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(UK) Luton: "National increase" in kids with SPED plans "reflected in Luton"

  • Jul 22, 2025
  • 2 min read
July 22, 2025, Luton Today: New special needs places approved for Luton primary school

 

N. of London


Eight pupils are set to benefit from a new special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) resourced provision at a Luton primary school, which could cater for 16 eventually, a meeting heard.


A national increase in pupils requiring an education, health and care plan (EHCP) for social, emotional mental health (SEMH) is reflected in Luton, according to a report to the borough council’s executive.


A number of these children are supported at and attend mainstream schools, said the report. “The intention is to develop this offer at Wigmore Primary School, which has the expertise and accommodation in place.


 “The most complex young people with SEMH currently attend specialist out-of-borough schools or independent specialist schools.


“There are:

greater rates of exclusion among children with identified or undiagnosed SEMH need;

higher proportions attending school on part-time timetables;


a greater percentage being supported in primary behaviour units within the schools;

or receiving alternative provision with more limited access to a broad full-time curriculum and social interaction with peers.


“LBC is in an unusual position by not having specialist SEMH provision. The council is heavily reliant on spaces in SEMH schools in neighbouring local authorities and the independent sector.


 “This is problematic as placements at out-of-borough schools are expensive. As the number of EHCPs and demand for specialist SEMH provision increases nationally and regionally, it’s becoming harder to secure places for Luton pupils in neighbouring local authority maintained special schools or academies.


“These schools are now at capacity and places are in high demand from within their own local authorities of Bedford borough, Central Bedfordshire Council and Buckinghamshire Council.


 “It’s also increasingly challenging to meet LBC’s legal duty for sufficient suitable school places, with out-of-borough placements incurring higher transport costs and longer journeys for pupils with complex special needs.


“Around one in five children in Luton diagnosed with SEMH and complex needs require specialist SEMH school provision, and they’re placed in schools outside Luton borough,” explained the report. . . .


LBC’s head of provision and services in education Debbie Craig added: “We’re not bringing out-of-borough children back, as we don’t want to destabilise their education.


“There are eight children in Luton schools that would very much benefit from this provision. We think it can be positive for them. Some more capacity is then available, if we need it.”


Labour Northwell councillor Rob Roche asked for a report back around the “greater rates of exclusion for this cohort”.


The committee approved the statutory proposals to arrange this primary school provision locally.


 
 
 

1 Comment


EndofDaze
Jul 25, 2025

U.S. congress just legalized letting states involuntarily re-hospitalize "mentally ill" patients possibly including autistic adults deemed "dangerous to self/others" (whatever that means, an abstract concept used to "justify" hostage holding, injections and injection threats, rights denial and betrayal by Jesuit-controlled "Psychrights" scams stealing our taxpayer dollars, etc). I wouldn't be surprised if the Jesuit/Masonic authorites involuntarily hospitalize millions of adult autistics nationwide in the name of "protecting self and others" through all sorts of "justified reasons" and loopholes and if their "caregivers" give them up to "Baker acts" instead of saying NO to all psychiatry and all vaccines/medical products and services as the Scabal owns all of it. All of it.

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