact that we have a national funding methodology and a national service to students in sixth-form colleges.

    Dr Richard Williams, Chief Executive, Rathbone, said:

    By passing payments and contract management responsibility to the Young People’s Learning Agency, and letting us work in partnership with local authorities, the government is emphasising both the importance of local government in the planning and development of services for young people and ensuring that funding gets to the frontline on a basis which minimises costs.

    The government has already announced outstanding FE and sixth-form colleges will be exempt from routine inspection, that sixth-form colleges will no longer be required to undertake surveys of learners views and that plans to introduce in-year funding adjustments would be scrapped.

     Notes to editors

    Under the current system, LAs are required to form sub-regional groups and regional planning groups to support the planning and commissioning of 16 to 19 education provision. * Sub-regional and regional planning groups * Payment of further education providers. The new system cuts out a layer of bureaucracy, with the YPLA paying sixth-form colleges, further education colleges and other training providers direct, so freeing up local authorities to focus on their strategic role in 16 to 19 education. * The Young People’s Learning Agency. The YPLA supports the training and education of all 16- to 19-year-olds in England.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement from Schools Minister Nick Gibb on Ofqual’s monitoring report of the 2009 key stage 2 tests

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement from Schools Minister Nick Gibb on Ofqual’s monitoring report of the 2009 key stage 2 tests

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 19 July 2010.

    Schools Minister Nick Gibb said:

    Today’s report from Ofqual recognises that overall the testing system is sound and that the results are a fair reflection of each pupil’s level of attainment. Rigorous external assessment provides parents and teachers with valuable objective data and plays a vital role in the accountability system. But I also agree with Ofqual’s report when it says that the current testing system can be improved. That is why we are committed to reviewing national curriculum tests to ensure they are as rigorous as possible and in the best interests of schools, children, parents and the public.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Gibb – ‘It’s time to free up teachers so they can maintain good behaviour’

    PRESS RELEASE : Gibb – ‘It’s time to free up teachers so they can maintain good behaviour’

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 7 July 2010.

    Ministers today put headteachers and teachers back in control of the classroom by stripping away bureaucracy that far too often prevents them from maintaining good behaviour.

    The government will cut red tape and simplify guidance and legislation so that teachers can ensure better behaviour.

    Nick Gibb MP, Minister for Schools, announced today that the government would:

    • end the rule requiring schools to give 24 hours written notice for detentions
    • allow heads and school staff to search pupils for mobile phones, pornography and cigarettes
    • strengthen guidance and legislation if necessary surrounding use of force in the classroom
    • give anonymity to teachers accused by pupils and take other measures to protect against false accusations

    Nick Gibb said today:

    All pupils should show respect and courtesy towards teachers, towards other staff and towards each other. Headteachers help to create that culture of respect by supporting their staff’s authority to discipline pupils. The role of the government is to give schools the freedom and support they need to provide a safe and structured environment in which teachers can teach and children can learn.

    We know that the majority of pupils are well behaved and want others to behave well too. Heads and teachers know best how to improve behaviour but are too often constrained by regulations which inhibit them from maintaining control of the classroom. Today we are removing red tape so that teachers can ensure discipline in the classroom and promote good behaviour.

    Teachers should feel confident in exercising their authority, and pupils should not have to suffer disruption to their learning caused by the poor behaviour of others.

    The government is removing the ban on same-day detentions, giving heads and teachers a stronger deterrent against poor behaviour. Currently, the law gives teachers the power to put pupils in detention, but only if the school gives their parents 24 hours’ notice in writing. In future each school will be able to decide what notice to give and how to inform parents.

    Currently headteachers and authorised school staff only have the statutory power to search without consent anyone who is suspected of carrying a knife or other weapon. Alcohol, controlled drugs, and stolen property will be added from 1 September 2010. Under the changes announced today we plan to extend the list this autumn to include:

    • personal electronic devices such as mobile phones, MP3 players and cameras
    • legal highs
    • pornography
    • cigarettes
    • fireworks

    We will introduce further legislation to allow teachers to search for any item which could cause disorder or pose a threat to safety.

