Commenting Neil Leitch, CEO of the Early Years Alliance,
said:
“As applications for the second phase
of the early entitlement expansion open, we remain entirely
unconvinced that the government will be able to keep the huge
promise it has made to parents.
“While the first phase largely
involved families who were already accessing early years places
switching from private to government-funded places, the next
phase is set to place further – and far more severe – capacity
challenges on the sector, with the government itself predicting
that 15,000 places will be needed by this September alone, and a
further 70,000 by the end of the rollout.
“With the recent National Audit Office
report raising serious concerns about future phases of the
expansion, and the Department for Education itself describing
delivering enough places to meet demand as ‘problematic', it's
clear that significant challenges lay ahead for
government.
“Yet, should this really come as a
surprise? Long before the expansion rollout began, the early
years sector was suffering from the effects of years of severe
underfunding and an acute staffing crisis, both of which – so far
– have failed to be adequately addressed.
“So, rather than pretending that
today's application launch is a cause for celebration, ministers
should acknowledge the scale of the challenge ahead of them and
take the action needed to safeguard the future of the sector –
that is, adequate funding and a comprehensive workforce strategy.
Only then can this policy have any hope of succeeding in the long
term.”