School Funding Madam Deputy Speaker (Natascha Engel) I
inform the House that the Speaker has selected the amendment in the
name of the Prime Minister. Before I call the hon. Member for
Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner) to move the motion, I must point
out that 36 Members wish to speak in the debate. I ask those on the
Front Benches to be as concise as possible, and if Members wishing
to...Request free trial
School Funding
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Madam Deputy Speaker (Natascha Engel)
I inform the House that the Speaker has selected the
amendment in the name of the Prime Minister. Before I call
the hon. Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner) to
move the motion, I must point out that 36 Members wish to
speak in the debate. I ask those on the Front Benches to be
as concise as possible, and if Members wishing to speak in
the debate make interventions on Front Benchers I am afraid
that they will find that their names have mysteriously
slipped down the speaking list. I am sorry to say that we
are going to start with a limit of three minutes on
Back-Bench speeches. If people keep their interventions to
an absolute minimum, everyone might get in. Otherwise, the
people at the bottom of the list will not be able to speak.
With that, let’s get going!
4.16 pm
-
(Ashton-under-Lyne)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House regrets the impact of school funding cuts
on the ability of children to reach their full potential;
and calls on the Government to ensure that all schools have
the funding that they need to provide an excellent
education for every child.
I will try to keep interventions to a minimum, Madam Deputy
Speaker; I warn hon. Members of that as I start my
contribution.
We have heard much this week about respecting the mandate
that the British people have given us, so today I am giving
Conservative Members the chance to do that, by implementing
the pledge that they gave to the country in their election
manifesto. It stated:
“Under a future Conservative government, the amount of
money following your child into school will be protected.
There will be a real terms increase in the schools budget
in the next Parliament.”
That pledge was repeated by the last Prime Minister—the one
who actually fought an election—and he was very clear about
what it meant. He said:
“I can tell you, with a Conservative Government the amount
of money following your child into school will not be cut.”
There is one question that the Secretary of State has to
answer today: will she keep her party’s promise to the
British people?
The National Audit Office has revealed that, under the
current spending settlement, there will be
“an 8 per cent cut in pupil funding”
between 2015 and 2020. That same conclusion was reached by
the Institute for Fiscal Studies. That means that schools
in every region, every city, every town and, yes, every
constituency will lose money because of the failure of this
Government to protect funding for our schools.
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(Wokingham) (Con)
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
I want to make some progress.
Will the Secretary of State tell us whether she intends to
keep that manifesto pledge? Let us consider the context.
-
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
I want to make some progress.
Let us consider the context.
“Britain has a deep social mobility problem, and for this
generation in particular, it is getting worse not better”—
as a result of—
“an unfair education system, a two-tier labour market, an
imbalanced economy, and an unaffordable housing market.”
That was the conclusion of the Government’s own Social
Mobility Commission. And what about our education system?
“We still have too many underperforming schools and low
overall levels of numeracy and literacy. England remains
the only OECD country where 16 to 24-year-olds are no more
literate or numerate than 55 to 64-year-olds.”
Again, that is not my conclusion, but that of the
Government’s own industrial strategy Green Paper, which
quite rightly makes it clear just how central education is
to our economy, especially following Brexit.
-
(Eltham) (Lab)
My hon. Friend is talking about the broken pledge on
increasing funding for schools. Is she aware that 74 out of
77 schools—that is 96% of them—face real-terms cuts of more
than £200,000 by 2019? How is that defensible? How is it
evidence of a Government who care about education?
-
I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend—there is no
justification for these cuts.
The Secretary of State has, of course, unveiled the
proposed solution, her so-called national fair funding
formula, which she presented to her Back Benchers as a kind
of reverse distribution. On the Government’s own figures,
they are quite literally robbing Peterborough to pay for
Poole, but it will not take long for Members on both sides
of the House to discover that not only is there nothing
fair about the proposed funding formula but that it will
not make up for overall real-terms cuts. Concerns about
what that means for our constituents are shared on both
sides of the House. The hon. Member for Bexhill and Battle
(Huw Merriman) has said that his message to the Minister
for School Standards is:
“I don’t get this and I don’t think it’s particularly
fair.”
I hope that we will see the hon. Member for Bexhill and
Battle in the Chamber this afternoon and that he will put
his concerns forward. I hope he will speak.
The hon. Member for Altrincham and Sale West (Mr Brady) has
said:
“Every secondary school in Trafford will lose funding, even
though it is one of the places famously underfunded for
education.”
Perhaps we will hear from him, too. The hon. Member for
Cheltenham (Alex Chalk), who of course co-chairs the f40
group of historically underfunded local education
authorities, said just this morning:
“The bottom line is that it’s created some distorted
outcomes which we think require some significant
remodelling.”
No wonder he is concerned, because nearly half of the f40
group face further cuts, rather than increases, under the
Minister’s national funding fiddle.
Of course there is one Government Member who seems quite
happy to accept the cuts in her own constituency: the
Secretary of State herself. Schools in her own constituency
are set to lose some 15% of their funding per pupil.
Perhaps she will be lobbying herself.
-
(Rochford and
Southend East) (Con)
The hon. Lady is listing Members who are unhappy. I, like
her, am unhappy. All the schools in Southend are receiving
a cut under this funding formula, and I think it is the
only local authority area outside central London where that
is the case.
-
(Slough) (Lab)
No, it is not.
-
The figures I have are from the House of Commons Library. I
apologise if I have misread them, but that is my reading.
Is not the point that this is a consultation? If this were
a fait accompli, I would not support the Secretary of
State, but this is a consultation.
-
I hope that the hon. Members I mentioned will make
contributions today, because the motion before the House
makes it clear that our schools are facing a cocktail of
cuts that will see 98% of schools lose out in the funding
formula. I hope that the Government think again about their
proposals.
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(Feltham and Heston)
(Lab/Co-op)
My hon. Friend is making a powerful speech. In my
constituency we are looking at cuts of £437 per pupil
between 2015 and 2019. With the Government saying that they
believe in and want to support social mobility, and with a
third of our children across the country not achieving even
five good GCSEs, does she agree that this is absolutely the
wrong time to be cutting school funding for the pupils who
most need it and that it is an own goal when it comes to
thinking about our future shared prosperity?
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I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend, and I would go so
far as to say that the meritocracy that the Prime Minister
talks about is already in tatters.
The National Audit Office has said that the Secretary of
State expects schools to make £1.7 billion of savings by
“using staff more efficiently.” Can she guarantee today
that those so-called efficiencies do not mean fewer staff?
A £1.7 billion cut could mean up to 10,000 redundancies for
teaching staff in our schools. She has resolutely failed to
give us figures on the impact of the planned cut, but her
own analysis of the research conducted by the education
unions shows that, for example, the cuts in my region—the
north-west—would amount to well over £400 million,
requiring the loss of more than 2,000 teachers. Given that
the Government have failed to meet their own teacher
recruitment targets for the past five years in a row, I
urge her to think again before she tries to solve school
budget crises on the back of hard-working staff.
Make no mistake, this is a crisis. Indeed, schools are
already resorting to staff cuts in order to cope. A Unison
staff survey conducted last year showed that, even then,
more than one in 10 respondents were reporting redundancies
in the past year and in the coming year. More than one in
five said that their school had left vacant posts unfilled
over the past year or had cut maintenance. Nearly a quarter
had seen increased class sizes, and over a quarter had
experienced cuts to budgets for books and resources over
the past year.
-
(East Worthing and
Shoreham) (Con)
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for giving way. I am sorry
that she does not agree with fair funding. How can she
possibly justify a child in the constituencies of the
Leader of the Opposition and the shadow Home Secretary
receiving, on average, £6,229 a year and £6,680 a year
respectively while a child in my West Sussex constituency,
which has deprived wards, will receive less than £4,200?
-
The Labour party is for fair funding, but this is not fair
funding; this is unfair funding for every school in our
nation. The hon. Gentleman should take heed of what that
might mean for his constituency. Pulling people down is not
the way forward. If we want to make the best of our economy
post-Brexit, we must ensure that we invest in all our
schools, not take from one school, robbing one group of
young people, to give to another, leading to an overall cut
in distribution.
-
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
I have given way once, so I am going to make some progress.
