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GMB call on govt to crack down on £900,000 PR spend by academy group with 11 schools in East England

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GMB call on government to crack down on £900,000 spend on PR by academy group with 11 schools in the East of England.

To spend nearly a million pounds on a PR firm for ‘reputation management services’ is a scandalous waste of money that should be better spent on children’s education says GMB.

GMB London and Eastern region, the union for school support staff, calls on the government to crack down on £900,000 spend by Ormiston Academies Trust to a public relations agency for ‘reputation management services’ as reported in today’s Times. [See notes to editors for copy of Times article and list of 31 schools run by Ormiston Academies Trust]

The 11 schools in the East of England run by Ormiston are in Essex, Great Yarmouth, Ipswich, Lowestoft, Norwich and Sudbury. [See full list in note 1 below]

Warren Kenny GMB London regional secretary said

“To spend nearly a million pounds on a PR firm for ‘reputation management services’ is a scandalous waste of money that should be better spent on children’s education.

The government must not allow for this amount of money to be frittered away so that the reputation of management can be enhanced. Children’s education is significantly more important than that.

This just shows that the privatisation of our schools is not being done to improve standards in education.”

End

Contact: Richard O'Leary 07710 631347; Colin Greer 07974 249745

Notes to editors

1) Ormiston Academy schools in East of England

City of Norwich School, An Ormiston Academy, Eaton Road, Norwich, NR4 6PP

Cliff Park Ormiston Academy, Kennedy Avenue, Gorleston-on-Sea, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, NR31 6TA

Ormiston Denes Academy, Yarmouth Road, Lowestoft, NR32 4AH

Ormiston Endeavour Academy, Defoe Road, Ipswich, IP1 6SG

Ormiston Herman Academy, Oriel Avenue, Great Yarmouth, NR31 7JL

Ormiston Park Academy, Nethan Drive, Aveley, Essex, RM15 4RU

Ormiston Rivers Academy, Southminster Road, Burnham-on-Crouch, Essex, CM0 8QB

Stoke High School - Ormiston Academy, Maidenhall Approach, Ipswich, Suffolk, IP2 8PL

Ormiston Sudbury Academy, Tudor Road, Sudbury, Suffolk, CO10 1NW

Ormiston Venture Academy, Gorleston, Norfolk, NR31 7JJ

Ormiston Victory Academy, Middleton Crescent, Costessey, Norwich, NR5 0PX

2) Ormiston Academy schools throughout rest of England

BOA (Birmingham Ormiston Academy), 1 Grosvenor Street, Birmingham, B4 7QD

Ormiston Bolingbroke Academy, Barnfield Avenue, Murdishaw, Runcorn, WA7 6EP

Ormiston Bushfield Academy, Ortongate, Peterborough, PE2 5RQ

Ormiston Chadwick Academy, Liverpool Road, Widnes, Cheshire, WA8 7HU

Cowes Enterprise College, An Ormiston Academy, Crossfield Avenue, Cowes, Isle of Wight, PO31 8HB

Edward Worlledge Community Primary School (in development) ,

Ormiston Forge Academy, Wrights Lane, Cradley Heath, West Midlands, B64 6QU

George Salter Academy, Davey Road, West Bromwich, West Midlands, B70 9UW

Ormiston Horizon Academy, Turnhurst Road, Tunstall, Stoke-on-Trent, ST6 6JZ

Ormiston Ilkeston Enterprise Academy, King George Avenue, Ilkeston Derbyshire, DE7 5HS

Ormiston Maritime Academy, Westward Ho, Grimsby, North-East Lincolnshire, DN34 5AH

Ormiston Meadows Academy, Orton Brimbles, Peterborough, PE2 5YQ

Packmoor Ormiston Academy, Carr Street, Packmoor, Stoke-on-Trent, ST7 4SP

Sandon College (in development), Sandon Road, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, ST3 7DF

Ormiston Sandwell Community Academy, Lower City Road, Oldbury, West Midlands, B69 2HE

Ormiston Shelfield Community Academy, Broad Way, Pelsall, Walsall, WS4 1BW

Ormiston Sir Stanley Matthews Academy, Beaconsfield Drive, Blurton, Stoke-on-Trent, ST3 3JD

Ormiston Six Villages Academy, Lime Avenue, Westergate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO20 3UE

Ormiston South Parade Academy, South Parade, Grimsby, DN31 1TU

Tenbury High Ormiston Academy, Oldwood Road, Tenbury Wells, Worcestershire, WR15 8XA

Wodensborough Ormiston Academy, Hydes Road, Wednesbury, West Midlands, WS10 0DR

Upcoming academies:

Sandon Business and Enterprise College, Stoke-on-Trent

Edward Worlledge Community Primary School, Great Yarmouth

3) 2 February 2017. Greg Hurst, Education Editor

www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/academy-bosses-set-aside-900-000-for-pr-experts-9x7lscc6f

Academy bosses set aside £900,000 for PR experts

A charity that sponsors a group of academy schools is seeking to hire a public relations agency for up to £900,000 for reputation management services.

Ormiston Academies Trust (OAT), which supports 31 schools, has issued a tender document for “marketing, media relations and crisis management services”, which would run for two years with an option to extend for a further year, according to PR Week.

It said that the contract was worth an estimated £900,000 excluding VAT, although generally academies can reclaim VAT incurred on non-business activities.

The trust said that the figure represented the “very upper limit” of the contract and it expected to spend much less.

Ormiston currently uses PLMR, the public affairs agency, and said that its current payments were the equivalent of £163 per academy each month, which would equate to about £60,000 a year.

News of the contract comes amid growing grassroots campaigns about pressure on school budgets. There have been previous controversies over academies spending large sums on PR consultants.

Ormiston, which sponsors many schools in deprived communities, has faced uncomfortable headlines over incidents in several of its schools, though none were of particular severity.

Potentially the most serious was a claim that one of its highest-profile former head teachers, Dame Rachel de Souza, was tipped off while training to be an inspector about forthcoming Ofsted visits to three Norfolk schools, including Ormiston Victory Academy, in 2013.

The incident prompted two inquiries, one by Ofsted and a second by a lawyer, who concluded on the balance of probabilities that none of the schools had had an unfair prior warning.

A spokesman for the trust said: “The framework amount cited in the article is the very upper limit of the . . . procurement.

“This is to provide long-term flexibility, but we do not anticipate spending anything like this much.

“Presently we spend £163 per month per academy. The brief, which is being tendered competitively, is to support all of our current schools and those joining with marketing, media management, social media, reputation management, training and fundraising solutions.

“OAT chooses to outsource elements of professional services support in this way as we are determined to get best value for money and ensure our teaching staff are able to stay focused on delivering the highest standards of education for our students.”

Figures released by the Liberal Democrats from a parliamentary answer showed that more than half of academies and multi-academy trusts spent more than their income per year in 2014-15.

John Pugh, the party’s education spokesman, said: “Academies are already falling short of cash and this is a deep concern to staff and parents.”