One in six secondary schools now an academy, figures show The number of academy schools in England has trebled over the last year to one in six secondary schools, government figures show. Statistics from the Department for Education reveal that the majority of secondary schools are academies in six local authorities. These include Southwark and Bromley, in south London, and Plymouth and Reading. Academies are schools that have opted out of the control of their local authority and may receive funds from charities or corporate sponsors. Under Labour, the academies programme focused on turning weak or underperforming schools into academies. Michael Gove, the education secretary, envisages that the majority of schools are expected to turn into academies in the near future. He has used emergency anti-terrorism legislation to change the law to allow all schools to acquire academy status. Academies can set their own pay and conditions for staff, set aside parts of the curriculum and change the length of the school day. The statistics show that the academy model is far more popular in secondary schools than primaries. Some 547 secondary schools are now academies – 16.5% of the total. But just 82 primary schools are academies – 0.5% of the total. There are now 629 Academies open, compared to 203 in May last year. In London, the south-west and the east of England, schools are particularly likely to become academies. They are least likely to convert to become academies in the north-east of the country. The government said it would now consider applications from schools for children with special needs that wanted to become academies. Lord Hill, minister for schools, said that “by setting good schools free and improving performance in weak schools, we will raise standards for all children no matter what their background”. Academies Schools Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …One in six secondary schools now an academy, figures show The number of academy schools in England has trebled over the last year to one in six secondary schools, government figures show. Statistics from the Department for Education reveal that the majority of secondary schools are academies in six local authorities. These include Southwark and Bromley, in south London, and Plymouth and Reading. Academies are schools that have opted out of the control of their local authority and may receive funds from charities or corporate sponsors. Under Labour, the academies programme focused on turning weak or underperforming schools into academies. Michael Gove, the education secretary, envisages that the majority of schools are expected to turn into academies in the near future. He has used emergency anti-terrorism legislation to change the law to allow all schools to acquire academy status. Academies can set their own pay and conditions for staff, set aside parts of the curriculum and change the length of the school day. The statistics show that the academy model is far more popular in secondary schools than primaries. Some 547 secondary schools are now academies – 16.5% of the total. But just 82 primary schools are academies – 0.5% of the total. There are now 629 Academies open, compared to 203 in May last year. In London, the south-west and the east of England, schools are particularly likely to become academies. They are least likely to convert to become academies in the north-east of the country. The government said it would now consider applications from schools for children with special needs that wanted to become academies. Lord Hill, minister for schools, said that “by setting good schools free and improving performance in weak schools, we will raise standards for all children no matter what their background”. Academies Schools Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Omar Fathi bin Shatwan says members of Libyan leader’s inner circle also want to defect but fear for their lives Libya’s former energy minister has fled to Europe, and says that several other key political figures also want to defect. Omar Fathi bin Shatwan, who was energy minister from 2004 to 2006, said members of Muammar Gaddafi’s inner circle also wanted to leave Libya, but feared for their lives. Shatwan, who also served as industry minister, fled to Malta on Friday from the besieged city of Misrata, the Maltese foreign ministry said. He arrived in the country but his presence had been kept a secret, it said. He said he remained in contact with members of Gaddafi’s government, who found themselves and their families under siege. “Those whose families are outside Libya will flee if they get a chance,” Shatwan said. “But many can’t leave, and all the families