    The government will also issue simplified guidance about the use of force for safety or restraint. Schools should not have ‘no touch’ policies and teachers should feel able to use force when they need to.

    Reporting restrictions will be placed on allegations made about teachers. Ministers wish to put an end to rumours and malicious gossip about innocent teachers which can ruin careers.

    Improving behaviour in schools is a major priority for the government. Further measures, including on tackling bullying, exclusions, and reforming alternative provision will be announced soon. The government will consult teachers and schools representatives on the best way to implement these changes, to ensure that legislation gives teachers the powers they need.

    Nick Gibb added:

    Same-day detentions will give immediacy to pupil discipline and will strengthen the impact detention can have. It is also profoundly wrong that teachers feel they cannot search pupils for items that put pupils and their peers at risk such as drugs, alcohol or fireworks – so we will expand search powers for teachers to put an end to this nonsense.

    It cannot be right that teachers are afraid to use force to constrain out-of-control and disruptive pupils for fear of retribution and malicious allegations. We will strengthen the guidance and legislate if necessary to make it plain when and how teachers might need to use force to control pupils. We want to put an end to rumours and malicious gossip about innocent teachers which can ruin careers and even lives.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Review of early years foundation stage

    PRESS RELEASE : Review of early years foundation stage

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 6 July 2010.

    Children’s Minister Sarah Teather today asked Dame Clare Tickell, Chief Executive of Action for Children, to carry out a review of the early years foundation stage (EYFS) so that it is less bureaucratic and more focused on young children’s learning and development.

    Ministers are concerned that the EYFS framework is currently too rigid and puts too many burdens on the early years workforce, which has led to some of the workforce saying they are spending less time with children, and more time ticking boxes.

    The government has asked Dame Clare, a children and families expert, to make sure the standards that support young children’s learning are based on the best and latest research on children’s development. They want to shift the focus to getting children ready for education and to increasing the attainment of children from deprived backgrounds.

    The review will cover four main areas:

    • scope of regulation – whether there should be 1 single framework for all early years providers
    • learning and development – looking at the latest evidence about children’s development and what is needed to give them the best start at school
    • assessment – whether young children’s development should be formally assessed at a certain age, and what this should cover
    • welfare – the minimum standards to keep children safe and support their healthy development

    Children’s Minister Sarah Teather said:

    I am always impressed by the dedication of professionals who are working hard to give young children the best start in life. They play a vital role in helping children from all backgrounds to have a good start in school and reach their full potential. Professionals deserve to have the freedom to do their jobs and not have to deal with unnecessary bureaucracy.

    It is not right or fair that children from deprived backgrounds that do really well in their early years are overtaken by lower achieving children from advantaged backgrounds by age five. We need good quality early learning for all children and a framework that raises standards, as well as keeping children safe.

    Through this review we want to hear about what is and isn’t working well in the EYFS. We also need to create a fairer and more flexible childcare market that is responsive to parents and the rising numbers of children in childcare settings.

    I am delighted that Clare has agreed to lead this important review. Her knowledge of the needs of children and families, especially those from more disadvantaged areas, as well as the importance of early intervention, means she is well placed to assess the best way to support young children, and free up the system so that it works for both childcare workers and parents.

    Dame Clare Tickell, Chief executive of Action for Children, said:

    There has been a lot of debate in recent years about what young children should be learning before they reach school, and the pressure and burdens this puts on the early years sector.

    It is important that professionals in the early years sector have the time to tackle the important issues – helping children from poorer backgrounds, and those with special needs, as well as giving all children a fun and stimulating learning experience.

    I look forward to conducting this review and to listening to professionals, parents, carers and early years experts. I hope to find a way forward that supports the different approaches to learning and development, so that we have some of the best early years standards in the world.

