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(UK) Leicestershire: Demand up; $60M deficit for special ed; plans to use regular ed $$$

June 28, 2021, Leicestershire Live: Council showdown with schools looms over huge special needs education deficit https://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/news/local-news/council-showdown-schools-looms-over-5562482 Midlands

Leicestershire County County is bracing itself for a battle with schools over its plans to tackle an anticipated deficit of tens of millions of pounds in its special needs education budget. Senior officials have warned the rising demand and costs of providing special educational needs and disabilities, (SEND), education in the county have made funding the system unsustainable and likely to mean the amount spent will outstrip the money available by £43 million [$60M U.S.] 2024. This is despite cost-cutting plans that have already saved £24 million in recent years. The projected £43 million deficit was this week described as the most significant short-term financial risk to the county council. SEND education is funded from a council pot of cash called the 'high needs block', while mainstream education in the county is paid for from a separate 'schools block'. The county council is now to ask the Leicestershire Schools Forum, a group of senior headteachers and governors from mainstream county schools, if it can transfer 0.5 per cent of the schools block cash - some £2 million - to the special educational needs fund in the next financial year. For that to happen, the council must secure the forum's agreement - and the body rejected a similar proposal last year. Should the forum refuse again, the council is likely to appeal to Education Secretary Gavin Williamson to approve the move anyway. Conservative deputy council leader councillor Debra Taylor is the cabinet member for children and families. She said other councils were also facing the difficult decision of having to take money from mainstream schooling to pay for special needs education…. “It’s with a very heavy heart that we do this.” Coun Taylor pledged to get the deficit under control and continue to lobby ministers for more money and to make them aware of the county council’s situation…. The council’s director of children and young people Jane Moore told a cabinet meeting this week: “‘Demand for places is the most significant driver of the cost and therefore the deficit. “The SEND system isn’t sustainable in its current format and presents a significant risk to the local authority.” She said it was hoped, but not expected, that a long-awaited national review of the SEND system would deliver some changes needed.


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