Sensitive soul that he is, the loathsome Toby Young has been
in touch to take issue with my
latest observations about goings-on at the West London Free School (WLFS),
of which he is CEO. He has also found time to comment adversely upon a
recent piece in the Standard on
WLFS’ expenditure of £9.25 million of taxpayers’ money on an office building in
Hammersmith.
Don't start the vino just yet, Tobes
Sadly for Tobes, these interventions only serve to prompt
more questions, to which I suspect he may be reluctant to provide answers. Let
us turn first to that
building on Bridge Avenue, which, it has been estimated, will provide a
playground space of 40cm by 40cm per pupil. And it won’t be able to accommodate
all the cycles ridden by those who have been estimated to use that transport
mode.
Tobes told the Standard that WLFS “has three schools in Hammersmith – a secondary and two primaries. We
were asked to step up the primaries by the local authority because of the acute
shortage of primary school places in the area thanks to the last government's
short-sighted cuts”. That’s fascinating – suddenly, local authorities have
no say in providing places – when the Tories are in charge.
He went on “Overall,
the cost of setting up the three schools in our multi-academy trust will be far
lower than the amount of money the last government would have spent under its
ludicrously inefficient Building Schools for the Future programme to create
three new schools. The £9.25m figure you mention is less than a third of the
average cost of a new BSF school”. And the bullshit detector sounded.
As another commenter on the article has pointed out, “That £9.25 m for the office block works out
to be £6200 a square metre. In comparison, BSF designed and put up new schools
for £1600 a metre for a building of a comparable size”. Given that there is
more work to do to make Bridge Avenue fit for purpose, it will, if that
estimate is correct, cost four times as much as BSF, not “less than a third”.
So it appears that Tobes’ trousers are well alight. And then
we come to the recent staff problems, which not only included losing a second
headmaster, but also the Senior Tutor of Year 7, who appears not to have yet
been replaced. What happened to Mrs Jo Fernando? She appeared to be one of the
few teachers with significant experience, having
previously put in six years at Mossbourne Academy.
And why were so many of the staff hauled in by Tobes and Co
for an extended chat recently? Why are there so many hockey players among
the staff – including those whose roles have no apparent sporting
connection, including the Data Manager? And what happens when what looks like
an enthusiastic but inexperienced looking crew has to deal with a rather bigger
school?
In the meantime, investigations continue. All information received in confidence.
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