    The coalition government is committed to investing in the early years, and recently announced the extension of free childcare for all 3- and 4-year-olds to 15 hours a week. The review of the EYFS will ensure that good quality early learning benefits all children, as the government believes this can make a real difference to success in later life. It also has a more significant impact for children from disadvantaged backgrounds.

    Dame Clare will provide a final report in spring 2011. The government will then consult on any proposed changes before they take effect from September 2012.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Next steps on special educational needs and disabilities

    PRESS RELEASE : Next steps on special educational needs and disabilities

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 6 July 2010.

    Speaking at an Every Disabled Child Matters event yesterday, Children’s Minister Sarah Teather, said:

    We want to make sure that the most vulnerable children get the best quality of support and care. Children with special educational needs and disabilities should have the same opportunities as their peers. The system needs to be more family friendly so that parents don’t feel they have to battle to get the support their child needs.

    That is why I will launch a green paper in the autumn to look at a wide range of issues for children with SEN and disabilities. Before then I will be looking at the results of the Ofsted review of SEN we are expecting later this summer, in addition to the many reviews of SEN policy in recent years. I’ll also be listening to the views of parents, teachers and organisations with an interest in this area.

    The system needs to be far more transparent. We need to give parents more choice and involve them in the decision-making process. The green paper will also look at how to manage the transition beyond school so that young people over 16 can get the support they need.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Overhaul to England’s school building programme

    PRESS RELEASE : Overhaul to England’s school building programme

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 5 July 2010.

    Education Secretary Michael Gove today set out a complete overhaul of capital investment in England’s schools.

    Mr Gove said he was making tough, immediate decisions to help get the best value for money.

    Bringing an end to Building Schools for the Future programme (BSF), he said in the light of the public finances, it would have been irresponsible to carry on regardless with an inflexible, and needlessly complex programme.

    And he said it was right to set out a clear way forward for prudent future capital investment in education up to 2015, to flexibly target schools in the worst condition, cut red tape, and tackle urgent demand from rising birth-rates.

    The Chancellor made clear in last month’s budget that existing overall public capital investment plans, put in place by the previous government, would remain with no further cuts.

    The key elements of today’s announcement are that:

    • the government is launching a comprehensive review of all capital investment in schools, early years, colleges and sixth forms. Led by Sebastian James (Group Operations Director of DSG international plc), the review team includes Kevin Grace (Tesco Director of Property Services), Barry Quirk (Chief Executive of Lewisham), John Hood (former Vice-Chancellor of University of Oxford) and Sir John Egan (former Chief Executive of Jaguar and BAA)
    • the review will guide future spending decisions over the next spending review period (from the financial year 2011 to 2012 to the financial year 2014 to 2015). It will look at how best to meet parental demand, make current design and procurement cost-effective and efficient, and overhaul how capital is allocated and targeted.
    • the Department for Education is reducing its end-year flexibility (EYF) requirements by £1 billion to help ensure no additional borrowing this year. This is in line with the government’s plan to reduce the deficit, and the Treasury’s announcement today that departments have agreed to address unrealistic inherited spending commitments for the financial year 2010 to 2011, where funding was reliant on underspends through the EYF system or additional funding from the government’s reserve. The department expects to be able to manage most of this through better financial management and tighter controls. Because of the size of the reduction, however, the department will have to make £156.5 million savings from capital budgets where commitments are no longer affordable.

    The Secretary of State is also announcing today that he will be ending the £972,000 annual funding for the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE) design advice service associated with the BSF programme.

    Sebastian James, Group Operations Director of DSG International plc and chair of the review, said:

    I am delighted to be involved in this vital project and feel very passionately that we can build a schools infrastructure in Britain that is truly world class, while significantly reducing our spending. In my view, success in this review means that we will have found a way to have great schools for our children against a more measured investment backdrop.

    This has also been welcomed by educational organisations with experience of working through the current BSF process.

    Sir Bruce Liddington, Director General of E-Act said:

    The current BSF programme is very bureaucratic, slow and unwieldy and I would welcome a review.

