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Fix School Funding

The issue

  • There has been 15 years with no overall growth in  school spending. This squeeze on school resources is effectively without precedent in post-war UK history.
  • Schools are now facing new and significant cost pressures e.g. surging energy prices, covid-related costs, falling primary pupil numbers, the National Insurance increase, and pressures due to significant underfunding of SEND.
  • Changes to the government’s national funding formula (NFF) have seen a redistribution of funding away from schools serving the most deprived communities in recent years.
  • Funding for pupils with special educational needs (SEND) is in crisis, with overall High Needs budget deficits estimated to be more than £2billion and growing
  • The value of pupil premium funding designed to support the most disadvantaged pupils has fallen in real-terms since 2015.
  • The government has only invested a small fraction of the covid recovery funding that its own recovery commissioner said would be required.
  • Between 2009-10 and 2021-22, capital spending declined by 25% in cash terms, and 29% when adjusted for inflation.
  • Specific types of schools including small schools and maintained nursery schools remain under extreme financial pressure and many of facing the real risk of closure.

 

What we want to see

  • The government needs to be more ambitious for schools and set out a proper funding plan that addresses the 15 funding squeeze.
  • The government needs to offer more support for schools experiencing severe financial pressures as a result of rising energy costs.
  • The government should set out a proper long-term capital funding plan to bring all schools up to ‘good’ condition.
  • The government should commit to a truly ambitious recovery plan based on the work of its own recovery commissioner.
  • The government should commit to at least restoring pupil premium funding in real-term terms, and increasing the Early Years Pupil Premium to reach parity with the primary pupil premium.
  • A consultation on the long-term future of the approach to maintained nursery school funding should be launched without delay.
  • The government must use the ling-awaited SEND review to develop a truly needs-led approach to SEND funding.
  • Sufficient and sustainable funding for small schools.

 

What we want you to do

 

Our conference motion

“Conference instructs National Executive to develop a national fair funding campaign to press government  to provide a sufficient overall level of funding to meet the needs of all pupils, through the national funding formula and the high needs national funding formula. This is required now to enable schools to set budgets from 2022-2023. It would allow them to meet all their statutory responsibilities and provide an extended curriculum offer that supports all children and young people to thrive academically, socially, physically and spiritually.

Conference further instructs National Executive to campaign for an increase in capital funding that will address the nation’s decrepit school estate, to ensure that school buildings and grounds are safe, fit for purpose and appropriate for the needs of the 21st century.”

Useful links
 

MP roundtable resources

Other useful links

Relevant articles and reports

 

 

The Future of Maintained Nursery Schools

Securing the long-term future of maintained nursery schools remains a high priority for NAHT.

While we welcomed the government’s recent announcement that they would be extending the supplementary funding nursery schools receive, we remain clear that there needs to be a sustainable long-term solution. Maintained nurseries cannot survive on short-term measures and warm-words alone.

Last week, we joined a coalition of key stakeholders in writing to the Minister responsible for early years to raise this issue.

We welcomed his public commitment to maintained nursery schools but reiterated the need for a long-term solution. We also took the opportunity to raise a number of related issues, including the fact that the supplementary funding has not risen in-line with inflation and has therefore been subject to a real-terms cut in recent year.

We asked that the minister make contact with local authorities (LAs) to reiterate the government’s commitment to nursery schools. We have become concerned about the number of LAs that have been contacting nursery schools asking them to make contingency plans should the supplementary funding be stopped. This clearly runs counter to the government’s recent announcement and places unnecessary stress on leaders in those schools.

In February, the NAHT Early Years Council will be meeting with the Minister and we will use the opportunity to reinforce these points.

First published 17 January 2020

First published 20 January 2020
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