20 July 2021

Martyn McCarthy's resignation statement

Ashley school's longest-serving governor resigned in June. You may not know this, because the school has chosen not to tell you. Here, Martyn McCarthy explains the reasons for his resignation:

"On 29th June 2021 I informed the Chair of the Local Governing Committee that I was resigning my position as Lead Governor for Child Protection & Safeguarding, Special Educational Needs & Disability, and Mental Heath & Wellbeing. I had been a governor at Ashley School for nearly nine years, firstly as a Parent Governor, and when my term ended in 2017 I was asked to stay on as a Foundation Governor by the former Headteacher, Richard Dunne. I am the sixth member of the Local Governing Committee to resign since the Good Shepherd Trust (GST) removed Ricard Dunne from his position. To date I’ve not received a formal acknowledgement of my resignation from the Local Governing Committee or The Trust. 

I gave several reasons for resigning. One thing all my reasons had in common were the actions and inactions, and poor practice and judgement relating to decisions made by the Good Shepherd Trust in relation to Ashley School over the last two years. The most obvious of these was the way in which The Trust wrongly removed Richard Dunne from his Headteacher post after eighteen years outstanding service to the children at Ashley School. Since I resigned, The Trust have sent a formal but half-hearted apology to Richard. This was long overdue and, following the Teaching Regulation Agency’s letter that exonerated Richard, The Trust have still not conducted a review into their own conduct as promised. 

With hindsight I should have resigned with Karola Zakrzewska in January (wrongly, I thought I could continue and help change the outlook of the GST from within). I hoped to sit face to face with an Ofsted inspector and relay most of my concerns to them. The catalyst for my resignation was the recent departure of one of the Assistant Headteachers. In my experience, I’ve not known a teacher or senior leader to give less than half a term’s notice when leaving. They certainly don’t give less than a week’s notice. The GST removed Richard. His loyal, long-serving and outstanding Deputy Headteacher then felt that she should leave last July. Other staff have disappeared without any explanation. I feel that the latest senior leader to leave the school left for a different reason than the one given to parents and LGC members. 

When we chose to join the GST they were a great fit for Ashley. We only partnered with them to develop Richard’s Harmony curriculum and they were very supportive for several years, until an interim CEO was appointed. It’s been downhill since then and Richard was the first casualty. As a publicly-funded organisation, the parents and LGC have asked The Trust to be more transparent on numerous occasions over the last two years. Despite promises to improve they are still far from transparent.

Other reasons I gave in my resignation letter include:

The Trust refused to tell the LGC what had happened to Richard Dunne throughout the autumn of 2019, after he disappeared from Ashley in the September and only telling us about the ‘disciplinary’ allegations and charges after the formal panel hearing (in his absence, after he had felt pressured to resign). Despite the fact that the LGC had no part to play in Richard’s removal and questioned the GST throughout that period, often asking them to add substantive facts to their letters to parents and governors, the GST released a statement to the local press last summer in which they wrongly seemed to implicate the LGC in the decision to remove Richard.

The GST then served a ‘Notice to Improve’ on the school (unorthodox, as usually a NTI is only served on a Trust by the Department for Education), that most of the senior leaders and governors at the time thought was absurd. The reasons why the NTI was unnecessary has previously been documented on Nick Wallis’ blog and I personally felt that it didn’t benefit the children. It was the GST’s attempt to further discredit Richard and cover the GST, should Ofsted arrive for a long overdue inspection. Two governors resigned. 

I agree with the two points on which Karola resigned from her governor role in January of this year:

Firstly that the LGC were purposely (and with disregard to our published Scheme of delegation) sidelined from the recruitment process for the current Headteacher. However, now she is in place, Jennie has my full support and I wish her well. 

Secondly that the LGC voted in the summer of 2020 to retain open governor meetings (meaning parents could attend) as we had done for the previous three years. Two weeks later the GST apparently decided that all LGC meetings across The Trust should be closed meetings. This decision was taken behind the backs of Ashley’s LGC and although we asked for information on how this decision was reached (and parents have also asked through Freedom of Information requests) nothing was provided. 

I know that the majority of parents will agree with most of the concerns I’ve highlighted above. It’s my opinion that The Trust have continually shown contempt for the parent community and LGC members over the last two years (the same community that have previously been so supportive of Ashley and the Trust, raising more than £40000 a year for the school). 

