logo
Shock ‘strap' claim rocks elite school

Shock ‘strap' claim rocks elite school

Yahoo22-02-2025
A prestigious regional Victorian private school has become engulfed in a scandal following allegations of senior boarding students 'lashing' their junior peers.
Ballarat Grammar School has launched an investigation into the alleged assault of boarding students at their campus at Wendouree - a suburb of Ballarat - after the alarm was raised by a parent earlier this month.
The Age reports some senior students in one of the school's boarding hoses ran a so-called 'punishment ring' where junior students were 'strapped' or lashed as punishment.
Ballarat Grammar headmaster Adam Heath said several senior students had developed a 'perverse sense of justice' and believed they had the 'right' to administer consequences to the younger boys. believing they had the right to 'administer consequences'
In a statement, he said the school was taking the allegations 'extremely seriously' and were 'committed to ensuring the wellbeing and safety of every student in our care.'
'We are fully cooperating with the relevant authorities and will continue to provide our full support, if required,' Mr Heath said.
Mr Heath said Bradley Fenner, an expert in boys' education and the former headmaster of Auckland's King's College and the Prince Alfred College in Adelaide, had been commissioned to undertake an independent review of what had allegedly occurred.
'He will be working with us to review all of our processes as well as our culture and practices within the
boarding environment,' Mr Heath continued in the statement.
'He is providing expert advice on how we're managing this situation so that we have a fair, transparent process of natural justice for all who are involved.'
The school did not elaborate on whether any students had been disciplined, suspended or expelled following the allegations.
Mr Heath said the investigation and review were ongoing.
'Our priority is to listen to and support those who have been impacted,' he said.
'Following the conclusion of the investigation and review, we will take decisive action and respond accordingly.'
The Herald Sun reports Mr Heath first wrote to parents on February 20 where he condemned the alleged acts.
'I want to inform you that I have become aware of certain behaviours in our boarding houses that do not align with the school's values and, if substantiated, would constitute serious misconduct,' he said in a letter to parents.
'As part of this investigation, I am committed to upholding the principles of natural justice, ensuring that all parties are treated fairly while I establish the facts.
'While the investigation is ongoing, I want to reassure our community that, should the allegations be substantiated, decisive action will be taken to ensure accountability.'
Ballarat Grammar School is one of the state's most expensive private schools - costing up to $26,040 per year for Year 12 students.
Boarding fees for that same year group cost an additional $23,400 on top of tuition fees.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A timeline of homelessness in Los Angeles
A timeline of homelessness in Los Angeles