of ministers are under siege.” The former minister described how he had witnessed the widespread destruction of Misrata and had seen government forces fire on civilians indiscriminately , during a 40-day period in which he could not leave his home. He finally managed to escape Libya’s third city on a small fishing vessel. “There has been a big bombardment and there is total destruction. After this, they occupied some streets with tanks, and put snipers in the buildings,” he said. He added that government forces were mainly foreign mercenaries, led by a small number of Libyans loyal to Gaddafi. Shatwan is a long-standing figure in Libyan politics, and held various government posts between 1987 and 2006. He returned to his academic career after leaving government in 2007. “At the beginning Gaddafi’s regime was good. The first 10 years saw vast improvements, the middle 20 years less so, and the last 10 years have seen terrible decline,” he said. Shatwan is the most recent political figure to flee Libya. The country’s foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, defected to the UK last week. Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Treasury confirms potential UK contribution to rescue package for Portugal as George Osborne seizes on debt crisis as vindication of his deficit reduction policies Britain could be required to find more than £4bn to help a European bailout of the stricken Portuguese economy, the Treasury has confirmed. The chancellor, George Osborne, seized on Lisbon’s debt crisis to warn that those opposed to the British government’s deficit reduction plans were playing “Russian roulette” with UK sovereignty. The “difficult decisions” taken had brought “credibility and stability” to Britain’s finances, Osborne said. But the prospect of Britain helping to rescue another member of the eurozone on the back of the emergency funding provided to Ireland provoked anger in Conservative ranks. The Portuguese prime minister, José Sócrates, announced on Wednesday that he was following Ireland and Greece in seeking an EU bailout – which analysts say could be up to €80bn (£70bn) – as “the last resort”. The British government argues that it is bound to help under an agreement signed by the former chancellor Alistair Darling in the last days of the Labour government, committing all EU member states to act as guarantors of any emergency funding. However, the leader of the Conservative MEPs in Brussels, Martin Callanan, said the legality of the bailout under the terms of the agreement was “highly dubious”. “Europe is sinking fast under the weight of its own uncompetitiveness and debt,” Callanan said. “It must not be allowed to take the UK with it.” The Eurosceptic Tory backbencher Douglas Carswell questioned claims by current ministers that they had opposed the deal, pointing to a Treasury memorandum suggesting there had been cross-party agreement. The Treasury said the UK was not planning to offer bilateral assistance to Portugal in the way that it did to Ireland. But it confirmed that Britain could be required to provide a loan of up to about £4.4bn – 13.6% of the €37.5bn remaining in the EU “disasters fund” after it was drawn upon by Ireland – as well as 4.5% of any IMF loan. The exact sums will depend on what application is made by Lisbon and how much of the bailout can be absorbed within the eurozone-only fund. In a speech to the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) conference in London, Osborne contrasted events in Greece, Ireland and Portugal with the UK government’s decision to put in place “a credible deficit reduction plan” which had provided a “crucial bedrock of stability”. “If you hear the stories about the cuts and still wonder why our country needs to take these difficult decisions, then look at what is happening around us,” he said. “Today, of all days, we can see the risks that would face Britain if we were not dealing with our debts and paying off our national credit card. “These risks are not imaginary – they are very, very real. Those in our country who deny the urgent need to deal with our deficit are playing Russian roulette with Britain’s national sovereignty. I will not do that.” The shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, accused Osborne of a “desperate piece of scaremongering” and called him a “desperate chancellor who looks out of his depth”. Balls told Sky News: “If anybody is playing Russian roulette with the British economy, it’s George Osborne, taking a huge gamble now without any idea how it’s going to turn out. “That may be good political lines. But it’s very bad economics, and it’s taking huge risks with jobs and businesses and