It was no surprise when the National Audit Office found
that the number of maintained secondary schools in deficit
rose from 33% to nearly 60% between 2010 and 2015. Its
report refers to a sample of schools that said that typical
savings came through increased class sizes, reduced teacher
contact time, replacing experienced teachers with new
recruits, recruiting staff on temporary contracts,
encouraging staff to teach outside their specialism, and
relying more on unqualified staff, none of which are
measures that parents would want to see at their school.
The NAO tells us that the Department’s savings estimates do
not even take account of the real impact on schools. For
example, the Government seem to remain committed to cutting
the national education services grant, which amounts to
£600 million, but they have not yet completed any
assessment of how that will impact on schools across
England. When will that assessment be put to the House?
Just this Monday, the Public Accounts Committee heard from
headteachers who are desperately trying to keep providing
an excellent education in the face of funding cuts. I hope
that the Secretary of State heard the contribution of Kate
Davies, headteacher of Darton College in Barnsley, for
example. She said that as a result of funding cuts she had
had to
“reduce the curriculum offer and cut out the whole of the
community team. We have reduced staffing and reduced the
leadership team.”
I am sure the Secretary of State heard Tim Gartside,
headteacher of Altrincham Grammar School for Boys, say only
this morning that the funding cuts that his school faces
are so severe that he only has three options left: reduce
the curriculum, increase class sizes, or ask parents to
make a cash contribution to keep the school running. What
is the Secretary of State’s plan? Does she want schools to
cut subjects, increase class sizes, or make parents foot
the bill? Is she not worried that routinely requesting
termly cash donations from parents risks discriminating
against low-income families and schools in lower-income
areas? We have heard similar from not only the
representatives of teachers, but unions that represent
teaching assistants, such as Unison and the GMB. If she
thinks assistants are a soft target for cuts, she is much
mistaken.
Evidence from the Education Endowment Foundation shows that
teaching assistants have a particularly important impact on
the literacy and numeracy of pupils on free school meals
and on those who were previously struggling—the very pupils
that the Government said only earlier this week needed
extra support if we are to increase skills and
productivity. Teaching assistant pay has declined so far
since the Government abolished the school staff negotiating
body that many are now on the minimum wage. There are
literally no more cuts to make to pay. Any further cuts
will hit teaching staff directly.
-
(Wirral South)
(Lab)
I have in my constituency a big secondary school that gets
the pupil premium for 67% of its kids, and it believes that
it will lose £300,000. Does my hon. Friend believe that
that lives up to the Prime Minister’s rhetoric?
-
I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend. I am sure that the
reason the debate has been over-subscribed is that many
hon. Members from both sides of the House have realised
that the national funding formula and the cuts faced by our
schools are taking them over the edge and building a crisis
in our school system.
The Conservative party’s promise was not to spend more on
schools; it was to spend more on each pupil, in real terms.
Yet the Government will cut per-pupil spending. Under
Labour Governments, education spending increased by 4.7%
per year. The fact of the matter is quite simple: the
Secretary of State and her party entered government on a
manifesto that pledged to protect per-pupil funding. That
promise is being broken.
-
(Thirsk and Malton)
(Con)
I have noticed over the past two years that the Opposition
seem to have an awful lot of money to spend, and the hon.
Lady is obviously suggesting spending more. Does she accept
the analysis performed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies
of the Labour and Conservative manifestos, which
effectively said that the two parties’ commitments to
investment in education came to exactly the same figure?
-
The difference between the Labour and Conservative
manifestos is that when Labour was in power, in 1997, 2001
and 2005, our manifesto pledged to increase spending on
education, and we delivered on that. It is the Conservative
Government who are not delivering on their promises.
Government Members should hold them to account.
Instead of proper funding for our schools and investment in
our future, we have seen years of regressive tax giveaways
to the wealthiest, and now the Prime Minister and the
Chancellor have threatened to turn Britain into an offshore
tax haven for billionaires—a bargain basement economy that
loses billions of pounds in tax revenues each and every
year. The Government are faced with choices, and time and
again they make the wrong decision.
I know that every Member, on both sides of the House, will
want every child in their constituency and in our country
to get the best possible start in life, but if the
Government do not change their course, that simply will not
be possible. So today is the chance for the Secretary of
State to tell us whether she will keep her manifesto pledge
and commit to provide the real-term increase in school
budgets that was promised. If she will not, I call on all
Members of the House to send a clear message today: that we
will accept nothing but the best possible start in life for
every child in our country.
4.33 pm
-
The Secretary of State for Education (Justine
Greening)
I beg to move an amendment, to leave out from “House” to
the end of the Question and add:
“shares the strong commitment of the Government to raising
school standards and building a country that works for
everyone; and welcomes proposals set out in the
Government's open schools national funding formula stage
two consultation to move to a fair and consistent national
funding formula for schools to ensure every child is fairly
funded, wherever in England they live, to protect funding
for deprived pupils and recognise the particular needs of
pupils with low prior attainment.”
Members on both sides of the House can agree that we want
to deliver a world-class education system that gives every
young person the chance to make the most of their talents,
no matter what their background or where they come from.
Indeed, the true value of an excellent education is that it
can open up opportunity and support young people to reach
their true potential. For me, education was certainly the
route to my having a much better life than my parents had.
We are keeping our promises and our record in government
speaks for itself. We now see 1.8 million more children in
good or outstanding schools than in 2010. We are keeping
our promise by protecting the core schools budget in real
terms over this Parliament. The shadow Secretary of State
talked about what parents want in schools, but what they do
not want in schools is what the previous Labour Government
left them with: children leaving school without the
literacy, numeracy and qualifications they need; and
children leaving school thinking that they had strong
grades when in fact what they were seeing was grade
inflation. We have steadily sought to change that and to
improve our education system. Many young people now leave
our education system in a much better place to achieve
success in their future life.
-
(Don Valley)
(Lab)
The right hon. Lady will be aware that the Public Accounts
Committee, of which I am a member, heard from the permanent
secretary, , on Monday in
our session on the National Audit Office report to which my
hon. Friend the Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela
Rayner) referred. That report does acknowledge what the
Secretary of State says about a real-terms increase in the
overall budget, but because there are more pupils than was
envisaged, there will be an 8% reduction in per-pupil
funding. Does she agree with the NAO report and the
acknowledgement of her permanent secretary to that effect?
-
The NAO report makes it very clear that there are cost
pressures, which I shall talk about later on in my speech.
It also makes it clear that there is significant scope for
efficiency in our school system. Although we are raising
standards in many schools—nearly nine out of 10 schools are
now rated as good or outstanding—many young people are
still not achieving the necessary standard in our education
system.
-
I welcome my right hon. Friend’s decision on fairer
funding. Does she agree that schools in areas such as mine
that were at the bottom of the pile under the previous
Government’s formula need quite a step up over the next few
years because they were very badly done by?
-
I do agree. We want every child to have the same chance to
do as well as possible no matter where they grow up in our
country or, indeed, where they start from academically.
That is why we must ensure that the resources going into
the system reflect our high ambitions for every child
wherever they grow up, and that they are distributed to
that effect. It is because of this Government’s economic
policy, which has seen jobs, growth and the careful
management of public finances, that we have been able to
protect the core schools budget in real terms over the
course of this Parliament. In fact, our core schools
investment is the largest on record.
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(East Ham) (Lab)
promised that the
funding per pupil would be protected but, as we have heard,
that is not happening. In my constituency, funding per
pupil is being reduced further as a result of the formula.
Why is ’s promise being broken?
-
It is not. We are protecting funding per pupil as well. On
apportioning funding fairly between schools, we know that
it is time to look at the school funding formula to ensure
that we rectify the current unfair and outdated system, as
my right hon. Friend the Member for Wokingham (John
Redwood) set out. At the moment, funding is not distributed
evenly across our country and does not take account of
pupil needs. For example, a school in Sutton receives £75
in extra funding for each pupil with English as a second
language, but in Tower Hamlets that figure is £3,548. We
know that a primary school pupil who is eligible for free
school meals and who has English as an additional language
attracts £4,219 in east Sussex, but just down the road in
Brighton and Hove, that same child would attract £5,813 for
their school. We know that a secondary class of 30 children
with no additional needs attracts £112,100 of funding in
Staffordshire, but £122,500 of funding in Stoke-on-Trent.
That is a difference of £10,400 for one class.