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

A timeline of homelessness in Los Angeles

Los Angeles experienced its first wide-scale homelessness during two periods of national upheaval — the Great Depression and the housing crunch after World War II. In both cases, the crises abated. In the 1970s, though, economic events and public policy decisions conspired to drive people onto the streets again — and, ever since, Los Angeles has suffered chronic homelessness, with more unsheltered people than any other city in the United States. Going back to the 1800s, the city keeps "tramps," "hobos," "vagrants" and "winos" off the streets by locking them up in jail or sending them to work at the county "poor farm." In 1896, the city builds a new jail with double the capacity of the old one. Read about how policing has contributed to homelessness. The population of Los Angeles quintuples in two decades. In the first months of 1921, more than 25,000 building permits are issued. The area on the eastern side of downtown Los Angeles whose cheap residential hotels, bars, liquor stores and missions made it a magnet for transients becomes widely known as Skid Row. A homeless census in 48 of California's 58 counties finds 101,174 homeless people in a state with a population of 5.7 million. (In 2022, the state had 171,521 homeless people — far more than in 1933, but not per capita, when you consider that the overall population now is about seven times larger.) It is estimated that 162,000 families in Los Angeles, including 50,000 veterans, are living in tents, garages, vehicles and other substandard accommodations, according to a 2021 report by UCLA's Luskin Center for History and Policy. Read about how housing policies exacerbated homelessness in Los Angeles: More than a half-million dwelling units are built from 1940 to 1950 in the L.A. metro area, most of them after the war. More than 850,000 more are built during the 1950s. The construction boom, fueled by the GI Bill, quickly ends the epidemic in homelessness. Authorities had pushed out most of the 1,800 families who lived in the Mexican American neighborhoods of Chavez Ravine to build a public housing project called Elysian Park Heights to house 17,000 people. But at the height of anti-communist hysteria, real estate interests, seeing their profits threatened by public housing, launch a successful campaign against it, financing opposition groups that call it "socialist housing." The project is scratched, and Mayor Norris Poulson promises that no new ones will be approved. Some 15,000 single-room occupancy units are demolished in Skid Row and 7,000 low-income Victorian homes are razed on Bunker Hill as civic leaders move to modernize downtown. The act decrees, among other things, that authorities can take people into custody only for 72-hour psychiatric holds, ending long-term commitments in the state's 10 psychiatric hospitals. But with few community clinics for patients to seek treatment, many end up on the street. Read more. The average price of a house in Los Angeles hits $100,000, four times what it was in 1970 (about $380,000 in today's dollars, or less than 40% of what the average home costs now). The county estimates that there are 30,000 homeless people on the streets, including 10,000 in Skid Row. By 1984, the Department of Housing and Urban Development finds that L.A.'s homeless numbers surpass New York's. Read how cuts in social services contributed to the homeless crisis: As crack cocaine tears through neighborhoods, legislators respond by passing shockingly stiff mandatory prison terms for the drug, even as more affluent cocaine users face far lighter sentences on the rare occasions when they are arrested. Crack users and other felons leave prison for Skid Row with criminal records that rob them of the ability to make a living, qualify for welfare or subsidized housing, contributing to the area's sudden transformation into a strongly Black enclave. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rules in April 2006 that in the absence of sufficient shelter beds, arrests for resting or sleeping on the sidewalks constitute 'cruel and unusual punishment.' Almost immediately, tents mushroom on the streets of L.A. The 9th Circuit's Lavan vs. City of Los Angeles ruling bars property owners from calling in garbage trucks to dispose of people's belongings in Skid Row. Overdose deaths among people experiencing homelessness in L.A. County increase 515% from 2016 to 2022, as fentanyl flooded the illegal drug market. By 2023, fentanyl would be detected in 70% of such deaths. The average single-family home hits $563,721 in April 2015. Ten years later, it is $1,060,048, according to Zillow. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals rules that cities cannot enforce anti-camping ordinances if there are not enough shelter beds available to the homeless, in effect becoming the law in most of the West when the U.S. Supreme Court declines to take the case in 2019. After a backlash against encampments in many Western cities, the Supreme Court rules in City of Grants Pass vs. Johnson that local governments' use of civil and criminal penalties for illegally camping on public land does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment of homeless people. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