    Aredi Pitsiaeli, Director of Business and Strategic Development at Oasis Community Learning said:

    We welcome the review of the BSF programme as to learn lessons from past experience in order to find a better way of working for the future can only be a good thing.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Gove – New grant to double the number of top teachers in challenging schools

    PRESS RELEASE : Gove – New grant to double the number of top teachers in challenging schools

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 4 July 2010.

    The Secretary of State for Education, Michael Gove, has authorised the expansion of Teach First into secondary schools across the whole country and a new Teach First Primary programme so that children of all ages can benefit from the expertise of our best graduates.

    The £4 million grant to Teach First – a highly successful charity which recruits top graduates from the best universities to work in our most challenging schools – will benefit tens of thousands of children by enabling the charity to double the number of top graduates recruited to the most challenging schools and by expanding the charity’s activities across the whole country.

    The expansion will also enable Teach First to carry out research on how to attract more top maths and science graduates going into teaching. They will also pioneer innovative approaches to developing the leadership skills of undergraduates, in partnership with business, as a way to attract more badly-needed science and stem graduates to join Teach First.

    Teach First plans to expand its Teach On programme to accelerate the progression of its fast growing community of teachers to become senior leaders and head teachers within challenging schools. These alumni – known as ambassadors – will work to bring about systemic change in the life chances of pupils by taking key leadership roles in challenging schools, helping turn around failing schools or starting new ones.

    The Secretary of State Michael Gove said:

    It is unacceptable that just 45 pupils out of 80,000 on free school meals made it into Oxbridge last year. Opportunity has to become more equal, and we are absolutely committed to spending more on the education of the poorest children.

    The countries which give their children the best education in the world are those which value their teachers most highly and where the profession attracts the brightest graduates. Our priority is to deliver robust standards and high quality teaching to all, whatever their background. To do this we must attract highly talented people into education, because the quality of teachers has a greater influence on children’s achievement than any other aspect of their education.

    Teach First has already been successful in attracting some of this country’s most impressive graduates into teaching. Supporting the charity to go further by recruiting even more high quality teachers, and expanding to other areas will help thousands more children across the country.

    Brett Wigdortz, Teach First founder and Chief Executive said:

    Over the last 8 years Teach First has worked with many partners – including schools, universities and businesses – to place more great teachers in the most challenging schools and increase their impact.

    We are very excited that this new support from the government will enable us to extend our reach to every region of England over time, and to begin placing our highly-motivated and qualified teachers for the first time in those primary schools who need them most in areas of highest deprivation.

    In time this investment will allow us to place teachers in 1 in 3 of the most challenging secondary schools and support those teachers towards leadership positions where they can make the most possible difference to the lives of children from poorer backgrounds.

    Since launching in 2002, Teach First has placed increasing numbers of participants in schools each year – 560 entered the programme in June 2010, more than double the 265 in 2005 – and has developed an ambassador community of over 1,200, working to change educational, and life, outcomes for hundreds of thousands of children today.

    Before Teach First, in 2002, only 4 graduates from Oxford University chose a career teaching in a challenging school; in the 2009 to 2010 academic year, 8% of finalists applied to teach in a challenging school through Teach First.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Gibb – ‘Further freedoms for schools and colleges’

    PRESS RELEASE : Gibb – ‘Further freedoms for schools and colleges’

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 24 June 2010.

    The government today announced further moves to free up colleges and schools and remove bureaucracy from the education system.

    School and college leaders welcomed the decisions made by Schools Minister Nick Gibb, who said:

    • schools and colleges would be allowed to choose how many, and which, diploma lines of learning they offered
    • the development of the extended diploma would be stopped
    • routine Ofsted inspections of sixth-form colleges rated outstanding would end – meaning 40% of colleges would be exempt
    • sixth-form colleges would no longer be forced to do surveys of learner views
    • plans to introduce in-year adjustments to 16 to 19 budgets would be dropped, giving greater certainty to institutions.