family finances up and down the country. I think he’s got this very, very badly wrong. And he will rue this day, with this blatant politicking.” Osborne told the BCC that while the UK recovery was “choppy”, Britain was “putting its house in order”. “We now have almost the same market interest rates as Germany, despite having a bigger budget deficit than Portugal, Greece and Spain,” he said. He added that the government was “unashamedly pro-enterprise, pro-business and pro-aspiration”, with a central objective of restoring UK competitiveness “after years of decline”. “We need to step up a gear,” he said. “Britain needs to out-compete, outsmart and outpace the rest of the world.” But he warned that “enterprising Britain” could not be build by government alone, urging businesses to help ministers combat the “forces of stagnation who will try to stop the forces of enterprise”. He said these included unions opposed to reforms of the industrial tribunal system, which they claim will weaken workers’ rights to fair treatment. Osborne said the workplace rights of an employee had to be balanced with the rights “not be priced out of the market” in the first place because of the cost burden on business. His speech comes as the government invites businesses and community groups to help “rip up” some of the UK’s 21,000 rules and regulations in a drive to tackle red tape and remove “ridiculous” burdens. T Portugal Europe European Union Economic policy Economics Global economy Tax and spending George Osborne Ed Balls Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Chloe Steward, a 15-year-old girl in Ankeny, Iowa, woke at 3 a.m. to find Benjamin Foster, a consultant for Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-MN), banging on her back door. Foster was arrested and charged with public intoxication and trespassing, according to KCCI . “The Steward family said Foster was drunk and was trying to get home to a friend’s house in Johnston,” the station reported. “They said he vomited in their backyard and scared their daughter.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republicans have been playing the innocent the past couple of weeks as the now-imminent government shutdown began looming closer, even though it was obvious they were taking their cues from Fox pundits and Rush Limbaugh, who were urging them to embrace the concept. Who, us, push for a shutdown? they’ve been saying. Why, it’s the Democrats who’ve been pushing for it, they claim. Well, Mike Pence cleared that up for us yesterday — first in an interview with MSNBC’s Contessa Brewer, then more loudly at a Tea Party gathering organized at the Capitol by those noted astroturfers ‘entrepreneurial advocates’ at Americans for Prosperity: PENCE: It’s time to take a stand. We need to say to liberals, ‘This far and no further.’ To borrow a line from another Harry, we’ve got to say, ‘The debt stops here.’ And if liberals in the Senate would rather play political games and force a government shutdown instead of accepting a modest down payment on fiscal discipline and reform, I say, ‘Shut it down.’ After which, of course, the crowd chanted: “Shut It Down! Shut It Down!” You get the idea of their idea of a workable compromise: Utter defeat for Democrats: The crowd of bussed-in people from Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and other states, repeatedly cheered for a shutdown and for deeper cuts. “A quarter of a trillion [in cuts] won’t be enough,” Rick Mishoe from South Carolina, told TheDC. Yet Pence did not threaten to campaign against any deal cut by Boehner. He didn’t lay down any markers, nor demand any particular level of cuts. Asked afterward if the GOP caucus would gain from a shutdown, he punted, and said that “the politics will take care of themselves.” “It’s not 1995, the American people are more informed and more engaged… The taxpayer will win in any confrontation with big spenders in Washington,” Pence said. Well, as Scott Keyes at ThinkProgress observes : The reason for Boehner’s intransigence is increasingly clear: as Republicans and Democratic lawmakers negotiate, Boehner is giving the Tea Party veto-power. Sen. Chuck Schumer detailed this point while discussing the ongoing negotiations on Good Morning America this week, noting that “The tea party just continues to pull Speaker Boehner further back and back and back. They’re the people who say they don’t want compromise. They’re the people who say they relish a shutdown.” I can’t believe anyone who’s watched Fox or listened to Limbaugh for the past couple of weeks would have any doubt about Republican thinking on the issue. Because that’s obviously what’s being executed here.