Just before the first COVID lockdown in March last year I spoke to every LGC member with regards to potentially leaving the GST. This September will be seven years since Richard, myself and the full Governing Board at the time took Ashley into the GST under an arrangement where, as the jewel in their crown and only Outstanding school, we were sold academy membership on the understanding that we would enjoy a degree of autonomy. This is how it remained for more than five years, until they attempted to destroy an outstanding headteacher, professionally and personally. 

They have continued to interfere where they aren’t needed, fix things that weren’t broken, sideline and undermine the LGC, lose several of our best key staff and a large number of students and families. The result of my poll last year was that all governors were happy to explore whether the GST were still a good fit for Ashley. We felt we should consider approaching the DfE with our concerns and ask for them to consider a different academy sponsor. It would have been remiss, even negligent, of us not to consider our future relationship with our academy trust. Then the pandemic struck…  but I would urge the LGC that it’s a conversation they still need to have, alongside the excellent support they will continue to give to the school, Headteacher and senior leaders.

Overall I believe that before, during and after Richard Dunne’s departure, the Trust has appeared only to remove resources from the school and this has caused instability and an absence of leadership. The removal or departure of some of our most experienced teachers and leaders does nothing to support the school’s previous culture of high standards and attainment. The way in which they easily removed Richard was terrifying and a warning to all remaining staff. 

When Richard disappeared the Trust did not adequately manage his absence or communicate with staff, parents and governors; this only finally happened in part due to repeated requests from the LGC and parents. Parents in particular felt they were not being told the truth, which led to some teaching staff and all LGC members to experience very uncomfortable interactions for a prolonged period. Several individuals had concerns over their mental health. This was very stressful for all concerned and, being on notice of this, action should have been taken by the GST. The lack of care of our staff and LGC members by the GST was seen by one governor (who resigned) as unsettling, affecting loyalty and future staff losses within senior leaders and key staff. They felt deeper instability would follow. That governor was spot on with their remarks. Part of the mistrust between governors, staff and The Trust after Richard’s departure was as a result of the NTI. 

Despite requesting the data on which the decision to serve the notice on the school was made, a believable reason has never been received.  Previous Trust-led assessments of progress and attainment only a short time before the NTI did not give cause for concern. Additionally, the school has lost its Green Flag status (we were one of only nine Ambassador Green Flag eco schools in the country only two years ago). Artsmark Gold status has not been achieved nor the International Schools Award. None of these inadequacies benefit the children. 

At times we must acknowledge and learn from our mistakes to enable us to move forward. Unfortunately the GST seem unable to do so."

12 January 2021

GST statement on Jennie Ratcliff's appointment in full

This is the full text of the email sent to me by Alex Clark, interim head teacher of Ashley school, about the appointment of Jennie Ratcliff as the new substantive head of Ashley School. Mr Clark has requested I consider publishing it in full, which I am happy to do.

My response, taking issue with some of Mr Clark's characterisations, is published directly below Mr Clark's email.

On 11 Jan 2021, at 21:45, Alex Clark wrote:

"Dear Mr Wallis,

Thank you for requesting an opinion on Ms Zakrzewska’s assertion that rules were broken in the appointment process regarding the new headteacher at Ashley. I am happy to provide you with a full statement from my viewpoint and if you are looking to publish this then I ask that you consider doing so in full on all of the sites that you have published information about Ashley. I am replying to you on behalf of Mr Kennedy and me.

It is important that you are aware of the status of our Local Governing Committee (LGC) and how it operates. On your website it states that Ms Zakrzewska resigned as a "parent governor”, however none of the LGC members are governors. This became the case when the school chose to convert to an academy in September 2014 when it ceased to be a school in its own right and gave up all governance to The Good Shepherd Trust (GST). This is a completely transparent process and the governing body at the time will have approved and signed the academy's Supplementary Funding Agreement, which sets out the academy's specific requirements. Prior to the conversion, parents were consulted and since then, all aspects of Ashley are wholly the responsibility of the Trust.

Although it is not mandatory, the Trust has chosen to hold academy committees, known in GST as local governing committees (LGC). Some aspects of governance are therefore delegated to these committees, although these aspects are on a reporting basis and the Trust retains accountability. Retaining a school level committee enables the Trust to have a local presence and representation from the community.

When a new member joins the LGC, they sign a Code of Conduct, which outlines:

"We will always be mindful of our responsibility to maintain and develop the ethos and reputation of our school and the Trust. Our actions within the school and the local community will reflect this.

