by MONITOR
LAST month's decision by Britain's Charity Commission, to withdraw charity status for tax purposes from private schools that do not appear to offer sufficient public benefit in exchange for such tax concessions, is not being taken lying down by the named schools or by the Independent Schools Council (ISC). Yesterday the chief executive of the ISC, David Lyscom, said there was potential for a legal challenge against the Charity Commission for its interpretation of the 2006 Charity Act. He said that, whether or not private schools provided a public benefit by offering bursaries for pupils from poor families, they offered a public service by educating children privately who would otherwise be in state schools and paid for by the taxpayer. He also suggested that private schools are educating the future movers and shakers who will give the UK economic success in the future.
SOCIAL STAND STILL
15/08/2013 00:00
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