Emma Knights has been championing the work of school governors and trustees as the National Governance Association鈥檚 resident knight in shining armour for the past 13 years. But now she鈥檚 handed over the reins (well, one of them) to another Emma. Emma Balchin, previously the association鈥檚 director of training and consultancy, stepped in as joint chief executive this month. It has eased Knights鈥 鈥渇airly all-consuming鈥 workload 鈥 at a time when reducing sector workload has become the organisation鈥檚 top priority. Knights and Balchin are members of the new DfE workload reduction taskforce, tasked with slashing five hours from the working week of teachers. At the same time, the NGA鈥檚 own workload project has revealed that governor recruitment and retention is at an all-time high (77 per cent of boards say it is an issue). 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to get a grip on workload,鈥 says Knights. 鈥淭he terms of [governor] office are four years, and if people are leaving in their first or second year, that’s just a waste of everybody’s time because of the training 鈥 it鈥檚 quite a lot to induct people.鈥 Balchin adds that most governors and trustees are still positive about their roles 鈥 and the numbers saying it鈥檚 unmanageable is 鈥渕ore or less the same as previous years鈥. But she says the 鈥減ressure on schools to always be on an ever-improving journey鈥 with greater 鈥渟crutiny in the system鈥 means the pressure on governors and trustees is probably greater now than ever. Knights speaking at the summer conference 鈥楽tepped鈥 transition at the top As Knights has been such a dominant force in steering the NGA for so long, its board wanted a 鈥渟tepped transition鈥 rather than a 鈥渃omplete change at one go鈥. Balchin brings a fresh perspective because she鈥檚 experienced school life from so many angles. While the role is a 鈥渢rue job share, not split鈥, Balchin has a vested interest in SEND, attendance and behaviour. Her first venture into governance was at a pupil referral unit in 鈥渃hallenging circumstances鈥, and her Postgraduate Certificate in Education was in English and SEND. In her first career as a secondary English teacher, she never understood or appreciated the role of school governors 鈥 that 鈥渢here are people outside your school organisation there to support you, and actually take your concerns seriously鈥. When a pupil opened up to her about his substance abuse, her senior leadership team invited his family in to discuss the issue. But when the pupil claimed he鈥檇 only said it to 鈥渨ind Miss up鈥, the school took no further action. 鈥淚t was easier at the time for schools to sweep it under the carpet, because of community perception and the knock-on effect around pupil numbers. That instance was quite fundamental in making me think 鈥榮omebody needs to do something different鈥.鈥 She became Wolverhampton Council鈥檚 school drugs adviser, which then became part of the joint DfE and Department of Health鈥檚 national healthy school programme. It included training governors and teachers about drugs issues. She recalls developing interactive theatre pieces for schools and attempting 鈥渄amage limitation around the use of drugs dogs in schools with the police鈥. She took on a similar regional role for the West Midlands, later returning to the local authority as head of children and young people鈥檚 performance. She then became a school governor to 鈥渟ee things from the other side鈥. Back then the role was 鈥渁 bit tokenistic鈥. Balchin believes thanks to the NGA, there鈥檚 now more knowledge in the system of how to make a positive impact. Emma Balchin in 2016 winning the West Midlands LA as CEO of a ficticious council Challenge 鈥楩eeds into governors feeling undervalued鈥 But its role is changing. The association was hired in 2021 to run and help boards judged weak by regional directors. But it will be axed next month. This means the NGA鈥檚 remit is, for the first time in more than a decade, 鈥渁ll about sales to schools鈥. Those sales have fortunately been on the up 鈥 membership has risen tenfold since it was formed in 2006. Three-quarters of schools and trusts are counted as customers. But Knights is frustrated over the 18 months of legwork that went into tendering for the NLG contract, then recruiting staff and developing them before the DfE pulled the plug. The department spent just over 拢700,000 on the scheme this year. Meanwhile, a Freedom of information request from Schools Week shows 拢1.2 million for governance development and training schemes in 2020-21 has also been cut. At a time when 鈥渟chool leadership development money is going up and up鈥 (which Knights agrees with), she鈥檚 frustrated equivalent funding for governance has been 鈥渃ompletely cut. It feeds into governors [and trustees] feeling undervalued.