In making or responding to criticism or complaints, we will follow the procedures established by the Trust.

When formally speaking or writing in our LGC role we will ensure our comments reflect current organisational policy, even if they might be different from our personal views.

When communicating in our private capacity, including on social media, we will be mindful of and strive to uphold, the reputation of the school and the Trust at all times.

We will observe complete confidentiality when matters are deemed confidential or where they concern specific members of staff or pupils, both inside or outside school.

We will exercise the greatest prudence at all times when discussions regarding school business arise outside an LGC meeting."

While these are specific points, they remain in context to what you have published Ms Zakrzewska as saying. The Code states: "Ceasing to be a member of the LGC: We understand that the requirements relating to confidentiality will continue to apply after an LGC member leaves office."

I am disappointed that information confidential to the LGC has been shared by an ex-LGC member and published on your website. However, as the interim leader of the school, I am deeply distressed by what is happening at Ashley - and I have to point out that some aspects of the situation that the school now finds itself in are because of relentless pressure from a small group of parents. This is causing additional stress and anxiety at an already difficult time for the school community and it must stop. 

I took up my position as interim headteacher at Ashley on 1st January 2020 for a period of two terms until 31st August 2020. My interview for the leadership role in the Trust took place in December 2019 and I was interviewed by the CEO and Trust Board, with LGC representation. Having been successful in securing the role, I led the school through a very challenging period. On 23rd March we went into a national lockdown and this threw in additional challenges for all schools.  

During the summer term, I applied for a new role in the Trust as a Director of Education. I was interviewed by the CEO and Trust Board and was successful in the role, which was due to start on 1st September 2020.

We are now into my fourth term at Ashley. Whilst I enjoy the role of headteacher and, in particular, at a school such as Ashley, this has only ever been an interim position and the time has come for me to move on. The school needs a substantive leader who is able to develop the vision and ethos of Ashley long-term. 

Headteacher appointments are made by the Good Shepherd Trust. The Trust has advertised the headteacher post at Ashley three times since I have been here. Leadership roles in schools are advertised nationally and ours has been no different. In the first round, there were no applicants. The second attempt attracted just one application from a candidate in the USA without any experience of headship. The third attempt in the summer attracted three candidates, two were interviewed but neither appointed. The process in the summer term had LGC representation as expected.

With a huge site with fantastic opportunities, a strong, stable staff, supportive parents and a large Trust with further development opportunities for leaders, the position at Ashley school is very attractive. However, my belief is that the job of a headteacher is, at the current time, a very difficult role. The level of accountability is immense. Education often seems politically driven and is not yet a system-led profession.

Ashley school is sitting on an outstanding Ofsted judgement from 14 years ago when it was a one-form entry school. The criteria for inspection has completely changed in that time and any headteacher is going to know that this judgement is now outdated. On top of that prospect, any search on the web brings up unrest in the school. It's going to take a strong person with resilience and determination to want to lead Ashley.

Following the third attempt at recruitment, another GST headteacher expressed an interest in leading Ashley. Mrs Ratcliff is ready to move to a larger, more challenging school. After discussion with the Trust and with the Chairs of both schools' LGCs, Mrs Ratcliff's move was agreed and our LGC had the opportunity to meet her several months ago. As headteachers are appointed by the Trust, Mrs Ratcliff is already in that position and so a full recruitment process was not necessary. 

Clearly, moving from Surrey Hills All Saints to Ashley leaves a post vacant at the other school. The recruitment process for her replacement is underway at Surrey Hills All Saints (led by the Trust). Mrs Ratcliff will take up her role at Ashley from 19th April, when I move to my role as Regional Director of Education where I will be supporting Ashley as one of my schools going forward.

In considering the post at Ashley, Mrs Ratcliff had several meetings. With this and the process the Trust went through, involving the LGCs at both schools, it took several months. We were ready to make the announcement at the end of term in December but did not want to be accused of doing it as we went into the holiday period. We therefore agreed that the announcement would be on the first day back in January. Unfortunately, this coincided with the announcement of another national lockdown. We understand that it is a stressful time for everyone and we in no way wanted to cause any additional pressure.

With ongoing challenges from the pandemic, it is an extremely difficult time for all schools, and I am thrilled that Ashley, its pupils and its staff are going to be in the safe hands of an experienced and well-respected GST headteacher going forward. 