The Mancunian Way: Going underground
The Mancunian Way: Going underground

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

The Mancunian Way: Going underground

Andy Burnham says he is 'deadly serious' about taking Greater Manchester's transport system subterranean. He wants to run trains and trams under Manchester city centre. The mayor's rather surprising announcement came at the end of an event to launch the new, 10-year Greater Manchester Strategy. And Mr Burnham said the underground policy was what he was most excited about. READ MORE: Dean Barnes trial: Burglary victim cleared of causing death by dangerous driving as thief who rode stolen bike convicted READ MORE: Mum murdered by ex dumped outside as his sisters tried to help cover up brutal killing He wants it to start with a new, underground Piccadilly station. 'We will need infrastructure on a bigger scale to cope,' he told Ethan Davies. It's not exactly a new idea. A 'Picc-Vic' subterranean tunnel was planned in the 1970s, before it was cancelled. No timelines for the underground system have been offered but Mr Burnham wants 'detailed' costed plans by 2030. Watch this space. While waxing lyrical last night, Mr Burnham said the next decade will be the best 'since the Victorian period'. Part of that is down to a new plan to run five new 'mayoral development corporations' (MDCs) - aimed at slashing red tape and speeding up development. In the town of Middleton, comedian Steve Coogan will be leading the charge. New homes and businesses, improved roads and a Metrolink stop could all be part of the regeneration. And Mr Coogan, who hails from Alkrington, says it's an 'exciting opportunity' for him to give back to a town that helped him in his early years. 'I feel I owe the people of Middleton a debt. That's why I'm happy to be involved and talk to people in Middleton and ask them what they want and what they need. 'You can't change the world, but you can change the things in your locality if you get involved. So I'm getting involved.' You can read more about the plans here. This lovely image shows Heaton Park as preparations start for the huge Oasis homecoming gigs. You can catch up with all our Oasis stories - and there are a few - right here. Demolition work has started at the Hotspur Press building after it was gutted during a devastating fire. A huge blaze erupted at the building - one of the city's oldest surviving cotton mills, which was later repurposed as a printing press - on the evening of June 23. More than 100 people were evacuated from nearby blocks of flats, while trains were stopped on the line near Oxford Road station. Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service confirmed it would have to be partially demolished. Specialist workers are currently on site and carrying out preparation work. Chris Slater has more detail here. Greater Manchester could see four major hospital rebuilds and new developments amid changes to frustrating rules that stopped the region from transforming crumbling buildings. After a years-long mission to get the funding, and a Manchester Evening News campaign, up to £1.5bn was finally approved by the government for the overhaul of the Victorian-era North Manchester General Hospital. But NHS capital spending rules have prevented three other major hospital building projects in Greater Manchester. Changes to those rules could break logjams for Stepping Hill Hospital, wythenshawe-hospital>Wythenshawe Hospital, and The Christie Hospital, says the region's NHS chief. Health reporter Helena Vesty has all the details here. Two years ago, Alex Spencer was performing to shoppers on Market Street. Last night he took to the Castlefield Bowl stage in front of thousands as a support act for The Black Keys. The 18-year-old started busking at the age of 12 and has made a name for himself releasing three EPs and showcasing tracks via BBC Introducing. 'If I never went out busking I'd never be here where I am now,' he told Adam Maidment. 'The best thing about busking is that you never know who is watching.' Read more about Alex here. Friday: It's another scorcher with sunshine all day and top temps of 30C. Roads: A577 Mosley Common Road, Astley, in both directions closed due to roadworks between B5232 Bridgewater Road and A572 Chaddock Lane until July 22. A6 Chapel Street westbound, Salford, closed due to long-term roadworks from A6041 Blackfriars Road to A34 New Bailey Street. Until January 19. A5067 Chester Road westbound, Old Trafford, closed due to roadworks between A5014 Talbot Road and A56 Bridgewater Way. Between 9.30am and 3.30pm Mondays to Sundays until October 31. Towering: Plans to build one of the UK's tallest skyscrapers in Salford look set to go ahead in a major development for the city. The massive tower could stand at 273m tall, in a £1bn project by Henley Investment Management (HIM) to build up to 3,300 homes across 10 buildings at Regent Retail Park. More here. Razed: An eyesore Northern Quarter car park is to be demolished to make way for a new development. Four new public squares will be built on the site of the Church Street multi-storey. More here. Blossoming: Castlefield Viaduct will double in size after securing £2.75m of funding, the National Trust has announced. The 'sky park' was opened to the public in 2022, initially opening for a year-long trial but it proved such a hit that the National Trust kept it open. Details here. It was a place of outlandish pranks, love affairs, legendary drunken parties and the first home many people ever had in the city. Sadly, all that remains are photographs and memories that generations of former students will never forget. Now reduced to rubble, Owens Park Tower was once the gold standard in student digs. Lee Grimsditch has been looking back at why.

