Application to shift £2m of school funding to SEND provision

18/01/2023

The move comes despite 90 per cent of schools objecting

by Andy Mitchell, Local Democracy Reporter

Oxfordshire County Council will apply to trim funding for every school pupil to push £2.38 million into special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) provision.

Ninety per cent of the county’s schools that responded objected but Councillor Liz Brighouse OBE (Lab, Churchill & Lye Valley), who oversees children, education and young people’s services, insists the measures are necessary and will save money in the long term.

A significant portion of the funding councils get for schools comes from the age-weighted pupil unit (AWPU), the basic level of funding for each child.

The same councils also have to fund the requirements of those with SEND with many having to overspend to meet statutory obligations, although the extra costs are ring fenced as a bill that does not need to be paid until 2025.

Oxfordshire expects to overspend by £17.5 million in the current financial year and build up a total deficit of £122 million by 2025.

A recent council report showed it expects to spend £92 million on SEND this financial year, £29 million of which is expected to go to private providers, some of which are outside Oxfordshire.

Some of those specialist placements are necessary but a part of that cost is driven by the lack of placements in the county and parents who challenge the decisions of the council’s SEND professionals.

In a bid to plug that gap, the county will apply to take the maximum it is permitted to – 0.5 per cent – from its dedicated schools grant (DSG) for the financial year starting in April 2023, £2.38 million which will be targeted at improving services and increasing the number of places, reducing the need for private providers.

It would mean a 0.72 per cent reduction in the AWPU of every pupil in Oxfordshire, which is around £25 per child per year in primary school, £35 for those in school years seven to nine and £40 for those in years 10 and 11.

The county requires permission from the secretary of state for education to implement the budget shift.

In backing the recommendation of council officers, Cllr Brighouse said “it will still be a pittance” when set against an anticipated £20 million shortfall for SEND in 2023-24.

“That just continues and will until the government decides to sort it out, and that doesn’t appear to be happening any time soon,” she said.

Speaking after the meeting, Cllr Brighouse said: “As the number of children with special educational needs goes up, so the deficit goes up.

“There has been a 125 per cent uplift in the number of children we are funding through the high needs block and we have had an uplift in funding of around 49 per cent so it hasn’t met the needs – it hasn’t nationally and it hasn’t here, some local authorities have even bigger problems than we do.

“We feel if we can better fund our mainstream schools, more special schools in the county and units within our schools to support children with special educational needs, then that will be a better way to spend money and it will cost much less than out-of-county boarding.

“It is to try to start shifting the way the money is spent.”

Asked what she would say to the schools that had objected, Cllr Brighouse replied: “We need to remember there are schools where maybe a third of children have special educational needs and disabilities.

“Some schools have many fewer children but we do need to be more equitable in terms of funding children with special educational needs and disabilities and this is one way to do it, to enable those children to stay in mainstream schools.

“Those schools are working really hard to keep children close to home, in their communities, and we need to be able to help them to do that – I would hope all schools want to do that.

“The purpose of this is to reduce the amount of money that we have to spend by keeping our children closer.

“A big part is very often going into private or commercial establishments to support the fewest number of children, some of whom could have their needs met appropriately in schools in the county but those schools need the extra support to do that.

“This would be spent on putting top-ups into schools to help them keep the children there.

“My personal view is that we also need to be looking at giving a lot more support to special educational needs co-ordinators (SENCOs) in schools so they can support some of our most distressed children.”

During the meeting, Sarah Fogden, finance business partner at Oxfordshire County Council, said there was “no timescale for the decision” on the request.


Published: by Banbury FM Newsteam

Reader's opinions

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Current track

Title

Artist

Background