鈥 She is also frustrated over the efforts that went into the now-defunct Schools Bill, although she says proposals for councils to be permitted involvement in running trusts were 鈥渁 con鈥. Councils would only have been allowed to serve as 鈥渕embers鈥, not trustees, meaning they wouldn鈥檛 have retained 鈥渁ny influence over the running of the trust at all. It was so cheeky鈥 a facade to make schools feel comfortable that the local authority was still involved, so they would then join MATs鈥. The reason the policy 鈥渄ied a death鈥 was 鈥渓obbying from other trusts who didn’t want the competition鈥, she claimed. But with local school improvement grants to local authorities now axed, Knights believes some councils will have so few support services for schools left that 鈥渢he last little lot鈥 of maintained schools will be forced to academise. The government is also launching a 拢1.2 million scheme to recruit new trustees 鈥 but they are solely to help failing academy trusts. Emma Balchin supervising a DofE trip SATs shake-up call While 鈥渢he worst end鈥 of the trust scandals of several years ago have been mitigated, that 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 all rosy in the garden of trust governance鈥, says Knights. Balchin said there has 鈥渞ightly been a huge emphasis on improving the governance of MATs as that structure was new to the sector and they are responsible for larger amounts of public money. We do now know what good looks like.鈥 But there hasn鈥檛 been so much of a focus on single academy trusts to 鈥渢hink about their governance鈥 and 鈥渟ome [SATs] are stuck in a time warp. Their chair鈥檚 been there for years, and there’s a cosy arrangement with the head who for example may be getting a very high salary as a 鈥榚xecutive head鈥, even though they鈥檝e only got one school. Others are absolutely brilliant鈥. Balchin is aware of some successful trust chiefs who want to 鈥渃ontrol their boards rather than vice versa鈥, at which point danger bells ring. 鈥淭hese relationships need to be built on trust and respect. NGA works hard with other leadership organisations to produce joint guidance on how to build that culture and ensure the best possible governance.鈥 Her concern is amplified by the DfE decision to stall plans for trust-level inspections. Five years ago, Knights had assumed more trust chiefs would emerge from outside the sector. 鈥淭here鈥檚 more schools could do to learn from the best in other sectors鈥robably with HR and finance. That would be good.鈥 Emma Balchin speaking at the NGAs summer conference Financial planning challenges Governors鈥 ability to set three-year financial plans is made much harder by late decisions about pay rates (the School Teachers鈥 Review Body report was published in March in 2015, but more recently has been late July). Knights says this is a disaster. 鈥淗ow are you meant to do three years of strategic planning when you can’t even know next term鈥檚 budget?鈥 The consequence is governors spending time over summer holidays reworking their budgets. But schools that have to reduce staffing budgets 鈥渃an鈥檛 make [people] redundant in that timeframe. You need months.鈥 Last year鈥檚 energy costs and staff pay rises created the perfect storm 鈥 the worst for school budgets in her memory. But some trusts get help from the DfE 鈥 specifically when taking on new schools, although this is normally down to individual negotiations. Knights says the process is 鈥渟lightly lacking in transparency鈥 and she questions just how much the DfE is spending to 鈥渆ncourage trusts to take on the most difficult schools鈥. Official government figures show rebroker fees paid to trusts dropped to 拢1.3 million last year as most transfers included no inducements, down from a high of 拢8.4 million in 2016-17. But there are other avenues for support. Emma Knights the National Governance Association 鈥業t can be a lonely job鈥 Rising permanent exclusions are another concern, creating a 鈥渂ig workload鈥 for governors sitting on the boards that uphold or challenge a head鈥檚 decision. 鈥淚f they rule the other way to the head, it can cause real ructions that make life difficult,鈥 Knights says, adding it is 鈥渁stounding鈥 there is no independent tribunal for issues such as exclusions. 鈥淧arents say 鈥榦f course governors uphold the head鈥檚 decision, because they’re in it with them鈥. And that鈥檚 true 鈥 governors are part of the institution.鈥 Nonetheless, Knights sees many good 鈥╟hairs providing vital support to pressured headteachers and believes the sector 鈥ㄢ渦nderplays鈥 their role. It 鈥渃an be quite a lonely job鈥 as there are some things a head tells their chair that can鈥檛 be shared. 鈥淪ometimes senior leaders don’t realise how much care goes into that. It doesn’t get said enough. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not all marvellous. But some are fabulous.鈥