News Date: Monday 29th June 2009

Loughton: Government playing politics with Further Education

A mere 13 of the 144 frozen college building projects have been given the go-ahead, ministers have revealed.  Every one of the approved projects is in a Labour-held seat and none are in West Sussex.

Tim Loughton, MP for East Worthing and Shoreham, said:

“The Government has, once again, turned its back on West Sussex and failed to come to the rescue of our Further Education Colleges. It is particularly galling that they have decided to play politics with public money and help only colleges in Labour constituencies.

“After almost a year of delay, 131 colleges building projects – many of them ‘shovel-ready’ – still have not got the go-ahead.  They will be deeply disappointed by today’s announcement. It is the young people deprived of high quality training opportunities who are the real losers from Labour’s incompetence.

“Peter Bottomley and I have been working closely with the principals and governors and Northbrook and Worthing College and took a delegation to see the Higher Education Minister Sion Simon earlier in the year. We will now have to step up this campaign as both colleges are trying to deliver crucial 21st century education opportunities in accommodation which is not fit for purpose in the 21st century and which they have been trying to upgrade for the last decade. This is completely unsustainable particularly in an area where educational under-achievement is one of our real challenges.”

 

For further information, please contact Debbie Willis on 020 7984 8113. 

Notes to Editors

1. In a written statement, Kevin Brennan, the Minister for Further Education, Skills, Apprenticeships and Consumer Affairs, announced ‘a shortlist of 13 further education building projects which are proceeding to the next stage of development. The 13 projects announced today have been prioritised from over 180 projects submitted to the LSC as part of the latest round of the FE Capital programme.’ The 13 colleges will be asked to amend their initial plans by making ‘cost reductions’ and ‘examin[ing] other possible sources of funds’ (Written Statement, 26 June 2009).

2. Overall, about 40 per cent of the frozen projects are in Liberal Democrat or Conservative-held seats. Yet every one of the projects approved today is in a Labour area.

 

Name of College

Postcode

MP

Party

Barnsley College

S70 2YW

Eric Illsley

Labour

Bournville College

B31 2AJ

Richard Burden

Labour

Furness College

LA14 2PJ

John Hutton

Labour

Hartlepool College of Further Education

TS24 7LB

Iain Wright

Labour

Kirklees College

HD1 5NN

Barry Sheerman

Labour & Co-operative

Leyton Sixth Form College

E10 6EQ

Harry Cohen

Labour

Manchester College – Wythenshawe

M23 9BQ

Paul Goggins

Labour

North West Kent College

DA1 2JT

Howard Stoate

Labour

St Helens College

WA10 1PP

Shaun Woodward

Labour

Sandwell College

B68 8NA

John Spellar

Labour

South Thames College

SW18 2PP

Martin Linton

Labour

Tresham Institute of Further and Higher Education, Corby

NN17 1QA

Phil Hope

Labour & Co-operative

West Cheshire College

CH4 7ER

Christine Russell

Labour

 

Background 

· First freeze. On 17 December 2008, the Learning and Skills Council (LSC) decided to freeze the approval process for all FE college building projects for at least three months. The LSC decision was made suddenly with no public statement (Letter from the Chief Executive of the AoC to the Chief Executive of the LSC, 8 January 2009 and AoC, Briefing, 8 January 2009).

 

· Freeze extended. In March 2009, the Government announced that it would be freezing the approval process for 144 college building projects. Seventy-nine of the frozen colleges had already received agreement in principle and were only awaiting approval in detail (the final stage of the approval process). These colleges have incurred considerable costs to reach this stage. The value of the government contribution required for these 79 projects is £2.7bn. The other 65 frozen colleges are waiting for approval in principle. These colleges have already assembled a project team and put money towards preparing the bid and would require a £3bn government contribution to go ahead (DIUS, Press Release, 4 March 2009).

 

· LSC chief resigns. On 23 March 2009, Mark Haysom, the Chief Executive of the Learning and Skills Council, resigned over the capital crisis.

 

· Foster review commissioned. Following a three-month delay to some FE college building projects, John Denham asked Sir Andrew Foster to lead a review into the management of the college building programme. His report was published on 1 April 2009 (Sir Andrew Foster, A review of the Capital Programme in Further Education, 1 April 2009).

 

·         Foster finds serious fault. The Foster report identified serious failings in both DIUS and the Learning and Skills Council. He found that ‘the most significant problems were systemic’ and that the crisis ‘could have been mitigated if action had been taken earlier’ (p. 21 & p. 5)

·         The problems stemmed from ‘the absence of a proper long term financial strategy and inadequate management information and monitoring.’ (p. 5)

·         Colleges were encouraged to bid as ‘the LSC promoted the programme intensively... Spurred on by the stated policy of renewing the entire estate, local LSC teams actively solicited projects from colleges and worked with college principals to turn more modest proposals into wholesale upgrading of the entire college estate.’ (p. 14)

·         In early 2008-09 ‘there began a surge in demand for capital... The surge became a veritable tsunami, leading, as the year turned, to a pause in approvals and great consternation in the field.’ (p. 9)

·         To make matters worse, the LSC was too slow to respond: ‘there were straws in the wind, early storm warnings, but the problem was not crystallised fast enough.’ (p. 22)

·           Failures lead back to the Government. Although the role of the LSC was to deliver ‘effective implementation’ of the college building programme, it remained the responsibility of DIUS ‘to determine and monitor the implementation of broad policy’ (p. 5). The report found that DIUS failed in this role: ‘DIUS monitored the LSC during the period and had most of the information that was actually collected and held centrally by the LSC. Senior staff in DIUS could have probed more actively the robustness of the forward projections of future funding commitments. Their challenge was insufficiently incisive to uncover ongoing flaws in implementation.’ Furthermore, there was ‘insufficient clarity and understanding around the relationship between the LSC and DIUS’ (p. 6).

       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
   

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