We know that parents and families see that unfairness
playing out for their children, and it is simply untenable
to say that these historical imbalances and differences in
how we fund our children across the country are something
that we should accept. No parent should have to put up with
such disparity. I hear the shadow Secretary of State say
that she does not like our proposed funding formula, but it
is subject to consultation. I have actually extended the
consultation period from 12 weeks, which was the longest
period ever for such a consultation, to 14 weeks, because
this is complicated. It is important that we have a
measured, proportionate debate around the right way to
proceed with the funding formula. What is absent from
Opposition Members’ speeches is any suggestion of a better
way of doing things. When the shadow Minister wraps up the
debate, I will be interested to hear whether Labour has any
alternative to the national funding formula—or any other
education policy for that matter. We are right to be taking
action.
-
(South Suffolk)
(Con)
Small primary schools in my constituency very much welcome
the fact that sparsity has been taken into account. They
think that they have a Government who understand the needs
of the countryside.
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The formula recognises
that different schools face different costs, particularly
in rural areas, so the sparsity factor recognises that
rural schools often have a higher cost base. That sits
alongside a lump-sum element that is built into the formula
to make sure that schools have the money that they need to
be able to function effectively. Colleagues in rural seats
will recognise that small rural schools have gained an
average of 1.3% under the formula. Primary schools in
sparse communities will gain 5.3% on average.
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There was a manifesto commitment to increase school
spending per capita, but secondary schools in Greenwich
face the prospect of having to make on average £1 million
savings between now and 2019, with primary schools saving
more than £200,000 each. Some 74 out of 77 schools face
those cuts. Is that consistent with what the Conservative
party told parents in my borough before the election?
-
We said that we would protect the core schools budget in
real terms, and that is exactly what we are doing. In
relation to the hon. Gentleman’s local community, the
change in the funding formula partly reflects the fact
that, for a long time, we have used deprivation data that
are simply out of date. It is important that we use
up-to-date deprivation factors. For example, in 2005, 28%
of children in London were on free school meals. That
percentage has now fallen to 17%. It is right that we make
sure that we have consistent investment for children from
deprived communities, because that is where the attainment
gap has opened up. It is also important that funding is
spread fairly using up-to-date information.
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(Wirral West)
(Lab)
When I was a schoolteacher under the Thatcher Government, I
remember my school running out of paper in about February.
A colleague and I had to go into the attic of the library
and tear pages out of books from the 1970s so that our
children could write on them. I remember wondering how we
could expect children to write in those circumstances. Is
the Secretary of State proud of that record, and what does
she think that the scale of these cuts will do to staff
morale in schools up and down the country?
-
I was actually at school during that time period, and I
felt that Oakwood comprehensive gave me a great start in
life that set me up to be able, hopefully, to make a
meaningful contribution to both the economy and my local
community.
We are introducing the national funding formula. I accept
that it is complex and challenging, and there is a reason
why such a thing has not been done for a long time: it is
difficult to ensure that we get it just right. That is why
we are having a longer consultation. We have provided all
the details so that colleagues can see how their local
communities will be affected, and then respond.
-
(The
Cotswolds) (Con)
In my constituency, which already has one of the
lowest-funded education authorities, two thirds of schools
will receive a cut and a third will receive a maximum
increase of 0.3%. That situation will undoubtedly lead to
teacher losses and probably school closures. Will my right
hon. Friend undertake to look at the situation? This might
be only a consultation, but the proposal needs a radical
overhaul?
-
I recognise my hon. Friend’s concerns. I am happy to talk
to him one to one about his local community, as I have done
with other colleagues. We are undertaking the consultation
so that we can ensure that we get the new formula right. It
is important that the formula works effectively on the
ground. Alongside it, we will make sure that we protect the
funding for deprived communities so that we can use that
mechanism to tackle the attainment gap. We have also made
sure that an element of our formula follows children who
start from further behind, for whatever reason. Low prior
attainment is properly addressed in the formula to make
sure that if a child needs additional investment to help
them to catch up, wherever they are in the country, that
investment is there.
The second stage of the consultation on the funding formula
runs until 22 March. We want to hear from as many school
governors, schools, local authorities and parents as
possible. I know that colleagues on both sides of the House
will also want to contribute. As I said, we have put a lot
of data alongside the consultation because we want to
ensure that people have the information that they need to
be able to respond. The transparency that the new formula
will give us also means that we will have much more
informed debates in this House about how we want to fund
our schools, and the relative balance we want between core
funding, deprivation funding and low prior attainment
funding, as well as issues such as sparsity.
-
(Arundel and South
Downs) (Con)
I strongly support my right hon. Friend in seeking to
achieve fair funding, which is absolutely the right thing
to do. However, there will be little help for secondary
schools in my constituency, and the primary schools will
actually lose out. How can that be right, given that West
Sussex is already the worst-funded shire authority? Will
she undertake to have another look at the draft allocation
before it is finalised?
-
My right hon. Friend will want to contribute to the
consultation. It is important that we hear from as many
colleagues, and indeed schools, from across the country as
possible. As I said, we have put out a lot of additional
information so that we can have an informed debate in the
House, and these proceedings form part of that.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
I will make a little more progress because I know that many
Members want to have their say on behalf of their local
communities.
I want to move on to the broader cost pressures that
schools are facing. Many of those pressures actually come
from steps that we have taken, for example by introducing
the apprenticeship levy. That levy will benefit millions of
young people in the coming years, but it will also benefit
schools through the training and development of existing
staff. We have also introduced the national living wage,
which benefits low-paid workers in schools and other
organisations, and that was the right thing to do.
My Department has a role to play in supporting schools
across the country to drive greater efficiencies. We have
analysed the cost bases of different schools that operate
in similar circumstances. As the National Audit Office
report sets out, we believe that efficiencies can be made.
-
(Kensington)
(Con)
I am grateful to the Secretary of State for giving way; I
appreciate that this is a very busy debate. I want to speak
up briefly for London. I need an assurance from her—I am
sure that she has touched on this—because of the negative
effect that the reform of the funding formula may have on
schools in London, some of which face intolerable
pressures.
-
Under the proposed formula on which we are consulting,
London schools, purely because of the underlying cost
pressures of running in London and the deprivation levels
in their areas—although they have reduced, they are still
comparatively high—will still receive, on average, 30%
more. My hon. Friend will of course want to speak up on
behalf of her community. This is about ensuring that we
fund the right amount by using current data on deprivation,
rather than data that are five or 10 years old.
We believe that the Department can work with schools to
help them to make the best use of their resources. I want
every single pound that we put into our schools system to
be used efficiently to improve standards and have the
maximum impact for pupils. We know that we can work with
schools to ensure that they can use this record funding to
make the maximum impact. Indeed, I would point to the
situation in York. It has been one of the lowest funded
authorities in the country, yet 92% of its schools are good
or outstanding. We therefore know that we can make progress
in education while making efficiencies.
-
(South West
Wiltshire) (Con)
I very much support what the Secretary of State is trying
to do, since Wiltshire is one of the worst-funded education
authorities in the country. However, will she look again at
the sparsity factor, because school governors are currently
crunching the figures, and some of them are saying that
they worry about the viability of small schools in rural
locations being undermined, which clearly will not be the
intention of the Secretary of State?
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Indeed, we looked at
the formula to ensure that we did introduce a sparsity
factor. Not all local authorities actually had a sparsity
factor in their local formula, but we are now making sure
that it is there for every single school. We have also
introduced the lump-sum formula.
We got to the stage in developing the formula where the
only way we could continue to improve it was to ask people
what they thought about it, which is why the consultation
is so important. It is important that we get the formula
right, but I recognise that this complicated formula has to
work for schools around the country that are in very
different situations, which is why the debate is so
important. Following the phase 1 consultation, it is right
that we steadily take the time to hold a phase 2
consultation to help us to finalise a formula that can work
and have real longevity.
We will work with schools to help them to improve their
efficiency. We have already published a school buying
strategy that sees us launching an efficiency website. We
are putting in place national deals to help to ensure that
schools get the best deals on things such as utilities. We
are putting in place buying and digital hubs so that strong
procurement teams are close to schools to give them advice
when they need it. We are also setting up school business
manager networks so that we work with the people who are
driving efficiencies in schools to share best practice and
improve performance. Over time, I believe that we really
can take some steps forward on that.
