(UK) Redbridge: Special education failure; kids "waiting years for vital therapies"
- The end of childhood
- Jul 1
- 2 min read
July 1, 2025, Ilford Recorder: Redbridge's SEND provision slammed in Ofsted report
N. of London
Children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) have been failed by Redbridge Council, a scathing Ofsted report has said.
A host of issues were uncovered during a lengthy inspection by the education watchdog, which assessed how pupils in special education are faring in the borough.
The Labour-run council, working alongside NHS North East London, says it has “refined and accelerated” its plans to improve SEND provision in light of the report.
Ofsted inspectors said the system as a whole is “ineffective, and many parents and carers are frustrated”. . . .
In the report, published last week, they listed a gauntlet of issues. Children were found to have been waiting years for vital therapies, families experienced very poor communication, and the method of assessing their needs is “outdated” and “does not reflect” current needs.
There were also delays in producing education, health and care (EHC) plans, which are legal documents outlining the needs of a child or young person, up to the age of 25, and any extra support they require. . . .
Elsewhere, “too many” disabled children do not have an allocated worker, and families “must rely on an overstretched duty system”.
Once again, statutory duties “are not consistently met, causing widespread frustration”.
The council said it welcomes the report and “recognises that real culture change and transformation are needed over the next 18 months". . . .
Councillor Paul Canal, leader of the Redbridge Conservatives, called the report “as distressing as it is damning”.
He said: “The findings lay bare a catalogue of systemic and prolonged failures that have left some of our borough’s most vulnerable children without the support, care, or dignity they deserve.”
Independent councillor Shanell Johnson said she feared the woeful report was “just the tip of the iceberg”.
She said: “Parents and teachers have told me they felt silenced or dismissed. The Ofsted report confirms that lack of leadership and oversight allowed real harm, especially to SEND children caught in a culture of groupthink where questioning was discouraged. . . .
Cllr Canal has also called for an extraordinary full council meeting to be held in light of the report.
He echoed the inspectors’ call for the council to produce an internal action plan outlining how it will improve its services.
He said: “The administration must publicly account for these failings, outline how it intends to restore trust and deliver improvement, and commit to a process of transparent oversight that involves families and cross-party scrutiny. . . .

Comments