Continue reading …Business secretary Vince Cable says increase to £6.08 an hour ‘reflects economic uncertainty’ The national minimum wage is to increase by 15p an hour to £6.08 in October, benefiting almost a million workers, the government has announced. Ministers said they had accepted recommendations from the Low Pay Commission , giving a new adult rate of £6.08, while the statutory minimum for 18- to 20-year-olds will increase by 6p to £4.98 an hour. The rate for 16- to 17-year-olds will increase by 4p to £3.68 an hour and the rate for apprentices will increase by 10p to £2.60 an hour. Vince Cable, the business secretary, said: “More than 890,000 of Britain’s lowest-paid workers will gain from these changes. They are appropriate, reflecting the current economic uncertainty, while at the same time protecting the UK’s lowest-paid workers. “I would like to thank the Low Pay Commission for doing a good job in difficult circumstances.” The commission’s chairman, David Norgrove, said: “We welcome the government’s acceptance of our recommendations. The commission was again unanimous, despite all the economic uncertainties. “We believe we have struck the right balance between the needs of low-paid workers and the challenges faced by businesses.” Pay Work & careers Vince Cable guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Witnesses tell how gunman opened fire on pupils at Tasso da Silveira primary school in Rio de Janeiro As many as 20 people are feared dead after a gunman invaded a primary school in Rio de Janeiro and opened fire. One witness told the Guardian he had seen between 15 and 20 children dead or seriously wounded inside the Tasso da Silveira primary school in western Rio. “It is a massacre, a true massacre,” said Roni de Macedo, a fireman who arrived on the scene shortly after the shooting began and dragged eight seriously injured children from the second floor classroom. “There is blood on the walls, blood on the chairs. There are 15 to 20 dead I think,” said De Macedo, who was covered in blood. “I’ve never seen anything like this. It’s like something in the United States.” Witnesses said the shooting began outside the school at around 8.30am when a man opened fire on two boys, shooting one in the head and one in the arm with what was said to be handgun. He is said to have cotinued through the school’s metal gates and up to a packed classroom the second floor, opening fire on children aged between 11 and 13. “I saw a load of injured kids, bleeding kids. I saw a dead guy inside. I heard more than 30 shots. My daughter was inside,” said Hercilei Antunes, 44, a postman who lives opposite the school. “It’s always been a calm school,” he added, standing on his bloodstained porch where he gave first aid to children who had been shot. “Today I heard shots, shots, shots and more shots. I tried to go in but he shot more and I am not made of steel.” With police helicopters hovering overhead, Yvonette Fernandes, 51, wept as she looked for news of her 12-year-old niece alongside scores of desperate parents. “Where is she? I want to know where she is!” Brazil Gun crime Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …We celebrate our 1,000th new band of the day with two free mix tapes, while new band columnist Paul Lester tells us how the feature has ruined his life
Continue reading …‘The fuckers got me’ said newspaper seller as he collapsed after being knocked down by riot policeman, court hears Ian Tomlinson, the newspaper seller knocked down by a police officer at the G20 protests, muttered “the fuckers got me” moments before he died. The inquest into his death has already heard how Tomlinson, a father of nine, was struck with a baton and pushed to the ground by police officer Simon Harwood minutes before he died in the City of London. Describing what may have been Tomlinson’s last words, a bystander told the jury in the case that watched Tomlinson colllapse about 100 metres from where he had been pushed. The former city worker Kamran Saleem, now a charity manager, said: “He said something along the lines of ‘They got me, the fuckers got me.’ His voice was more quiet than normal and there was an anger to it but probably more surprised than anything.” The jury, which is sitting at a venue in Fleet Street, London, has heard how Tomlinson was repeatedly turned away from police cordons near the Bank of England. The 47-year-old had been attempting to find his way home from work before he finally encountered Harwood, a member of the Met’s territorial support group (TSG). Harwood, a van driver who had strayed from his vehicle, has accepted Tomlinson posed no threat to him or anyone else when he struck him. He said he did so because he believed the newspaper seller posed a “breach of the peace” under common law. The heavy push sent Tomlinson sprawling to the ground on Royal Exchange Buildings at around 7.20pm on 1 April 2009. Tomlinson was helped to his feet by a bystander and stumbled along Cornhill for a minute or two before collapsing outside a Starbucks coffee shop. Saleem said he saw Tomlinson stagger along Cornhill “as if he was drunk” before falling to the ground “like a tree”. “He was kind of swaying as he came up the road kind of staggering from left to right,” he told Alison Hewitt QC, counsel to the inquest. “Just before I saw him fall over when he was coming up he kind of shook his head as if to like clear his head. “And that was when he fell into the wall on his left hand side. It was like he was not in charge of his body, it was like a tree falling over. His arms were by his side and there was no reaction when he hit the wall. “It was a forceful impact.” Saleem said people rushed to Tomlinson’s aid and he saw a redness on the man’s head. “I think he was still breathing and his eyes were still open.” When police medics rushed in to help Tomlinson he started slipping in and out of consciousness and his eyes were “flicking around”. “He had a grey look to him. He was a lot paler than before.” Saleem said protesters had been throwing bottles at the police who rushed to help Tomlinson. The hearing continues. Ian Tomlinson Police London Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
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