We are making sure that record funding is going into our
schools, we are making sure that our curriculum is stronger
than ever before, and we are actually turning out young
people with the knowledge and skills they need to be
successful. That is not the only part of our education
policy; we are also investing in apprenticeships and
radically reforming technical education. We are going to
make sure that this Government end up being able to say
that every young person, wherever they grow up, is able to
do their best and reach their full potential. I hope that,
over the course of the debate, colleagues will recognise
that that is the strategy that we will deliver.
4.52 pm
-
(Slough) (Lab)
I am sure that, in her characterisation of different
education authorities, the Secretary of State would say
that Slough is unfairly generously funded. I want to speak
about the hundreds of pupils in Slough who get no funding
at all for their education. You might think, “How can that
be?” and that is a very serious issue, which is not
properly addressed by the Secretary of State’s proposed
fair funding formula.
There is swift growth in areas such as Slough. For years,
we have been in the top 10 authorities for growth in pupil
numbers, and we do not get paid until 18 months later for
extra children who arrive after the October census date.
Locally, that is dealt with by taking a top slice of the
dedicated schools grant of £1 million or £1.5 million to
fund bulge classes in existing schools.
Obviously, other authorities face churn and growth in pupil
numbers, but in most places the number of additional pupils
is not particularly significant, and new arrivals after
October tend to be balanced by departures. Also, most of
the extra children are born in families who are already
there, so they apply at the usual time for schools.
That does not happen in Slough. When I asked schools about
the numbers, the results were stark. One primary school had
13 children leave, but it had 23 new starters: one was
completely new to English, others had English as a second
language, and two more from overseas start next week. One
secondary school estimates that the pupil formula for the
13 extra pupils who arrived after the census date in
2015-16 would have been worth £49,937; in the current year,
the figure is £39,595. Those figures have gone down partly
because the school has been subject to the minimum income
formula, which I call the maximum cut formula, because that
is the case for the secondary schools in Slough.
A primary school that opened two extra classes in November
2015 to accommodate children new to the town now has 63
pupils above its standard number. The bulge classes are
funded by the top-slicing of the dedicated schools grant,
but that money only lasts for a year, and the extra pupils
will not be funded by the DFE until next year, so this year
two whole classes are being educated in one primary school
with no capitation funding. We are not talking about
children who are easy to teach, and there are the children
who arrive from—
-
My right hon. Friend is making a unique and important point
about places like Slough. Does she agree that this shows
that the Government are yet to properly listen?
-
Indeed. There is a hint in the new funding formula that
they might do something about this, but no clarity about
what. This is absolutely urgent, because the per-pupil
comparisons between different authorities are not accurate.
Places like Slough and London that have historically been
quite well funded and are facing the largest cuts are the
places with the largest numbers of pupils who are not being
paid for at all.
The Minister for Schools knows about the massive problems
we face in teacher recruitment. Over the past five months,
five geography teacher posts in Slough have been
advertised, with not one single applicant. The Migration
Advisory Committee will not make the teaching of English,
where we have a real shortage, a job that can be applied
for by teachers overseas. We are in a crisis, and the
Department is not responding to the real needs of the
community that I have the privilege to represent. I really
want answers on this now.
4.56 pm
-
(Stroud) (Con)
The very fact that we are having this debate is proof that
there has been a huge step forward, because there is a
proposal on the table for fairer funding. We should salute
the Government for getting this far. We are obviously in a
consultation process. The Education Committee is part of
that process, in a sense, because we will be seeing the
Minister for Schools shortly, and we will expand on many of
my points then.
In a funding situation where schools in a county like
Gloucestershire are, in effect, no further forward and some
are actually going backwards, there are clearly issues to
explore. One of those is the need to lift the baseline,
which can be done in a number of ways; I will suggest
three. First, we must look at the deprivation assessment in
line with the pupil premium, because the two things are
clearly related, and it would be wise to consider the
impact of one in the context of the other. That provides
scope to lift the baseline.
The second area is small schools. We all want to support
small schools, but we might need to look at the ratio
between what we think of as a small school and a slightly
larger school. The use of statistics, as we all know, can
have unpredictable and unintended consequences, and that is
possibly the case with small schools. The third area is
recalibrating the 3% floor, which could give authorities
that have had historical problems with underfunding some
way out of that.
I know those three ideas are complicated in the context of
these reforms, but we need to demonstrate that we really
are committed to providing fair funding. If we think
carefully about the impact of the various measures I have
outlined, in conjunction with the wider question of the
objectives of the new funding system, we may well deliver
for our children exactly what we want.
-
(Gloucester)
(Con)
Will my hon. Friend give way?
-
No, I am not going to give way, because too many people
wish to contribute.
In an ideal world, we would want to spend more on
education. When the Government continue to grow the
economy, as I am sure they will, with or without Brexit,
that will be achieved. But we have to be realistic about
the size of the cake and make sure that everybody has an
appropriate slice.
4.59 pm
-
(Liverpool, West Derby)
(Lab/Co-op)
The Department has produced a school-by-school analysis of
the impact of the proposed funding formula. For schools in
Liverpool, the results are worrying; 80% are forecast to
lose funding, and we are set to lose around £1.3 million
from the schools block in the first year, 2018-19. When the
formula is fully implemented, unless it changes, that will
increase to slightly more than £3 million. I know that
consultation is still under way, but it is very important
that schools in my constituency know what is happening as
soon as possible so that they can plan their budgets.
I welcome the fact that the Liverpool settlement will mean
more money for high-needs funding. There is, however,
concern from the council and schools that that high-needs
funding will not be available in time to alleviate the cuts
in the schools block. What timescale do the Government
envisage for full implementation of the new formula,
particularly the high-needs funding element?
As we know, early years education is vital to pupils’ life
chances. I have two nursery schools in my constituency,
Ellergreen and East Prescot Road, both of which have been
rated outstanding by Ofsted. Both are very concerned about
the Government’s plans for nursery school funding. I seek
assurances from the Minister that long-term funding for our
nursery schools will be secure, so that they can continue
their excellent work of providing quality early years
education.
When I saw the motion for this debate, I wrote to the heads
of schools in my constituency, asking them for their
concerns. Blackmoor Park Infant School in West Derby told
me about its need for repairs. It is using four mobile
classrooms, which are three years beyond their shelf life.
The headteacher told me that the school does not have
enough money to replace them, because of the financial
pressures that it faces.
-
Like my hon. Friend, I wrote to local schools. Does he
agree that given the importance of the subject, it is
unsurprising that so many people want to speak in this
debate?
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The financial pressures
that the schools told me about are highlighted in the
Opposition motion. Secondary schools are also feeling the
pinch. The head of St Edward’s College in my constituency
told me that,
“small budget lines are being nibbled away and in the end
this is going to have a massive cumulative impact.”
The headteacher of St Cecilia’s Infant School told me that
she is worried about the impact of budget cuts on staffing
levels, particularly with regard to support staff.
Pupils with special needs present particular challenges for
school budgets. The head of Croxteth Community Primary
School raised with me the issue of educating those whose
needs are more challenging and complex. The headteacher of
Redbridge High School, a very good special school in my
constituency, is worried that the imposition of a national
funding model for children with additional needs has taken
away local flexibility to move money around. Another of the
fantastic special schools in my constituency is Bank View
High School. The headteacher, who is concerned about the
impact of cuts elsewhere in the public sector, said to me:
“How are we able to make our pupils effective members of
society, who are able to be employed, if support agencies
such as CAMHS are also having their funding reduced?”
-
The hon. Gentleman is making very reasonable points on
behalf of schools in his constituency. Does he recognise
that it is fundamentally unfair for small cities, such as
my constituency of Gloucester, to receive approximately 50%
less per-pupil funding than the metropolitan city area that
he represents, and that it is right for the Secretary of
State to address that?
-
I certainly recognise that it is hugely challenging to
ensure that there is fair funding for all schools in all
parts of the country, but the cuts that I am referring to,
and the cuts that my hon. Friend the shadow Secretary of
State talked about, are not to do with the national funding
formula. I addressed it because it is an important issue,
and because it is contained in the Government’s amendment
to the motion. The motion is about the funding pressures
that schools face before the implementation of the national
funding formula, and we need to address that as well.
