Sunday, 26 May 2013

Boffin mustn’t meddle in precious education

I WAS hoping we’d heard the last of Dr Tim Leunig. You may remember his outspoken views in a report earlier this year suggesting that the regeneration of failed towns was a non-starter.

EM Darren McSweeney
Darren McSweeney

His name has popped up again this week, only in a somewhat worrying turn of events, he has reappeared as an official adviser to the education secretary Michael Gove.

As a parent and school governor, I find it worrying that someone with a background of highly controversial opinions and views may now be influencing educational policies.

His latest report this year into northern towns shrinking in population size against a national trend was ridiculed by many, but it was really just a regurgitation of what he published four years ago as part of the “Policy Exchange” think tank.

When that first report was published in 2008, David Cameron famously referred to him as “barmy”. Yet here he is, four years on, securing a key advisory role in Cameron’s government.

Looking at his report earlier this year, the outspoken lecturer singled out Barrow as a dying town. In what was a smack in the teeth for all the hard working people involved in regeneration of the Furness area, he said “politicians must stop pretending the regeneration works, when it doesn’t”.

He said the same thing about Liverpool in his 2008 report. He needs to go back and look at Liverpool One, the whole waterfront, the continued expansion and development – he needs to take a long hard look at the number of jobs created, the businesses thriving and then tell us all regeneration doesn’t work.

People of vision, like Harry Knowles, John Woodcock and others – business people, in fact everyone one of us, have a hard enough battle geographically as it is – it took years to get the High Newton bypass agreed, but we got there. We got there by shouting long and hard, refusing to give up. We mustn’t stop shouting. We need the younger generations to believe Furness has a future worth fighting for.

It’s a worry that someone with such extreme views, who urged us all to up sticks and move south, who said coastal towns like Barrow had lost their raison d’etre as ports and as such had no future, could have a direct influence on educational policy.

Our children’s education is precious, it should be safeguarded and kept free from the influences of political boffins.

Have your say

This government gets more detached from reality by the day

Posted by Dave c on 2 October 2012 at 12:52

Harry Knowles a 'person with vision?
John Woodcock a person with vision?
Ye gods. All I can say is thank god Mr McSweeney isn't on the X-factor panel!

Posted by Tony on 1 October 2012 at 19:36

Make your comment

Your name

Your Email

Your Town/City

Your comment


SHARE THIS ARTICLE

North West Evening Mail What's on search











Powered by
Evening Mail Jobs

Hot Jobs

Loading latest hot jobs...
Powered by Zoopla.co.uk






Featured companies

Searching for featured companies...
Search for:

Vote

Should more be done to protect children from online pornography?

Yes

No

Show Result

My Millom
Keswick to Barrow challenge
Prime of your life
Heart of Ulverston
London Reader travel supplement
In-Cumbria
Energy
Weddings

Whit week

Go Green 24

The Waterworks Studio

Furness cars and commercials

Humble Pie

Professional motor body repairs

Choosing a Primary school

Great daffodil appeal 2013


Coach, camping and festival tickets available
Book Now with only £45 deposit
Weston Park Staffs, 16-19 August
Click here to order


To save our contact details direct to your smartphone simply scan this QR code

North West Evening Mail

Evening Mail Going Out
Boosting Barrow and Furness
Love your life, Live your life
Community news pages - join the Facebook page for your town or village