Schools 'need private-sector help'

 By Paul Waugh, Deputy Political Editor

 The Independent, 03 September 2001

 Estelle Morris, the Education
 Secretary, set the Government on
 a collision course with teaching
 unions yesterday when she
 declared that Britain's failing state
 schools "need" the help of private
 firms. 

 Ms Morris's defiant stance, which
 has the full backing of Tony Blair,
 will be underlined on Wednesday
 when she publishes the education White Paper outlining plans
 to allow the private sector a much greater role in state
 education. The Prime Minister has refused to back down over
 the proposals, despite claims from critics that they amount to
 the "creeping privatisation" of schools. 

 Unlike the NHS, where public-sector unions have forced a
 retreat on the issue of private involvement, Downing Street is
 prepared for a showdown on education. A senior party source
 told The Independent that part of the reason for the defiance of
 unions such as the NUT and NASUWT was that they did not
 help fund the Labour Party. "The plain fact is that we will listen
 to unions that are part of the Labour movement. But we're not
 going to take lectures from those unions who aren't affiliated,"
 he said. 

 The White Paper was due to be released in July but its
 publication was postponed amid a wider outcry from Labour
 MPs and unions about public-private partnerships. 

 However, Andrew Adonis, the Downing Street Policy Unit chief
 who has written the paper, has been allowed by Mr Blair to
 retain proposals to use private firms to rescue Britain's
 worst-performing schools. To make the plans more palatable,
 private involvement will be allowed only at the request of
 parents, and successful state schools will also be allowed to
 take over their failing neighbours. 

 Alan Milburn, the Health Secretary, reassured the big trade
 unions in a private meeting last week that the role of the private
 sector in the NHS would be tightly circumscribed. 

 But Ms Morris made clear yesterday that the Government
 would not be deterred by union threats from implementing
 radical change in education. "Some children are not getting a
 good enough education and that's not a criticism of teachers.
 It's a tough job and they need more help and support and
 expertise that the private sector can offer. I'm not going to turn
 my back on it if it can really help to raise standards," she told
 BBC1's Breakfast with Frost. 

 "The biggest threat to public service is actually not to use every
 tool at your disposal to make it better. We have got to use
 everything that we can and, if using the private sector helps to
 deliver a better service and we solve some deep-rooted
 problems, then I think we should do it." 

 But Ms Morris's remarks failed to dampen the criticism of union
 leaders, including John Monks, the TUC general secretary, and
 Nigel de Gruchy, the general secretary of the National
 Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers. 

 Mr Monks warned the Government that any wholesale
 privatisation of public services would lead to "an extremely
 strong reaction" from workers. "We've seen what's happened
 on the railways. People don't like what's happened with London
 Underground. They certainly won't like the idea of the extension
 of the private sector in areas like education and health," Mr
 Monks told GMTV's Sunday Programme. 

 Charles Clarke, the Labour Party chairman, denied that the
 Government had plans for "wholesale privatisation" of key
 services, but did warn that reform as well as resources was the
 only key to improvement. 

 * Government plans to increase private sector involvement in
 the running of essential services risk alienating their own
 supporters and are out of step with public opinion, a new
 survey reveals. 

 Two thirds of the electorate  and half of Tory voters  want to
 see health and education provided mostly or entirely by the
 state, according to a MORI poll in The Times. 

 Seventy per cent of Labour supporters believe that education
 should be mostly or entirely provided by government money,
 with 69 per cent supporting a public-funded health service and
 59 per cent wanting to see a renationalised railway network.

Full article at:
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/education/story.jsp?story=92015

Michael Keaney
Mercuria Business School
Martinlaaksontie 36
01620 Vantaa
Finland

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