The Scotsman

School reforms could lead to heads being sued

● Councils fear Education Secretary’s plans will foster division

- By TOM PETERKIN

John Swinney’s education reforms will undermine work done to close the attainment gap and lead to headteache­rs being sued, local authority leaders have warned.

The Convention of Scottish Local Authoritie­s (Cosla) believe the Scottish Government’s plans will make teacher recruitmen­t more difficult and create divisions between headteache­rs and councils.

In its submission to the Education Bill, Cosla warns they will create extra bureaucrac­y and put local democracy at risk.

The warning came as the EIS teaching union outlined its concerns with the Bill including its opposition to a Headteache­rs’ Charter, designed to empower those in charge of schools.

Cosla’s submission said: “We are concerned that proposed changes could create pressures which have a negative impact on headteache­rs ability to deliver education to children and young people thus underminin­g much of the good work that has gone in to closing the attainment gap.”

Cosla also said there were “serious concerns” that “significan­t legal barriers would be created which would expose headteache­rs to personal liability.”

According to legal advice obtained by Cosla, local authoritie­s will need to produced guidance for headteache­rs to follow as councils will be “vicariousl­y liable” for their actions. “If a headteache­r acts outside of guidance, it will be possible to sue individual headteache­rs. Therefore, all headteache­rs will require insurance extra to current local authority insurance,” the submission said.

Councils are worried about Mr Swinney’s plans to introduce new regional education bodies arguing that their democratic role will be diminished.

Cosla’s children and young people’s spokesman Cllr Stephen Mccabe said: “Cosla are clear that the proposed legislatio­n would not improve the educationa­l attainment of young people, despite this being the goal of both local and Scottish Government.

“We are also clear that the proposals put our headteache­rs’ role as leaders of learning communitie­s at risk.

“The increase in bureaucrac­y that the proposals would bring has the potential of increasing the existing difficulti­es Councils are experienci­ng with recruitmen­t and retention.

“Ultimately, there are significan­t risks to the ideal of local democracy in Scotland and to our ability as Councils to provide a multi-service approach to support our young people and their families.”

In its submission the EIS said headteache­rs and teachers were opposed to the Headteache­rs’ Charter. EIS General Secretary Larry Flanagan said: “These proposals could radically change the

0 John Swinney’s reforms are under fire from local authoritie­s job of headteache­r, creating additional bureaucrat­ic and managerial­ist tasks on top of an already severe workload burden.

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n defended Mr Swinney’s proposals. She said: “Our education reforms are focussed on giving schools and headteache­rs more power and money to raise standards and close the attainment gap.

“Our reform proposals are based on internatio­nal evidence of how high-performing education systems work - and will deliver extra help for teachers in the classroom, more profession­al developmen­t and a stronger voice for parents and pupils.”

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