Academy cash should be monitored by councils
Following a series of high-profile financial abuses uncovered by whistle-blowers, council leaders are calling for local authorities to oversee academy budgets.
The demand comes after two scandals were uncovered; Kings Science Academy in Bradford where two members were convicted of fraud for transferring £150,000 of government grants into their own bank accounts and the Chief Executive at Perry Beeches Academy in Birmingham paid £1.3m to a third party supplier without any contracts.
The Education industry is already making headlines with issues of excess workload and budget cuts. These cases of fraudulent activity are adding further negativity to an industry already in crisis. Cllr Richard Watts, chair of the Local Government Association children and young people board, said parents had a right to know that “money for teachers and equipment isn’t instead being spent on first-class train tickets or topping up chief executive salaries”. “We are told that academies and free schools are subject to more financial scrutiny than council-maintained schools, yet we keep hearing that millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money, which has been earmarked to make sure our children get a good education, is disappearing into the back pockets of those in charge.”
Cllr Watts raised concerns that many recent abuses of academy finances had been uncovered by whistle-blowers rather than the Education Funding Agency, which is responsible for their financial oversight. “The National Audit Office has raised serious concerns about the ability of the Department for Education to effectively monitor academy trusts’ spending, even before the planned expansion of the academy programme, and we don’t believe it can possibly have effective oversight of spending in more than 20,000 schools,” he said. “Centralising control of schools isn't working; oversight needs to be devolved down to local councils.” Council leaders are urging Education Secretary Justine Greening to restore local oversight of all school finances "providing democratic accountability so that parents and communities can be confident their children aren't missing out". They say the Education Funding Agency, the official body responsible for the financial oversight of academies and free schools, lacks the capacity "to provide the level of scrutiny necessary to ensure value for money and catch out fraudsters". In April, a report by MPs on the Public Accounts Committee raised concerns that the rapid expansion of the academies programme in England had made it difficult to keep track of spending and land. In May, the government abandoned controversial plans to force all England's schools to become academies.
The Department for Education says all academies operate under a strict system of oversight and accountability which is more robust than in council-run schools and ensures any issues are identified quickly. "Unlike other schools, their accounts are scrutinised by an independent auditor and we have considerably more financial information about academies than we ever had for council-run schools," said a spokeswoman. "The academy programme puts control of running schools in the hands of teachers and school leaders, the people who know best how to run their schools. "They also allow us to tackle underperformance far more swiftly than in a council-run system where many schools have been allowed to fail for years."