I hope that this clearly explains to you that Mrs Ratcliff’s appointment was made in the best intentions and followed all guidelines.

I now ask that we can put an end to the accusations and allow Mrs Ratcliff the opportunity to do her job and lead Ashley with the fantastic leadership that she has demonstrated throughout her career. There is no limit to what can be achieved at Ashley if we all work together. We sincerely hope sharing this information with you now brings this time of conflict to a close.

Kind regards,

Alex Clark"

On 12 Jan 2021, at 04:54, Nick Wallis  wrote:

"Hi Mr Clark

I am deeply grateful to you for your considered and comprehensive response. I will publish relevant elements of it on all platforms.

I was struck by your sentence: "I have to point out that some aspects of the situation that the school now finds itself in are because of relentless pressure from a small group of parents.”

First of all I don’t agree with that characterisation. Remember on 7 Feb 2020 the majority of families at Ashley school called for an investigation into the way Mr Dunne was defenestrated. This was ignored. 

Secondly your assertion that “some aspects of the situation” are the parents’ fault ignores the fact that most aspects are the GST’s fault. This remains completely unacknowledged. The failure, after more than a year, to address those faults and do the right thing are what has maintained the parental outrage. 

All the GST had to do was recognise it had treated a well-respected head teacher appallingly, driven a wedge through a happy school community, and offered Richard Dunne his job back with a proper apology. As far as I am aware the GST hasn’t even bothered to apologise to Mr Dunne for senselessly, and possibly maliciously, ruining his career.

On the issue of head teacher recruitment, I take on board your comments (which I think you first gave shape to in the coffee mornings you held last year) that the head-ship of Ashley is a tough gig. Who would want to take on a school on low-ish pay, with an outdated Outstanding rating? The unresolved “unrest” you refer to is a bed the GST made. Had they engaged with parents (rather than treating us an annoying irrelevance, or worse, blaming us) and made the right decisions about Mr Dunne there would be no “unrest”. I don’t understand why the GST has not resolved the Dunne situation to everyone’s satisfaction. It has had every opportunity. Yet it still seems to be blaming parents for the environment it created. I would love to have the opportunity to write joyous and complimentary things about the governance of the school and its parent MAT. The GST has given me no material to go on.

On the issue of whether or not Ms Ratcliff is suitable for the school - it’s not something I’m going to get too involved with, but when you call her “experienced and well-respected” you are going to have to set that against what is already public about her record and experience. The minority of parents who don’t care about Mr Dunne very much do care about a head teacher from a one-form entry inadequate school being put in charge of their child’s education. 

As I think I have said to Mr Kennedy before, if you want to go some way to heal this, apologise to Mr Dunne, offer him his job back, investigate the people who suspended him and investigate the complaints against Nigel Stapleton properly. The GST has the power to do this. It just chooses not to, and if you can’t see why that outrages normal, decent, Christian people, then the situation is worse than I thought.

Finally - I want to pay tribute to you and your staff for the superb job you have done steering us through the pandemic. Nicola and I were just saying last week how impressed we have been with the level of organisation and clarity you and your team have brought to a rapidly changing situation. It is very much appreciated. Some of the parents you put at fault for the current situation are in the middle of fundraising a large amount of money for you and your staff, to show how grateful we are. I have, of course, contributed.

All best

Nick"

To read Karola Zakrzewska's resignation statement in full, please click here.

To read more about Ms Ratcliff's tenure at Surrey Hills primary, click here.

To get to grips with this story from the beginning, try the Start Here or About sections, or dive straight into the timeline.

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The GST's take on Jennie Ratcliff's appointment

On Sunday I wrote to Paul Kennedy, chief executive of the Good Shepherd Trust, about the appointment of Jennie Ratcliff as the new head teacher of Ashley School, specifically to get a comment on the assertion by outgoing parent governor Karola Zakrzewska that the GST's own rules in appointing Ms Ratcliff were not followed

In a statement on Friday, Ms Zakrzewska said:

"No LGC [Local Governing Committee] member was part of the hiring process for Mrs Ratcliff. For previous candidates interviewed for the role, a member of the LGC was included in those interviews. And as per the Scheme Of Delegation, there should have been a member of the LGC as “a representative on the appointment panel".”

Ms Ratcliff is currently the head teacher at Surrey Hills All Saints Primary, an inadequate one-form entry school in Westcott, also run by the GST.

