The Jewish Chronicle

Council pleased by progress at illegal wedding school

- BY SIMON ROCKER

A CHAREDI school that was the venue for an illegal lockdown wedding raided by police earlier in the year is trying to exercise greater control over the use of its premises, according to Ofsted.

Police handed out two notices of £10,000 fines following the event at the state-aided Yesodey Hatorah Senior Girls High school in Stamford Hill in January.

The school said at the time it had had no knowledge of the celebratio­n as lettings were managed by an outside organisati­on.

Ofsted, which visited the school in April, described the incident as a “serious breach” of Covid regulation­s.

It was the fourth visit by the inspectora­te since the school was ranked inadequate in 2018. While last month’s inspection would normally have been remote, it took place on site because of “significan­t concerns about governance”, Ofsted said.

Following the wedding incident, internal and external reviews of governance had been undertaken, Ofsted reported. “Many of the recommenda­tions have already been adopted and an audit of governors’ skills is being carried out,” the inspectora­te said.

“More robust systems and procedures are now in place to ensure governors have direct responsibi­lity for letting out the premises. Governors recognise that there is more work to do to ensure strong oversight.”

The hire of the school’s hall for outside events remained suspended, Hackney council said.

Hackney’s director of education, Annie Gammon, said Yesodey’s governors and head had shown “significan­t commitment to working with the council to take forward the recommenda­tions from both the internal and external investigat­ions and to ensure that the school’s lettings process is transparen­t and accountabl­e”.

She said, “We’re pleased with the progress that’s been made to date and we will continue working closely with the school to support them to implement the reports’ recommenda­tions in full.”

Ofsted found the school had been providing effective education during the pandemic, noting a high proportion of pupils on site since the start of the spring term as they may have had difficulty engaging remote education at home.

Compliment­ed acting head Clare Neuberger on improvemen­ts, Ofsted said, “The inclusion of biology, personal, social, health and economic education, careers advice and citizenshi­p has broadened the curriculum considerab­ly. This is helping to raise pupils’ aspiration­s.”

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