-
(Ashfield)
(Lab)
Like my hon. Friend, I consulted headteachers in my
constituency. Jacquie Sainsbury, the headteacher of
Brookhill Leys Primary School, where 55% of kids are on
pupil premium, said, “How am I going to find £230,000 out
of next year’s budget?” Do the Government not have a duty
to help headteachers such as Mrs Sainsbury?
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Schools across the
country in constituencies in all parts of the country are
facing these challenges. In the end, my view is that
investment in education should be a priority, and we should
be able to agree to that on a cross-party basis.
-
(Taunton Deane)
(Con)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
No, I am running out of time.
I urge the Minister to listen to the concerns of schools in
Liverpool and elsewhere, so that school budgets are
protected. It is vital that schools have the money they
need to deliver the quality education that children and
young people deserve.
5.05 pm
-
Sir (East Devon) (Con)
Last week, I was fortunate enough to secure a debate in
Westminster Hall on the funding for schools in Devon, and
it was well supported by my colleagues from across the
county. In that debate, several of us—including my hon.
Friend the Member for South West Devon (Mr Streeter), who
cannot be in his place this afternoon—made it clear that
unless there were some changes, we would find it extremely
difficult to support the Government.
It was therefore with some interest that I was made aware
of this debate, and I thought it would be an occasion—in my
case, a very rare one—when I would not be able to support
the Government. However, I have studied the motion and the
amendment carefully, and having heard the opening remarks
of the hon. Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner), I
have to say that the Whips can relax, because I am now more
convinced than ever that I will be able to support the
Government amendment.
I know that the hon. Lady was not in this place during
Labour’s rule, but I would say gently to her that had she
not been asleep under a tree like Ferdinand the Bull, she
might have noticed that during the period from 1997 to 2010
a Labour Government exacerbated the educational funding gap
between rural and urban areas. The team we now have in the
Department, with the Secretary of State and her Minister
for School Standards, are excellent. They inherited an
extraordinarily difficult situation, and they are
attempting to resolve it in as fair a way as possible.
[Interruption.] I know the hon. Lady, who is chuntering
from the Opposition Front Bench, was not in the House in
2010, but if she had been, she would have realised, as did
many of her colleagues—this fact is worth remembering—that
the Exchequer was left completely empty. Labour blew the
economy, and they blew their credibility. It was not until
2015 that there was some rebalancing, when the coalition
Government provided a much-needed boost in funding for more
rural schools.
I would say to my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State
that there is currently a consultation on this issue, and
it is one that I and my colleagues in the south-west feel
passionately about. I am grateful to the Minister for
School Standards, who I understand has agreed to meet a
delegation of headteachers from Devon secondary and primary
schools. Our situation is very bleak at the moment.
Historically, Devon has been one of the lowest-funded
education authorities in the country, and when we were told
there would be a reassessment, we assumed that it would
benefit us after all these years. Following all the
campaigning we have done for a fairer deal over the
decades, we did not think that the result of the
consultation would mean that we were worse off. If
implemented, the national funding formula proposals will
result in 62% of Devon schools gaining, 37% losing out and
1% remaining the same. The proposals will reduce Devon
County Council’s overall schools funding by £500,000 for
the first year—but more of that on another occasion.
5.08 pm
-
(Bermondsey and Old
Southwark) (Lab)
After seven years of Lib Dem and Tory Government cuts to my
community, the Government have failed to meet their deficit
reduction target and they are back doing all that they know
how to do, which is to make further cuts, this time
targeting children in my constituency. I do not believe
children should suffer for the Government’s failure.
Southwark schools perform above the national average, but
they face specific challenges, including increasing class
sizes as a result of our growing population. I was
therefore surprised to find my borough targeted with £5
million in cuts by this Government.
-
(Hornsey and Wood
Green) (Lab)
Does my hon. Friend accept that that will add to the
recruitment crisis within the teaching body?
-
Absolutely, especially in London.
My constituency is even more badly affected than the
borough of Southwark. On the Department’s statistics, my
schools will lose £1,050 per child per year. They are the
worst affected schools anywhere in country, but the
Government have claimed that this is fair. There are 35
schools in my constituency, of which the ones losing out
are Alfred Salter, Globe Academy, Walworth Academy, Bacon’s
College, Boutcher, Charlotte Sharman, City of London
Academy, Cobourg, Compass, Crampton, English Martyrs,
Friars, Harris Academy, Notre Dame, Peter Hills, Redriff,
Riverside, Robert Browning, all three St Joseph’s,
Snowsfields, Southwark Park, St George’s, St John’s
Catholic, St Jude’s, St Michael’s, St John’s Walworth, St
Paul’s, St Saviour’s and St Olave’s, Cathedral, Surrey
Square, Tower Bridge, Townsend and Victory. If anyone was
keeping a tally, they will know that that was a list of 35
schools. Every single school in my constituency will lose
out, and not one school will benefit, under the
Government’s proposals.
-
Does my hon. Friend agree that if the proposal of the Chair
of the Education Committee to remove the 3% protection were
implemented, the position for schools in his constituency
and many others would be a great deal worse?
-
I completely agree.
The cuts proposed by the Government have led parents to get
in touch with me to say, “What is it about Southwark
children this Government do not like?” Why is my
constituency being targeted for cuts? These cuts will
impede the progress that schools have made, prevent them
from managing the challenges they face and damage the
prospects of the children and families I serve, but whom
this Government are failing.
Of course, the Department’s figures do not include costs
that schools cannot ignore: pension contributions, the
apprenticeship levy and higher national insurance
contributions. The National Audit Office figures suggest
that the borough of Southwark will lose £12.5 million by
2018-19 and that schools in my constituency alone will lose
£6.9 million.
If Ministers push forward with these plans, they will fail
schools, fail teachers and fail families and children, and
the Secretary of State will undermine parents’ aspirations
for their children, undermine future opportunities for
Southwark children and undermine the prospects for this
country overall. The Government must rethink this blatant
attack on opportunity and stand by their manifesto
commitment.
5.11 pm
-
(Louth and Horncastle) (Con)
I welcome the consultation and the review because my
constituency will see an increase of 2.6% or £1.3 million.
Forty two of my 54 schools will see an increase, which is
77% of them. Some of the increases are significant. New
York Primary School will see an increase of 11.4%. North
Cockerington Church of England Primary School will see an
increase of 10.2%. The theme that runs through the
increases is that these schools were historically
underfunded by the Labour Government. This Government
recognise the challenges that rurality and sparsity present
for local schools.
-
Will my hon. Friend give way?
-
I will not, thank you.
Louth and Horncastle is an extremely rural constituency,
with less than one person per hectare. Some of the wards on
the coast are among the 3% most deprived communities in the
country. They deserve a better funding deal and that is
what the Government are trying to achieve. This is not
about the Tory shires as some, although not all, Opposition
Members like to paint it. It is about making funding fairer
than it has been historically.
I echo the concerns of colleagues that the laudable
principle of including sparsity must work on the ground.
The Minister for School Standards has agreed to meet me to
discuss individual schools, for which I am grateful, to
ensure that the principle applies in practice. I recognise
that the 12 schools in my constituency with decreases face
a challenge. I do not underestimate that and look forward
to discussing it with the Minister.
There has been much talk among Opposition Members regarding
cuts. When I hear that the education of children in the
Leader of the Opposition’s constituency is funded to the
tune of more than £6,000 per student, whereas in
Lincolnshire the figure is £4,379 per student, I simply do
not understand how Opposition Members can claim that that
is fair and not deserving of review. I say that
understanding only too well the challenges in education.
-
(Tonbridge and Malling)
(Con)
I am delighted to hear my hon. Friend making such an
important speech. She is highlighting the fact that schools
such as the Judd and Tonbridge Grammar in Kent, which have
such great reputations, are massively underfunded. This
settlement will go some way towards making the situation
fairer.
-
I am extremely grateful. This is about making sure that the
cake is cut just a little more fairly than it is at the
moment.
I will make one final point because I am conscious of time.
I also apologise to colleagues from whom I have not
accepted interventions. May I thank the teachers, the
governors and the staff of my 54 local schools? I look
forward to meeting all of them before the general election.
That is my promise and I will try to keep it. I love it
when they come to the House of Commons because, if nothing
else, bringing our schools into this place to show them how
democracy works is how we get young people interested in
our democracy.