    On diplomas, Nick Gibb said:

    We want schools and colleges to have greater choice over the qualifications they offer – they know what’s best for their students.

    We want students to be able to sit the qualification that is right for them, whether diplomas, the International Baccalaureate, A levels and GCSEs, or iGCSEs, not to be told by government what they can and cannot take.

    That is why we are removing the unnecessary bureaucracy and cost associated with the requirement that every school offers access to every diploma line, and why we are stopping development of the extended diploma.

    That does not mean young people presently studying for a diploma, or who plan to start one in the future, should think again, and I want to reassure them. We want to see how diplomas work, and learn from them to improve the quality of vocational education in this country.

    It is not the role of government to make sweeping assumptions from the centre about what is best for them, and to introduce unnecessary bureaucracy.

    He added:

    The diploma entitlement forces schools and colleges to offer all lines of learning, and so adds extra layers of complexity and red tape to the whole process, with a great deal of work required on curriculum planning and timetabling.

    Ending it will free schools and colleges to offer the lines of learning they want and that they know will meet the needs of their students. It will allow them to specialise in certain lines if they wish, and it will make it is easier for some centres to provide diplomas.

    We are stopping the development of the extended diploma because it would be an unnecessary burden on schools and colleges, with no clear benefit for young people, who already have the flexibility to take additional qualifications alongside their diploma.

    On freedoms granted to sixth-form colleges, Nick Gibb said:

    We will work to ensure that those sixth-form colleges rated outstanding will no longer be subject to routine Ofsted inspections as long as their performance does not drop, putting them in line with the proposals already announced on outstanding further education colleges and schools.

    We will also bring an end to the prescription on sixth-form colleges to do surveys of learner views – it will now be at the discretion of individual colleges as to whether they undertake them.

    I will also simplify the 16 to 19 allocations process to schools and colleges, by working with the Young People’s Learning Agency, local authorities and sixth-form colleges to strip away bureaucracy.

    As an immediate step, that will include asking the YPLA not to implement ‘in-year’ funding adjustments in the sector, which will make a real difference to colleges in the reduction of bureaucracy – and in providing greater certainty.

    These measures are only part of a longer running programme of red-tape reduction. As such, I hope I continually hear from the Sixth-form Colleges Forum, and its members, as to exactly where we can make improvements in the future.

    David Igoe, chief executive of the Sixth-form Colleges Forum (SFCF), said:

    The SFCF welcomes today’s announcements and in particular the early indications of the government’s commitment to simplification and reducing bureaucracy.

    These proposals are the first step in freeing up colleges, enabling principals and teaching staff to focus on their core purpose of teaching and learning. We look forward to working with the government in identifying further areas where burdens can be removed.

    Dr John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), said:

    Removing the entitlement to all 14 diploma lines is a sensible, welcome decision. ASCL strongly supports diplomas but believes their complex structure can be simplified and this is a move in the right direction.

    It remains the case that schools and colleges will need to continue to work together in order to offer a good range of courses for 14- to 19-year-olds.

    However, heads and principals will be relieved that there is no longer a requirement to offer every diploma at 3 levels in every area.

    Martin Doel, chief executive of the Association of Colleges (AoC), said:

    AoC is pleased to see that the government is committed to supporting diplomas as part of a rich mix of qualifications providing choice for young people. Colleges have invested significant time and resources in the development of their diploma offer and 98% of colleges are planning to offer diplomas from this September. Colleges have the breadth of experience to offer whole diplomas and AoC believes that colleges could become local diploma hubs serving the needs of their educational communities.

    We welcome the freedom from Ofsted inspections for outstanding colleges and, indeed, the general freedoms from constraint that will allow colleges to flourish.

    The government has already indicated an end to Ofsted inspections for outstanding schools, along with those in general further education settings. Earlier this month it announced that maintained schools could now choose whether or not their students take the iGCSE, and said development of the academic diplomas, due to be introduced in September 2011, would stop immediately, saving around £1.77 million instantly, with further savings in future years.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Seven new Social Mobility Commissioners appointed

    PRESS RELEASE : Seven new Social Mobility Commissioners appointed

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 1 September 2022.