I cc'd the current interim head teacher at Ashley school, Alex Clark, in my letter to Mr Kennedy. Mr Clark has kindly written me a response on behalf of the GST.

Firstly, he notes he is: "disappointed that information confidential to the LGC has been shared by an ex-LGC member", suggesting Ms Zakrzewska has broken the code of conduct she signed up to when she became a parent governor.

On the specific issue of whether or not the rules were broken in the appointment of Ms Ratcliff, Mr Clark says:

"As headteachers are appointed by the Trust, Mrs Ratcliff is already in that position and so a full recruitment process was not necessary." 

adding:

"Mrs Ratcliff’s appointment was made in the best intentions and followed all guidelines."

On the unfortunate timing of the announcement (4 Jan), Mr Clark says:

"We were ready to make the announcement at the end of term in December but did not want to be accused of doing it as we went into the holiday period. We therefore agreed that the announcement would be on the first day back in January. Unfortunately, this coincided with the announcement of another national lockdown. We understand that it is a stressful time for everyone and we in no way wanted to cause any additional pressure."

On Ms Ratcliff's suitability for the post, Mr Clark says:

"I am thrilled that Ashley, its pupils and its staff are going to be in the safe hands of an experienced and well-respected GST headteacher going forward. I now ask that we can... allow Mrs Ratcliff the opportunity to do her job and lead Ashley with the fantastic leadership that she has demonstrated throughout her career."

Ms Ratcliff will take up her role at Ashley from 19 April, and Mr Clark will move to his role as Regional Director of Education at the GST, where he tells me he will be supporting Ashley as one of his schools going forward.

I am grateful to Mr Clark for his response. To read his email in full, please click here.

To read Karola Zakrzewska's resignation statement in full, please click here.

To read more about Ms Ratcliff's tenure at Surrey Hills primary, click here.

To get to grips with this story from the beginning, try the Start Here or About sections, or dive straight into the timeline.

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10 January 2021

Ashley school's new head teacher

On 4 Jan this year, Paul Kennedy, the Chief Executive of the Good Shepherd Trust, wrote to parents announcing Jennie Ratcliff as the new substantive head teacher of Ashley school. She will take up her post after Easter 2021.

Ms Ratcliff is currently head teacher at an inadequate one-form entry GST school in the Surrey Hills. Mr Kennedy said Ms Ratcliff:

"is excited about her move to Ashley and the career development it brings. Mrs Ratcliff wishes to work with the community to develop and enhance the excellent education that the school provides. She is also delighted that the school has a strong LGC to support the school’s leaders."

I don’t know Ms Ratcliff. It is my natural inclination to take people as I find them. But that natural inclination changes when you are being asked to trust a person with something you have responsibility for.

Jennie Ratcliff is about to be put in charge of my youngest child’s education. I would be deserting my duty as a parent and journalist if I took everything I was told at face value, especially given what we already know about the Good Shepherd Trust’s duplicitous behaviour. Sometimes a bit of research can stop you from being a mug.

Btw, springing the appointment of a new head on parents and staff during possibly the single most stressful day of the school year so far smacks of the ongoing contempt the GST has shown Ashley school over the past couple of years. 

Inadequate

It is a matter of public record that Jennie Ratcliff, who was appointed head teacher of Surrey Hills CofE Primary in 2013, took a "good" school and over five years rendered it "inadequate". Surrey Hills currently cannot fill its reception places.

On the day of the announcement of Ms Ratcliff’s appointment to Ashley I was put in contact with a former Surrey Hills parent. We had a long conversation. She remains aghast at what Jennie Ratcliff did to their “lovely little village school" during her tenure.

My correspondent described Ms Ratcliff as “wholly incompetent” and said “the staff turnaround at the school since she joined has been horrendous. All the good teachers have left.” 

She told me there is a group of existing and former Surrey Hills parents who might be willing to be quoted on the record about Ms Ratcliff’s abilities, though they said there was also a contrary feeling amongst some parents that maybe they shouldn’t say anything, in case it meant Ms Ratcliff’s appointment was successfully resisted by Ashley parents and she ended up back at Surrey Hills.

I have no reason to believe the views I was given were not honestly held, but of course, they may not be representative of anything more than a tiny minority of current and ex-parents.

Active paedophile

Ms Ratcliff also did not notice an active paedophile (subsequently jailed) operating as her deputy head teacher in 2016. That’s understandable, paedophiles can be sneaky. But an Ofsted report stated her knowledge around safeguarding was “not secure”.