5.14 pm
-
(Nottingham South)
(Lab)
Schools already face real-terms cuts to their budgets, and
now, for every single one of the 26 schools in my
constituency, the new national funding formula represents a
further blow of the axe. For every pupil in the city of
Nottingham, funding is being cut by an average of £650,
while more affluent areas are expected to gain. This is not
just bad for children in Nottingham; it is bad for our
country and our society. According to Ofsted’s latest
annual report, there are now twice as many inadequate
secondary schools in the midlands and the north as in the
south and the east. Sir Michael Wilshaw has rightly warned:
“Regions that are already less prosperous…are in danger of
adding a learning deficit to their economic one.”
I support the principle of fair funding, but that cannot be
at the expense of children in cities such as Nottingham,
where there are high levels of need and poverty and where
we already face the challenge of closing the gap in
educational outcomes between children from poorer homes and
those in wealthier ones.
-
(Broxtowe) (Con)
Will the hon. Lady confirm that Nottingham schools have
failed for decades under Labour-run councils?
-
Secondary schools in my constituency are not the
responsibility of Nottingham City Council; they are
academies, and sadly some of them are still not improving.
We already face intense funding pressures. The Institute
for Fiscal Studies tells us that all schools face an 8%
real-terms cut to their budgets as a result of higher
national insurance contributions, increases in employer
pension contributions and unfunded national pay rises. The
National Audit Office has provided evidence of growing
financial pressures, particularly in secondary schools: 59%
of maintained schools and 61% of academies were in deficit
last year.
The NAO also concluded that the Department’s approach meant
that schools
“could make spending choices that put educational outcomes
at risk.
Local headteachers have told me what that will mean: fewer
teachers, less pastoral support, bigger classes, more
contact time for teachers, less choice at key stages 4 and
5. The added enrichment—the breakfast clubs, the school
trips, the reading sessions for parents, the
extra-curricular sports, culture and arts activities—will
be the first to go, yet these are the very things that can
make all the difference to children growing up in poverty.
-
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
I am afraid not.
I know that Nottingham has schools that need to do better,
but it is some of these very schools that are losing out
under the Government’s new national funding formula.
Learning is not a matter of chance. The quality of school
leadership and teaching is critical, yet there is a
national headteacher shortage and a teacher recruitment
crisis. As the Social Market Foundation found, schools in
deprived areas are more likely to have fewer experienced
teachers, teachers without formal teaching qualifications
or degrees in relevant subjects—[Interruption.] I cannot
hear what the Secretary of State is chuntering about—and a
higher teacher turnover than schools elsewhere.
These latest funding changes will make school improvement
harder not easier. The Secretary of State and Minister say
they want more good and outstanding schools. It is a noble
ambition. It is what I want for every child in my
constituency, and I am proud of the work that Nottingham’s
educational improvement board is doing to try to make it a
reality, but creating more good schools requires more than
ambition; actions speak louder than words, and right now
actions must mean adequate funding.
5.18 pm
-
(Mid Dorset and
North Poole) (Con)
It is a great pleasure to have caught your eye so early in
the debate, Madam Deputy Speaker, and to speak in favour of
the amendment and against the motion.
The motion is wrong in fact—this is a novel point, so it is
great to make it now—because it refers to “school funding
cuts”. That is wrong as a matter of fact. This year alone,
the Government are spending more than £40 billion on
schools up and down this land, which is more than any other
Government. There was a time when Labour was in favour of
fairer funding. As recently as March 2010, the then Labour
Government were looking at a national funding formula, but
as ever it has taken a Conservative Government to grasp the
nettle.
-
(Morecambe and
Lunesdale) (Con)
Does my hon. Friend agree that when Labour tried to
introduce the funding formula, most of the per capita
spending, which was £4,000, came from private finance
initiatives?
-
I am very grateful for that intervention. Indeed, if we
look at the per pupil funding figures, we find that that is
where it is most important. The hon. Member for Bermondsey
and Old Southwark (Neil Coyle) mentioned fairness and
deprivation. In his constituency, pupils receive £6,450 per
pupil; in my constituency in Poole and in Dorset, they
receive £4,100 and £4,200 per pupil.
-
One academy head told me that as a result of current
funding pressures and class size growth, he is having to
cut art and tech classes. That is today; that is the
“efficiency saving” about which the Secretary of State
speaks. How will a cut of £100,000 under the Government
proposals help?
-
The point I am making about per pupil funding is one of
fairness. If this were done on areas of deprivation or on
an index of deprivation, I could look my constituents in
the eye and say, “That is why you are receiving, on
average, £2,000 per pupil less than you otherwise would”.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for letting me get in at last. Does
my hon. Friend agree that it is grossly unfair that the
pupils of Somerset have had, on average, £2,000 per pupil
less than the national average? We are very grateful to the
Government for increasing funding to Taunton Deane by 4.5%.
This will make it fair, when historically things have been
grossly unfair.
-
I agree entirely with my hon. Friend, who is right to
highlight the unfairness. If there were a rhyme or reason
or an explanation, and if it had been done on the basis of
an index of deprivation, I could support it, but it is not.
It is based on historical anomalies. That is why I
wholeheartedly support the principle of fairer funding.
I want to make two points about the detail of the fairer
funding. First, the schools that are right down at the
bottom, in local authorities such as Poole and Dorset,
should not, I suggest, see any reduction in funding. When I
respond to the consultation, which I very much look forward
to doing, I will make that point to the Minister.
My second point relates to grammar schools. I warmly
welcome what the Government are doing in their move towards
grammar schools, giving our parents a greater choice. We
know that this is popular and that parents want to make the
choice that is best for them and their children. I welcome
the Government’s direction of travel, but it does seem odd
that 103 out of 163 grammar schools appear to be losing out
under this formula.
-
(Salisbury) (Con)
I echo all that my hon. Friend is saying. Similarly, in
Wiltshire, we have seen a 2.6% increase, but the two
grammar schools are the two out of the 10 schools in the
constituency that are suffering, so this needs some further
examination.
-
I am grateful for that. I see the Minister for School
Standards in his place and I know that he is listening
carefully. I suggest that a delegation of Members of
Parliament should go to see him—I know that, of all things,
that will gladden his heart. He has been very receptive in
the past, and I know that he will be again in the future.
That is why I support not only the principle of fairer
funding, but the fact that we have a chance at the second
stage of the consultation running all the way up to 22
March. I see the Minister nodding, so I shall take it as an
open invitation to come and knock on his door, with a
delegation from the cathedral city of Salisbury and from
Mid Dorset and North Poole. I greatly look forward to that
meeting. The principle is right; let us now get the detail
right.
5.23 pm
-
(Hammersmith)
(Lab)
I make no apology for talking about schools in my
constituency, which is the eighth worst affected in the
country, while the neighbouring constituency, Chelsea and
Fulham, which makes up the rest of the borough, is the
seventh worst affected. All 48 schools will lose
significant sums, and the borough loses £2.8 million.
According to the excellent work done by the National Union
of Teachers and the other teaching unions, that represents
£796 per pupil per year, or 15%.
When I look at where the money is going from, I find it
particularly objectionable. Wormholt Park is the
highest-losing primary school with £65,000 gone; while
Burlington Danes Academy is the highest-losing secondary
school. Both are excellent schools with excellent staff,
but they are in two of the most deprived wards not just in
my constituency and London but in the country: College Park
and Old Oak, and Wormholt and White City. What do we
expect? What sort of message does this send out to the
pupils, parents and teachers of those schools, who are
working hard to try to ensure that the excellent standard
of education continues against the odds?
-
Ms (Westminster North)
(Lab)
Westminster’s is a mixed story, but a number of schools,
including those that are among the 3% most deprived in the
country, stand to lose substantially. Does my hon. Friend
share my concern about the fact that the Government are
finding resources for a number of free schools that have
been unable to fill places? When the Government talk about
efficiency, could they not question the efficiency of that?
-
My hon. Friend is right. It constitutes a triumph of
ideology over practicality.
Let me quote what has been said by two of the people in my
borough who know what they are talking about. The head of
the borough’s schools forum, who is also the principal of
one of our excellent local secondary schools, has said:
“If schools’ budgets are cut, at a time when costs are
increasingly significantly, it can only have a negative
effect on the education that we are able to deliver.
We will not be able to employ the number of high quality
teachers and leaders that we need to be able to maintain
standards.”
