Home Menu

NAHT Northern Ireland

NAHT_NIidentity_RGB_LR 389.jpg

NAHT Northern Ireland represents principals and vice-principals in around two-thirds of 1,150 schools in Northern Ireland. NAHT Northern Ireland provide advice, training and support for its members on a range of issues faced by senior leaders in schools. Along with our colleagues in England and Wales, we are there to defend and extend the rights of school leaders.  

NAHT NI is democratic and member-led, and supported by its Belfast-based team of staff alongside their colleagues based in both Wales and England.

NAHT Northern Ireland
Carnmoney House
Edgewater Office Park

Belfast
BT3 9JQ

nahtni@naht.org.uk
02890 776633 

Children to pay the price for political failures as Education Authority forced into damaging cuts

School leaders' union NAHT NI has responded to the Education Authority's announcement of severe savings measures, asserting that planned cuts to schools are the direct result of political choices in determining the education budget in Northern Ireland.

The measures announced today include a 50p increase in school meal prices, cuts to home-to-school transport, savings impacting the music service and the suspension of referrals to external EOTAS (Education Other Than At School) providers - services supporting some of the most vulnerable children who cannot attend mainstream school.

Dr Graham Gault, NAHT NI national secretary, said: "Every single one of these damaging measures announced today is the direct consequence of political choices made at Westminster and in Stormont about how much to allocate to education in Northern Ireland.

"The Education Authority is pointing to decisions that will directly impact children and families. This situation is not inevitable - it is the result of years of political decision-making that has systematically underfunded education while politicians of all shades have talked about valuing our children's futures.

"Suspending referrals to EOTAS providers is particularly concerning. These services support some of our most vulnerable children - those who cannot attend mainstream school for various complex reasons. What happens to these children now? Where are they supposed to go?

"Increasing school meal prices will hit families who are already struggling but who earn just above the threshold for free school meals. Parents facing financial challenges will also be impacted by cuts to transport services which may mean children, including some with additional needs, face longer journeys or more inconvenient arrangements. And reducing access to music education means narrowing opportunities for children to develop their talents.

"The Education Authority says that this situation is 'not one anyone at EA wants to be in.' Of course it isn't. Nobody in education wants to be making these choices. But politicians have forced this situation through their funding decisions year after year.

"The Department of Education's own equality impact assessment warned in March that the Budget 'will leave a considerable shortfall across the education sector' and that 'demand-led, statutory pressures will go unfunded.' Politicians were warned. They chose not to act. Now children are paying the price.

"Politicians at Westminster and in Stormont must now make different choices. They must prioritise education and provide the funding needed to prevent these damaging cuts from being implemented. They must choose to invest in children's futures rather than managing education's decline.

"Our children deserve better than this. They deserve political leaders who will make the right choices - who will fund education properly, protect the most vulnerable, and ensure every child can access the education and support they need."

First published 05 November 2025

NAHT Northern Ireland events 2025

NAHT(NI) Leadership Conference – 15 and 16 May 2025 

Roe Valley Resort, Limavady

The conference theme this year is 'Navigating leadership' and we have an agenda to support school leaders as you steer schools through still and troubled waters. Find out more.

 

 

 

 

Recent consultations and other documents

NITC joint letter to management side

The five teacher unions in Northern Ireland, including NAHT(NI), wrote to the employers seeking additional payment to school leaders and teaching staff who worked significant additional hours during summer 2021 in order to ensure this work was recognised.

 

Consultation on deferring school starting age: NAHT(NI) draft response

We are concerned at the advancement of this proposal as the evidential basis for this consultation is highly limited. We contend that the current proposal should be retracted. The proposal fails to reflect the experience of pupils, school leaders, parents and the whole school community. Given the significance of this potential policy change, it is essential that the perspectives of all stakeholders are considered. We know that members are operating in a business-critical environment and will have limited or no time to engage with consultation exercises, however, we encourage members to consider responding to this important consultation and copy our response to complete your individual response.

 

Previous consultation responses and statements

First published 08 April 2020