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Thursday, February 09 2012

February 12: Brains behind BoJo's airport to be quizzed but not in Kent

Boris JohnsonIT seems councillors are finally going to get the chance to find out a little bit more about Mayor of London Boris Johnson’s plans for an island airport.

After we reported how "BoJo" had repeatedly snubbed requests to come to Kent to talk about his plan with the great and the good, the door has been opened.

The only trouble is that the councillors getting the opportunity to ask a few questions are members of the Greater London Assembly and it won’t be BoJO answering.

Instead Doug Oakervee, the top civil engineer given the job by Boris of coming up with a feasibility study, is to appear before the London Assembly’s cross-party environment committee in March.

Still, although Kent councillors are still being snubbed at least someone is going to have the chance to elicit a bit more information – even if they’re from London.

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Phil WoolasIt looks like council taxpayers will, after all, be bearing the brunt of a stand-off between KCC and the Home Office over a clash about unpaid grant money to meet the costs of looking after asylum seekers.

Despite efforts to negotiate a settlement that would have seen KCC get a full return of the full £4million, it seems the Home Office has only offered 25 per cent - £1million.

As a result, council tax bills are set to rise by 2.39 per cent instead of the 1.86 per cent the council would have preferred.

There seems to be another sting in the tale as a report setting out the plans, due to be voted on at next week’s budget-setting meeting, says the Government has only offered enough to cover a future shortfall, not the historic amount of £7.3million.

It says the county council has rejected the current offer on the table and negotiations are continuing.

If there’s no successful outcome, the average Band D tax for the KCC share will rise to £1,050.84

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I HAVEN’T heard how a recent visit to Sweden by a small group of Kent education chiefs and headteachers went.

The party went to look at some free schools, a concept the Conservatives are rather keen on.

But by coincidence, there was an interesting piece on "Newsnight" examining the pros and cons of the free school system that the Conservative party nationally is rather keen on.

You can see the report here>>>

One of the most interesting revelations was that the Swedish authorities are now re-examining the whole policy, after research pointed to a decline in standards nationally since free schools were first introduced.

 

 

Friday, February 12 2010

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