The council cabinet member responsible for these matters
has said:
“It’s clear that the government is trying to redistribute a
pot of funding that is just too small. Cutting funding
hardest in London, rather than giving all schools the money
they need for teachers, buildings and equipment, is
divisive and just plain wrong.”
That is absolutely right. According to the National Audit
Office, there are extra cost pressures amounting to £2
billion across the country, but London is far and away the
worst affected region. It contains eight of the 10 biggest
losers in the country, which are in most boroughs and most
constituencies—although not in every one: I know that the
constituency of the Minister for London is the 12th biggest
gainer. I find that particularly objectionable because
London is a success story, and success is being punished.
From the London Challenge to the London Schools Excellence
Fund, ever since the days of the Inner London Education
Authority, we have prized education, particularly for
people from deprived parts of London. We see it as an
opportunity. It is a shame that a London Member, the
Secretary of State, is overseeing this denuding of
resources from London schools.
-
Mr (Coventry South)
(Lab)
I am sure that my hon. Friend has received letters from
teachers expressing great concern about the implications of
this. Surely the logic of the argument is that if there is
to be fair funding for schools, funding should not be taken
away, but should be increased in other areas. The
Government are pursuing a ridiculous policy.
-
I entirely agree. This is a very crude exercise, and it is
also a political exercise. I find some of the triumphalism
that we have seen on the Conservative Benches extremely
objectionable.
Early one morning last year, my neighbour knocked on my
door. When I said, “I have got to go to work”—if you call
this work—she said, “This is more important. Will you come
round to my children’s school? We are having a meeting
about the funding formula.” So I went to the Good Shepherd
primary school, which is in the street next to the one in
which I live, and listened to parents and teachers who were
both very well informed and very concerned. The same is
true of schools throughout my constituency. Real people are
having to address real problems, and I am afraid that the
Secretary of State’s contribution today showed an
extraordinary degree of complacency. She knows the problems
in our schools, because she is a good constituency Member,
and she must address them. This cannot be a levelling down.
It cannot be robbing Peter to pay Paul. We must be fair to
everyone.
5.28 pm
-
(South East
Cambridgeshire) (Con)
Education has the power to change lives. As the motion
recognises, it helps children to fulfil their potential.
Like many Members of Parliament, I have campaigned to
ensure that my constituency gets its share of funding
through a new, fairer funding formula, because it has been
historically underfunded. I want to see a formula with a
significant element allocated to core funding, to ensure
that every school has the funds it needs. Funding for good
education is not only important, but necessary.
I want to focus, for a moment, on the implicit suggestion
in the motion that it is the Government’s funding decisions
that are inhibiting children from reaching their full
potential. Funding on its own is insufficient to ensure
excellence. Let me give two examples. The first relates to
early years. In its 2016 report, Ofsted emphasised the
success of our early-years education. When it came to
recommendations, it said not that more money was needed but
that parents needed to take up the education opportunities
that were already being offered. It reported that 113,000
children who would have benefited from early-years were
simply not taking up Government-funded places.
-
My hon. Friend is making a very valid point about
early-years. Does she agree that this is not just about a
new fairer funding formula? This Government are putting
much money into education, particularly for the new 30
hours of free childcare. Neroche pre-school in my
constituency is having a brand-new building built on the
back of that money and it is only too grateful to the
Government.
-
My hon. Friend makes an important point: it is not just
about fairer funding. I am very pleased that my area of
East Cambridgeshire was one of the 12 opportunity areas
announced last week to get significantly more money—£72
million in total. So this is not just about fairer funding
money coming in.
I mentioned that there were two examples, and I want to
move on to the second. On secondary education, in the same
report Ofsted mentioned that secondary schools in the north
and midlands were weaker than those in other areas of the
country. It remarked that
“lower performance across these regions cannot be fully
accounted for by poverty or by differences in school
funding.”
The Ofsted report also stated that leaders and teachers had
not set sufficiently high expectations for the behaviour of
their pupils, which leads me on to my key point. To raise
standards and to allow children to achieve their
aspirations, we need to do so much more than provide
adequate funding. We need to champion teaching as a
vocation. We need to inspire more outstanding teachers to
teach. We need to give teachers the respect and autonomy
they deserve. We need to support our students in the
classroom to enable them to deal with life’s challenges,
from helping them with mental health issues to building up
their resilience and aspiration. We need to work with
industry to identify local skills shortages and to raise
standards in our technical education. These go hand in hand
with funding, and all these measures have been championed
by this Government, whether in the industrial strategy
Green Paper announced this week, the Prime Minister’s
statement on mental health earlier this month, or the
“Educational excellence everywhere” White Paper last year.
Education is a building-block for the future. Good funding
is essential, but we need to work together across all
Departments to ensure that our children fulfil their
potential.
5.32 pm
-
(Burnley) (Lab)
As a former teacher, experienced school governor and
parent, I fully understand the value of providing every
child with an excellent education. Education changes lives,
it empowers individuals, it increases social mobility, and
it is the single biggest driver of economic success for a
nation. It is right that we pursue high standards and seek
to provide the very best education for all the children of
this country.
This Government are going about things in the wrong way,
however. The new national funding formula will see 98% of
schools worse off and demonstrates more than anything else
could that the Government are not serious about raising
educational standards or about social mobility. My
constituency of Burnley, which continues to have some of
the highest levels of social deprivation and is in the top
five most deprived areas in the whole of Lancashire, will
lose £477 for every secondary pupil and £339 for every
primary pupil. In the past, the Secretary of State has said
that no school would lose more than 1.5% of funding per
year under the new formula. How can she square that with
projections that my schools will lose 8% on average by
2019?
Even before these cuts, we are already seeing increased
class sizes, subjects being dropped from the curriculum,
pupils with special educational needs and disabilities
losing vital support, and teacher vacancies. I ask the
Secretary of State how she believes cutting funding for
schools in Burnley will help a whole generation of young
people to succeed.
There is nothing fair about funding that is not sufficient.
How can it be fair to take educational funding from schools
that are already stretched to breaking point—schools that
already go the extra mile to give every child the best
possible start in life?
-
(Solihull) (Con)
The hon. Lady said that 98% of schools will lose, but I
understand from the figures that I have that 70% of the
hon. Lady’s schools will gain from this new funding
formula. Would she like to comment on that?
-
I hope that the hon. Gentleman’s figures are correct, but I
fear that they are not. My information suggests that they
are not. The research that I have done shows that that is
not the case.
My schools are already working flat out to ensure that
children coping with social and economic deprivation can
overcome disadvantage and fulfil their potential, yet those
schools are having the rug pulled from under them. Robbing
Peter to pay Paul—or robbing Peterborough to help Poole—is
not going to help. In my constituency, there has been a
concerted effort by the key stakeholders, the schools, the
council and businesses to work together to grow the local
economy. That has not been easy, but we are making good
progress. We are focusing our energies on raising skill
levels, confidence and aspiration among young people.
Considerable effort has been expended on this, and these
funding cuts feel like a kick in the teeth.
Education is the key not just to better life chances for
individuals but to our economic success. Ensuring adequate
funding is crucial so that every child, wherever they live
and whatever their background, can fulfil their potential.
As a nation, we know that every citizen matters in the
widest possible sense, not least to our economy. Investing
in education is an investment in the economy, and failing
to do that is short-sighted in the extreme. A Government
who talk of increased social mobility and growing a strong
economy need to understand that investment in education is
absolutely fundamental to those aims.
5.36 pm
-
(North Dorset)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Burnley
(Julie Cooper).
The Secretary of State and her team are to be
congratulated. To many Conservative Members, and probably
to some Opposition Members, this problem seems almost too
large and intractable to wrestle with. However, we are in a
consultation process. Of course there will be one or two
anomalies and a few little creases will have to be ironed
out. There will be unforeseen circumstances that need to be
attended to. The scary thing is that those Opposition
Members who have spoken so far have been either unable or
unwilling to see the inherent unfairness of a system that
they not only promoted but fed, either because it was to
their advantage to do so or because they had no interest in
rural areas.