A timeline of homelessness in Los Angeles
A timeline of homelessness in Los Angeles

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

A timeline of homelessness in Los Angeles

Los Angeles experienced its first wide-scale homelessness during two periods of national upheaval — the Great Depression and the housing crunch after World War II. In both cases, the crises abated. In the 1970s, though, economic events and public policy decisions conspired to drive people onto the streets again — and, ever since, Los Angeles has suffered chronic homelessness, with more unsheltered people than any other city in the United States. Going back to the 1800s, the city keeps 'tramps,' 'hobos,' 'vagrants' and 'winos' off the streets by locking them up in jail or sending them to work at the county 'poor farm.' In 1896, the city builds a new jail with double the capacity of the old one. Read about how policing has contributed to homelessness. The population of Los Angeles quintuples in two decades. In the first months of 1921, more than 25,000 building permits are issued. The area on the eastern side of downtown Los Angeles whose cheap residential hotels, bars, liquor stores and missions made it a magnet for transients becomes widely known as Skid Row. A homeless census in 48 of California's 58 counties finds 101,174 homeless people in a state with a population of 5.7 million. (In 2022, the state had 171,521 homeless people — far more than in 1933, but not per capita, when you consider that the overall population now is about seven times larger.) It is estimated that 162,000 families in Los Angeles, including 50,000 veterans, are living in tents, garages, vehicles and other substandard accommodations, according to a 2021 report by UCLA's Luskin Center for History and Policy. Read about how housing policies exacerbated homelessness in Los Angeles: More than a half-million dwelling units are built from 1940 to 1950 in the L.A. metro area, most of them after the war. More than 850,000 more are built during the 1950s. The construction boom, fueled by the GI Bill, quickly ends the epidemic in homelessness. Authorities had pushed out most of the 1,800 families who lived in the Mexican American neighborhoods of Chavez Ravine to build a public housing project called Elysian Park Heights to house 17,000 people. But at the height of anti-communist hysteria, real estate interests, seeing their profits threatened by public housing, launch a successful campaign against it, financing opposition groups that call it 'socialist housing.' The project is scratched, and Mayor Norris Poulson promises that no new ones will be approved. Some 15,000 single-room occupancy units are demolished in Skid Row and 7,000 low-income Victorian homes are razed on Bunker Hill as civic leaders move to modernize downtown. The act decrees, among other things, that authorities can take people into custody only for 72-hour psychiatric holds, ending long-term commitments in the state's 10 psychiatric hospitals. But with few community clinics for patients to seek treatment, many end up on the street. Read more. The average price of a house in Los Angeles hits $100,000, four times what it was in 1970 (about $380,000 in today's dollars, or less than 40% of what the average home costs now). The county estimates that there are 30,000 homeless people on the streets, including 10,000 in Skid Row. By 1984, the Department of Housing and Urban Development finds that L.A.'s homeless numbers surpass New York's. Read how cuts in social services contributed to the homeless crisis: As crack cocaine tears through neighborhoods, legislators respond by passing shockingly stiff mandatory prison terms for the drug, even as more affluent cocaine users face far lighter sentences on the rare occasions when they are arrested. Crack users and other felons leave prison for Skid Row with criminal records that rob them of the ability to make a living, qualify for welfare or subsidized housing, contributing to the area's sudden transformation into a strongly Black enclave. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rules in April 2006 that in the absence of sufficient shelter beds, arrests for resting or sleeping on the sidewalks constitute 'cruel and unusual punishment.' Almost immediately, tents mushroom on the streets of L.A. The 9th Circuit's Lavan vs. City of Los Angeles ruling bars property owners from calling in garbage trucks to dispose of people's belongings in Skid Row. Overdose deaths among people experiencing homelessness in L.A. County increase 515% from 2016 to 2022, as fentanyl flooded the illegal drug market. By 2023, fentanyl would be detected in 70% of such deaths. The average single-family home hits $563,721 in April 2015. Ten years later, it is $1,060,048, according to Zillow. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals rules that cities cannot enforce anti-camping ordinances if there are not enough shelter beds available to the homeless, in effect becoming the law in most of the West when the U.S. Supreme Court declines to take the case in 2019. After a backlash against encampments in many Western cities, the Supreme Court rules in City of Grants Pass vs. Johnson that local governments' use of civil and criminal penalties for illegally camping on public land does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment of homeless people.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store