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(UK) Bristol: Council accused of monitoring social media of SPED parents

Oct 20, 2022, Bristol Post: Independent inquiry to investigate Bristol council officers monitoring SEND parents https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/independent-inquiry-investigate-bristol-council-7723103

SW England

A new independent inquiry will investigate how Bristol City Council officers monitored the social media of parents of children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). A majority of councillors have now voted to call on the mayor to set up an inquiry into the ongoing "scandal".

Calls for an inquiry began after emails leaked this summer revealing how council staff collected and shared a dossier of critical social media posts, cross-referencing anonymous Twitter accounts with private Facebook wedding photos. Two parents monitored by the council volunteered for the Bristol Parent Carer Forum, a local charity representing parents and carers of children with SEND. A long-running row led to the council scrapping its support for the charity’s funding. Conservative Councillor Geoff Gollop said: “These parents are a remarkable group of people who deserve to feel the council is on their side, not adding to the many challenges that they already face. But instead of responding to their needs, somewhere within this organisation, someone made a decision to monitor those parents’ social media accounts.

“The administration appears not to have condemned these actions, and by not condemning them that means they appear to have condoned them. It doesn’t matter to me whether this was systematic or random, it was wrong — yet we employ people who actually think it was right. Only an independent inquiry will tell us who was responsible for this.”

He was speaking during a full council meeting on Tuesday, October 18, where he put forward a motion calling for an inquiry. The vote was backed by other opposition parties, while Labour councillors chose not to vote.

Liberal Democrat Cllr Tim Kent said: “The council doesn’t know if officers may have infiltrated private Facebook groups to gather evidence. We have many unanswered questions. An independent investigation is now vital, if this council and the administration wishes to rebuild trust in parents.”

Several months' worth of tweets were collected by council staff, to use as evidence against the Bristol Parent Carer Forum. Staff alleged that two parents running the charity had been “campaigning” against the council, because they were criticising the city’s SEND provision, creating a conflict of interest.

Bristol has a long history of poor SEND provision, with Ofsted inspectors failing the city in 2019, parents regularly waiting well past the legal limit for education health and care plans, and often having to take the council to court to get support for their children. Both parents previously denied they were campaigning, but said they were raising legitimate concerns. 'RIDICULOUS'

Cabinet member for education Asher Craig said: “When we heard of the allegations, we immediately commissioned a report to get to the bottom of what happened. All the information that was collated was publicly available, and any suggestion that this council was carrying out covert surveillance on parents is just ridiculous. “But if councillors want to spend taxpayers’ money on an external investigation, then that’s fine. Officers had concerns relating to the governance of the [charity] and the fact that it represented a relatively small section of Bristol’s diverse parent carer community. We do have a strategic relationship with parents of children with SEND in this city.”

The vote saw 39 councillors in favour of an inquiry and 18 abstaining. Labour councillors abstained from voting, with concerns about how much time and money the inquiry would cost….

Councillors said an independent inquiry was 'vital' (Image: James Beck/Freelance)

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