For many within Labour this whole debacle was the single biggest misstep of the party's first year in office.
However, it has refused to reveal when concerns were first raised with the school.Nor has it said if an internal investigation will be carried out to look at how the case was handled.
Saj Golby, who runs the North Solihull Additional Needs Support Group, told the BBC she had been in direct contact with the families of at least a dozen of Clarke's potential victims."The families that are approaching us are so angry and so hurt," she said. "He was in a position of trust and that has been broken."Something horrific was happening at a school on our doorsteps and families are saying 'we raised concerns' but they were ignored.
"Someone needs to be held accountable."Ms Golby founded the group in 2016 because she believed there was not enough support for parents of children with additional needs.
Her community campaigning led to her being selected as a baton bearer for the 2022 Commonwealth Games.
But about the same time, the 43-year-old said she was having problems with her own children at Forest Oak, because of what she called unrelated safeguarding concerns.They believed the speed of Carla's care was a key factor in the lucky position she was in to get the "best chance of recovery".
Craig said: "It was all within a 20-hour window which, to be quite honest is probably the main reason why Carla is in the condition she is in now and able to fight."Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust's spinal cord injury lead Michelle Elmsley said: "It's been an honour to be part of Carla's journey.
"It is a rare opportunity to be part of something special for acute patients under our care, and being able to go 'beyond the norm' has made me extremely proud to be part of team NUH."An 11-year-old boy has become the second child to die after a minibus overturned on a motorway slip road.