Saturday 9 July 2011

MoD spends more on school fees than for injured servicemen.

Excellent and harrowing article  in the Sun. Oops. Look our Coalition, you are about to get Clare Shorted

MoD school fees 3 times war compo

Scandal ... £34m to soldiers injured in Afghan war, left, against £113m paid to send Forces kids to private schools
Scandal ... £34m to soldiers injured in Afghan war, left, against £113m paid to send Forces kids to private schools

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By Diane Dernie
Mother of Lance Bombardier Ben Parkinson
THIS shows what an absolute pittance is paid to our wounded soldiers. It's insufficient and doesn't fairly represent the sacrifice they make.
It's not that we are against the allowance scheme for school fees - we think it is right children have a chance of the best start at life.
But it seems a shame that, while the MoD are trying to help children, they are not equally committed to helping wounded soldiers who must start new lives. This comparison says it all about how cheaply their lives are treated.

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By ANDY McNAB, Sun Security Adviser
THE education allowance is a success story for all sorts of reasons. The Armed Forces remain one of the few places where ordinary people can really achieve social mobility through hard work.
This scheme is open to all ranks and it is money well spent on the children because they are getting a top-class education.
It is also money well spent on our servicemen and women who travel constantly for work.
If they take advantage of this, they stand to gain a great deal.
 

 

THE Ministry of Defence spends three times as much money helping top officers' children attend elite private schools as it does compensating soldiers injured in Afghanistan.

Officials forked out £113million on the kids' posh educations in 2009-10, annual accounts show.
At the same time they handed over just £34million to soldiers who had been hurt fighting in the war zone.
The average compensation cheque for being injured in Afghanistan is about £10,000, figures show. About 55 payments are processed a week as the battlefield toll rises.

But the MoD - which faces severe cost-cutting measures - found cash to subsidise the children of more than 5,000 officers to attend top schools.

Brave ... Ben Parkinson
Brave ... Ben Parkinson
Each place costs the taxpayer around £20,000 a year. It is believed some kids are being educated for free at top public establishments like Eton.

The MoD's Continuity of Education Allowance scheme allows service personnel to give youngsters stable educations, rather than send them to different schools as parents are posted worldwide.
Soldiers pay just ten per cent of private school fees.
Some £177million was paid out under the scheme in 2009-10. About £113million was claimed by officers and the rest by non-commissioned officers and other ranks. Meanwhile, a squaddie whose leg is blown off in battle can receive as little as £92,000. A colleague with "superficial" shrapnel wounds can expect about £5,000. Among those to receive low payouts was 27-year-old Lance Bombardier Ben Parkinson, who lost both legs in an Afghan bomb blast and remains the most seriously-wounded Brit to survive.
His compensation rose after his family complained. 

Thousands of top brass use the MoD school scheme.
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Labour MP David Hanson said: "At a time when the MoD is having to save money it should look again at the cost of the education subsidy. The priority should be supporting our troops."
An improved compensation package launched last May lists tariffs for each individual injury - ranging from £1,200 to £570,000.
An MoD spokesman said: "CEA is an allowance open to all ranks. We have recently tightened the rules to ensure that it goes only to those who really need it. In 2010-11 the Ministry spent £59.5million on compensation for injured personnel."

Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/campaigns/our_boys/3681975/Ministry-of-Defence-spends-three-times-as-much-money-helping-top-officers-children-attend-elite-private-schools-as-it-does-compensating-soldiers-injured-in-Afghanistan.html#ixzz1RdQdKu31

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