top of page
Search

(UK) Suffolk: Council faces $214M SPED deficit; 2,289 more SPED plans than last year

Oct 25, 2025, East Anglian Daily Times: Government SEND reform delays called disappointing

E. England


The Government announced on Wednesday it would delay long-awaited reforms to the special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) system.


The reforms, under the Government’s schools white paper, were expected this autumn, but are now scheduled for early 2026.


Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, said the delays would allow for a ‘period of co-creation’ with parents, educators, experts and other organisations.


Cllr Amanda Hopgood, of the Local Government Association (LGA), said the delays were disappointing.


The LGA’s membership covers some 315 out of 317 councils in England and Wales.

She said: “We have been urging the Government to set out its reforms of the SEND system, and it should do this at the earliest opportunity.


“The system is failing children and families, while councils have been pushed to the brink by rising high needs deficits. Urgent reform is needed.”


Pepe Di’Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said the union understood the decision but stressed the importance of the reforms.


He said: “Reforming the SEND system is of the utmost importance and the government cannot afford to get this wrong.


“It is critical that these reforms have the confidence of parents and schools – and it is sensible for the Government to take the time to listen and get this right.”


Councils across the country are struggling with the SEND system amid a significant and continued increase in demand for services, as well as the cost of delivering them.


In Suffolk, the county council had delivered 10,625 education, care and health plans (EHCPs) as of March, 2,289 more than the previous year.


EHCPs are legally-binding documents which outline children and young people’s needs and what support is needed to meet them.


The council is also having to grapple with a growing financial hole in its Dedicated Schools Grant, the total money the council gets from the Government for education.


As it stands, councils can accumulate an overspend of the DSG reserve through a ‘statutory override’ without it affecting their books  Suffolk is set to be £161 million [$214M] in the red by the time the override runs out, in March.


The High Needs Block (HNB) gap alone — the proportion of education funding used on SEND services — is forecast to be overspent by as much as £64.4 million [$86M] by February.


The Government’s reforms were expected to address growing uncertainty over the future of council finances.


Suffolk County Council did not comment on the delay’s impact on its finances and service delivery.

ree

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page