Her leadership when dealing with a subsequent safeguarding issue in 2018 was criticised again by Ofsted, which said the school’s leaders “cannot guarantee that pupils are safe" because they have "not always robustly followed procedures for dealing with allegations against staff”."

If I were a fan of a football team and this was the calibre of manager the board had foisted on us, I would have questions. Though like any dutiful fan, I continue to support Ashley school (in terms of what it stands for, the time I give to the Ashley Parent Partnership and financially).

I have no personal animus towards any individual, and I am not going to get involved in any campaign to stop Ms Ratcliff’s appointment, partly because in 18 months I am out of here and neither she, nor the GST’s moral bankruptcy will be my problem any more.

Also, Ms Ratcliff might come in and be an inspirational force for good, or a half-decent plodder. Whatever, It’s certainly not in the GST’s interests to let her fail. I wish her well.

Resignation

The appointment of Ms Ratcliff has led to the resignation of a parent member of Ashley school's Local Governing Committee. Karola Zakrzewska says the GST's own rules for appointing head teachers were not followed.

Ms Zakrzewska appears to have a case. In Ashley School's "Scheme of Empowerment (Delegation)" which was approved in December 2019, under the heading: "Appointing Principal School Leaders (Executive Headteachers and Headteachers)" it says the Local Governing Committee will have a "representative on the appointment panel". According to Ms Zakrzewska, this did not happen.

I have asked the GST to respond to this specific point. They have done so adding more information about Ms Racliff's suitability for the post, here.

If you want to know more about how we lost an inspirational head teacher who turned Ashley into an outstanding school, please read the timeline.

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08 January 2021

Karola Zakrzewska's resignation statement

Karola Zakrzewska
Earlier this week Karola Zakrzewska resigned as a parent governor of Ashley CofE Primary School. We weren't told why. 

I wrote to Ms Zakrzewska and asked if she would issue a statement for publication as to the reasons behind her resignation. 

She sent me the following:

"I resigned from my role as parent member of the Local Governing Committee at Ashley School on Sunday 3 January 2021 for two main reasons: 

1. The new Head Teacher: 

I couldn’t stand by the decision to appoint the new Head Teacher that was announced on 4 January 2021.  

The following processes were not followed: 

a. No LGC member was part of the hiring process for Mrs Ratcliff. For previous candidates interviewed for the role, a member of the LGC was included in those interviews. And as per the Scheme Of Delegation, there should have been a member of the LGC as “a representative on the appointment panel”. 

b. The LGC was told that the new incoming Chair would meet with Mrs Ratcliff following which a decision to proceed would be made. The incoming Chair didn’t meet with the new Head Teacher before the decision was made to proceed. 

As far as I am aware, this is the first appointment that has been made where a representative member of the LGC has not been on the interview panel for a member of the Senior Leadership Team at Ashley School. 

I felt the LGC was misled and that being a part of the process and giving the LGC the right to question the appointment was taken away from us. 

Fundamentally, I don’t think the new appointment is good for Ashley School or our children.  

We are an Outstanding school and considering the unrest that the school has gone through in the past 18 months, we needed a Head Teacher with no baggage. Unfortunately that is not the case here.   

2. Open/Closed LGC meetings: 

The GST decided in the summer of 2020 that our LGC meetings needed to be “closed”, meaning parents couldn’t attend Part 1 (Part 2 of the meetings were always closed due to confidentiality). 

This decision came shortly after the LGC decided for our meetings to remain open. 

This decision was done behind the backs of the LGC and although the LGC asked for information on how this decision was reached, nothing was provided.  

Ashley needs as much transparency as possible and I felt that closing these meetings sends the wrong message to the Ashley parent community. 

I am disappointed I didn’t last longer than 6 months in the role. I wish I could have done more. But the situation became untenable, and I felt remaining in the role would have meant that I was complicit in decisions that I felt were not right for the school. 

I wish the LGC the best of luck over the weeks and months ahead. They are fighting hard in the background to ask very difficult questions.  They can’t talk about much/any of it so we are lucky they are there. Hopefully soon the GST will start to appreciate the viewpoint they bring and the effort that is involved in being a member."

More on Ms Ratcliff's appointment here

UPDATE: The GST has responded to Ms Zakrezewska's statement here.

If you want to read more about this story, please click on the timeline on this website.

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