    • Minister for Women and Equalities, Liz Truss, appoints seven new commissioners to Social Mobility Commission board
    • The appointments will support Katharine Birbalsingh in her role as Chair of the SMC
    • The new board members will advance the independent work of the SMC following this year’s State of the Nation report

    Dr Raghib Ali, Resham Kotecha, Matthew Goodwin, Ryan Henson, Rob Henderson, Parminder Kohli and Rob Wilson have been appointed to the Board for a period of four years. They’ll make up a new panel of advisors, from diverse ethnic backgrounds, with expertise stretching from academia, to education and business.

    Following the announcement of Katharine Birbalsingh and Alun Francis as the Chair and Deputy Chair of the Social Mobility Commission (SMC), the organisation released its State of the Nation report in June. The report, and accompanying speech by the Chair, have set a new direction for the work of the SMC, which the newly appointed Commissioners will help to advance.

    Minister for Women and Equalities, Liz Truss, said:

    “Everyone in the UK should have the freedom to reach their full potential. These appointments are a positive step forward for equality in this country as we strive to improve social mobility and ensure everyone has the chance to succeed.

    “The combined expertise and experience of the new Commissioners will help the SMC to carry out its important work to ensure a person’s circumstances of birth do not determine outcomes in life.”

    Further Information:

    These appointments were conducted in accordance with the Governance Code on Public Appointments.

    The Social Mobility Commission is an independent statutory body (an organisation created by an Act of Parliament), established by The Life Chances Act 2010.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government takes further steps to address serious council failures in Slough

    PRESS RELEASE : Government takes further steps to address serious council failures in Slough

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 1 September 2022.

    • Local Government Minister Paul Scully expands government intervention in failing council
    • New powers granted to Commissioners who will be given control over recruitment of senior officers at the Council
    • Move comes following report from Commissioners outlining ‘unprecedented’ challenges at Slough Borough Council

    The government will expand its intervention in Slough Borough Council after persistent failure to deliver best value for local taxpayers, Minister Scully will confirm today (1 September 2022).

    A report from the Commissioners submitted in June of this year revealed the Council was facing an “unprecedented” scale of challenge, following years of financial mismanagement, piling debt and poor accounting practices.

    The Council was also plagued by governance issues, and despite the best efforts of Commissioners, insufficient progress had been made to deliver proper value for money for Slough’s taxpayers.

    To ensure Council staff have the best support possible in place, commissioners are now being granted further powers to oversee the recruitment of the Council’s most senior members of staff.

    Local Government Minister, Paul Scully, said:

    The people of Slough deserve a council that can deliver for their needs and drive long-lasting improvements and a brighter future.

    Given the scale of the challenges set out in the Commissioners report, I am granting further powers to Commissioners to help implement much-needed changes.

    I am confident that these expanded powers will support the Council so they can drive forward long-term change and protect hardworking taxpayers.

    In July this year, the Levelling Up Secretary confirmed he was minded-to expand the intervention in Slough. Having considered the representations made after this announcement, the decision to expand the intervention has now been confirmed.

    Lead Commissioner Max Caller CBE said:

    I am grateful to the Levelling Up Minister for confirming the expansion of the Directions and his support for Commissioners’ work at Slough Borough Council.

    There is much to do and no easy answers. Getting the right officer team in place quickly is an important step in the Council’s recovery and in delivering best value for Slough’s taxpayers.

    Further information

    On 1 December 2021, Commissioners were sent into Slough Borough Council to address serious financial and management failures at the request of the former Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.

    On 28 July, the Levelling Up Secretary announced that he was minded-to expand the existing intervention in Slough Borough Council following the Commissioners’ report on the failings in the Council. A period of representations was held which closed on 11 August. The representations received agreed with or were neutral toward the expansion of powers for Commissioners and the Secretary of State has duly granted them.