Sunday 22 December 2024
Select a region
News

Education documents could soon be handed to Scrutiny

Education documents could soon be handed to Scrutiny

Sunday 15 December 2019

Education documents could soon be handed to Scrutiny

Sunday 15 December 2019


A change in the law could happen within days, to allow unredacted documents relating to a controversial education appointment to be handed over to the Scrutiny Committee.

There had been a delay in documents being inspected because the data protection law meant they could only be seen in a redacted form unless handed to a named individual.

The documents all related to the appointment of Clare Sealy as the island's new Head of Curriculum and Standards. 

She was given the role after impressing the President of the Committee for Education, Sport and Culture at her interview. Deputy Matt Fallaize was accused of interfering in the recruitment process by a HR professional working for the States.

clare_sealy.png

Pictured: Clare Sealy. 

Documents belonging to Deputy Fallaize and the other members of ESC as well as the HR professional are ready to be inspected but only in redacted form so far.

However last week, the Home Affairs President said the law could be amended to allow the unredacted documents to be seen

Deputy Fallaize said it was good news. 

"I was delighted when on Tuesday I was advised of this draft Regulation. I welcome the intention of it to remove data protection obstacles which can stand in the way of allowing all documents to be submitted to Scrutiny reviews in full and unredacted.

"For weeks my Committee has wanted to hand the Scrutiny Management Committee every word of every e mail and document. We are more frustrated than anyone that up to this point no lawful way has been found to do this. If this Regulation is made soon and if it achieves what the Committee for Home Affairs thinks it will achieve then we will have a lawful route to submit everything unredacted and we would do so immediately.

"In the meantime, in line with my undertaking to Deputy Green, we will submit to the SMC everything we hold but redacted as the States' lawyers advise they must be until the legal obstacles around data protection can hopefully be removed imminently."

Pictured top: Deputy Matt Fallaize and Deputy Chris Green, Scrutiny President. 

Sign up to newsletter

 

Comments

Comments on this story express the views of the commentator only, not Bailiwick Publishing. We are unable to guarantee the accuracy of any of those comments.

You have landed on the Bailiwick Express website, however it appears you are based in . Would you like to stay on the site, or visit the site?