Chief Cabinet Secretary Ben Weyts becomes the new head of the Education Inspectorate

Chief Cabinet Secretary Ben Weyts becomes the new head of the Education Inspectorate
Chief Cabinet Secretary Ben Weyts becomes the new head of the Education Inspectorate
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The Flemish government appointed a successor for Lieven Viaene on Friday. The West Flemish inspector general was honorably discharged by the government earlier this year and is retiring. The new top woman of the Education Inspectorate will be Katrien Bonneux. After a selection procedure carried out by an external agency, two candidates were nominated to the Flemish government. He ultimately chose Bonneux.

Since 2021, Bonneux has been Chief of Cabinet for Education to Flemish Minister of Education Ben Weyts (N-VA). When Weyts’ first chief of staff, Carine Steverlynck, left, Bonneux was a logical choice. She took on the role of coordinator of corona policy in 2020 and thus came into the spotlight.

Big challenges

According to Weyts, she has “a solid track record in education policy”. She started working at the support policy department of the Department of Education and Training in 2006 and became department head of the Secondary education and student guidance department in 2012. “This is a matter of the right woman in the right place. Major challenges await the Education Inspectorate: reducing the planning burden and improving the quality of education,” said the minister.

The choice for Bonneux is certainly striking. At his farewell, former CEO Lieven Viaene lashed out at Weyts. Viaene found both the minister’s vision and the way he worked to be below standard. For example, communication about certain studies was not allowed and press releases were rewritten. “We are being silenced,” Viaene said The standard.

Concerns about objectivity

Viaene – and many in the education field with him – are concerned about the independence of the inspection. He said: “The inspectorate only has effectiveness if it can function independently of politics and report objectively. If she is used to drive for the minister, she does not have one.”

Politics was also very supportive of the minister’s attitude. This ranged from “creepy and very harmful” (Vooruit) and “independence is crucial” (Open VLD) to “the primacy of politics has gone completely crazy in Flanders. It is detrimental to good governance” (Green).

The fact that a chief of staff is immediately promoted to a top position at the watchdog reinforces those fears. “Where is there any confidence in serious advice from the inspectorate in an independent manner?” says a source from civil society, who wishes to remain anonymous. “This is really a position that you cannot immediately step into as chief of staff.”

It is of course not surprising that people are appointed politically, but it is that they also head the inspectorate. Bonneux’s profile differs significantly from that of her predecessor, Viaene. He came to the inspectorate as general director of a large school group. The choice of Bonneux is in line with an earlier response from Weyts, who sees the inspectorate as one of the top civil servants under him. About Viaene’s criticism, he said: “If he wants to become independent, he can open a shop or a hairdresser’s shop.”

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