The Government have been trying to counterbalance the
differentials in funding for 2016-17, but when House of
Commons Library research shows that Manchester has a
per-pupil figure of £4,619 and Doncaster has a figure of
£5,281, but the figure for Dorset is £4,240, we know that
something has gone wrong. This tells us quite clearly that
it is thought that taxpayers in Dorset and their children’s
needs are less important than taxpayers and their children
in other areas. There was nothing fair in the funding
formula that Labour bequeathed to us. We could have had a
knee-jerk reaction, which really would have put the cat
among the pigeons, but my right hon. Friend the Secretary
of State and her predecessor have adopted an incremental
approach to try to address and arrest the problem, and they
are to be congratulated on that.
I concur with many of the comments made by my hon. Friend
the Member for Louth and Horncastle (Victoria Atkins),
among others. When we go into our village primary schools,
we see the enthusiasm of the teachers, parents, governors
and staff in general. We see their enthusiasm for
education, but we know that they have been trying to do
their work with one hand tied behind their back because
they have been penalised for living and working in a rural
area.
-
Ms Buck
There is great passion among the teachers in schools such
as the Westminster Academy, which has one of the highest
proportions of children on free school dinners anywhere in
Britain, but that school stands to lose at least £250,000.
How is that fair?
-
I took over from the hon. Lady as chairman of the governors
of Wilberforce primary school many years ago, so I am
familiar with the problems facing schools in her
constituency, as well as those elsewhere. Perhaps I need to
make the point to Opposition Members quite baldly that just
because schools that have done very well under an unfair
system start to see some rebalancing while the cake is
being re-divided, that is not necessarily an argument for
saying that there should be no change for those schools
that have disproportionately enjoyed funding while those in
rural areas have not.
-
Does my hon. Friend agree that many of our rural schools in
Somerset and Dorset have been doing so well with the
funding they have had? This extra funding might enable them
to put in place some of the things that they have not been
able to have because there simply has not been enough money
to go around.
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Back in the summer, I
convened a roundtable of all the headteachers and chairs of
governors at my schools. They said that the key thing was
the recruitment and retention of teachers, and that the
heart of the problem was the inequity in funding and the
lack of a formula that recognises rural sparsity and the
additional costs that such schools face.
-
(Derby North)
(Con)
Will my hon. Friend give way?
-
I will not.
I declare an interest, because I have three young daughters
at a village primary school in my constituency and—here is
the plug—my wonderful wife is the chairman of its parents,
teachers and friends association. The hard-working farmer
Spencer Mogridge gets up at 3 o’clock or 4 o’clock in the
morning to look after his livestock, but he still goes to
the PTFA meeting at 7 o’clock in the evening to organise
the school fun run—[Hon. Members: “Were you on the fun
run?”] I was not on the fun run. I think the words “fun”
and “run” should never be used in the same sentence; it is
an oxymoron.
I see such keenness at all levels of the rural educational
establishment. That is why people want a fairer funding
model that addresses the imbalance, recognises needs, and
ensures that the lifeblood of many of our rural
communities, which I believe our rural schools are, can
continue long into the future.
5.41 pm
-
(Bradford South)
(Lab)
In recent weeks, the Government have revealed their reforms
to the national funding formula. The reforms paint a bleak
future for the schools of Bradford, promising stagnant
funding allocations that fail to meet increasing pupil
demand. The city has faced, and continues to face,
difficult times, but it is trying its best to improve
standards. This perfect storm of funding cuts will damage
Bradford’s education system and harm the life chances of
our children.
What I fear most is that the reforms mark a determined and
intentional culture of underinvestment by this Government
in our school system. What do the national funding formula
reforms mean for Bradford? Overall, 89% of Bradford’s
primary schools, secondary schools and academies face cuts
to their budgets, with funding for early-years provision
set to be cut by £2.4 million, which is more than 6%.
Difficult funding decisions are already being taken in
Bradford. In recent weeks, the Bradford schools forum took
the difficult decision to divert millions of pounds from
the budgets of mainstream schools to help to fund
additional school places for pupils with special
educational needs. Every child, whether they are learning
in a mainstream school or a special school, deserves an
excellent education.
Against that woeful financial backdrop, it is not only
day-to-day teaching budgets that are becoming ever more
constrained. Investing in new provision is becoming less
and less viable for our schools system. In recent months,
the Prime Minister has said that she wants parity for
mental health provision in this country. That must be as
true for our young people as it is for the rest of the
population. Many believe that mental health provision for
our children and young people is in need of urgent
improvement.
In response to my recent parliamentary question, the
Minister for Vulnerable Children and Families said:
“Schools are able to decide on, and make assessments of,
the support they provide for their pupils, based on their
individual needs.”
At a time when our schools’ budgets are facing real-terms
funding cuts, it is unlikely that they will be able to find
extra funding for new provision, even if they believe that
additional support would benefit their pupils.
If the Prime Minister is truly committed to parity of care
between physical and mental illness, her Government must
seriously consider making additional ring-fenced funding
available to schools. If, as a country, we are genuinely
committed to driving improvements in educational
attainment, tackling inequality and supporting our children
with decent mental health provision, fair and decent
funding is nothing short of vital.
5.44 pm
-
(Kingston and Surbiton)
(Con)
I am lucky to represent a constituency in one of the
best—if not the best—boroughs in the country for school
results and Ofsted ratings. Having visited every school in
my constituency at least once, I can safely say that that
is due to the exceptional teaching and school leadership on
offer. My comments are informed by the many meetings I have
had with headteachers from across the constituency,
including in a delegation that I brought to see the Schools
Minister last year.
Overall funding is now at its highest level, but there is
additional demand. When we discuss how public spending
should be divided, I will make no apology for asking for
more money for schools, but that must be set against the
demands made by Government and Opposition Members for more
funding for everything from the NHS to national
infrastructure—the money has to be divided up somehow. That
brings me on to the national funding formula.
The existing formula was plainly unfair, and a cross-party
group of MPs said that it had to be made fairer. Under the
existing formula, Kingston has the third worst-funded
schools in London. Pupils in Kingston get £2,406 less than
pupils in Tower Hamlets, which is in the same city, just 14
miles away. How can that be fair? I campaigned for a fairer
funding formula along with parents in my constituency. I am
pleased that we have seen a marginal increase in our
funding and that, importantly, mobility is being taken into
account.
-
Does the hon. Gentleman accept that the social
circumstances in the area of London that he represents are
quite different from those in Tower Hamlets? Schools in
places that are affected by high levels of deprivation
require more funding per pupil.
-
I ask the hon. Lady to come and repeat that in the poorer
parts of my constituency, where some people are just as
deprived as those in Tower Hamlets. In addition, a high
proportion of children receive the pupil premium. I do not
disagree that deprivation should be one of the most
important factors or that schools in boroughs such as
Kingston will always get less because deprivation is a key
factor, but that level of disparity is simply not fair.
There will be winners and losers whenever a funding formula
is reorganised unless there is a massive increase in
funding to level things up rather than down, but no party
committed to such funding in its manifesto.
-
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
No, I will not.
Headteachers make the legitimate point that the increased
costs of the national living wage, and national insurance
and pension contributions, are putting pressure on their
budgets. The situation is the same in other areas of the
public sector, but we should not forget that point in this
debate.
Finally, high-needs funding, not the national funding
formula, is the biggest issue in my constituency. Such
funding has resulted in an overspend on the dedicated
schools grant of some £5 million, which will have to be
found from school budgets as a whole. The council and free
school providers have put in two applications for new
special schools in the borough—one in Kingston and one in
Richmond—which will reduce pressure in the medium term, but
there is no clear answer to where that £5 million will come
from in the short term, apart from every single child’s
school funding. I am pleased that the Minister was able to
meet the council leader and me a few weeks ago to discuss
that.
All the points that I have made must be taken into account
in addition to the funding formula. I am pleased that
Kingston schools will receive a small increase. We could
have been bolder and made bigger reductions elsewhere to
make the situation even fairer to pupils in my
constituency, but there must be fairness across the board,
as my constituents recognise. I will be submitting a
response to phase 2 of the consultation, just as I did
previously, and it will be informed by my constituency’s
headteachers—the best headteachers in the land.
5.48 pm
-
(Southport) (LD)
This week, the Public Accounts Committee reviewed the
National Audit Office report on the financial
sustainability of school funding, and the most helpful
thing I can do now is to give the Chamber some flavour of
how that went. Present were officials from the DFE,
including the permanent secretary, , but the session
with them was preceded by a panel made up of headteachers
and Russell Hobby of the National Association of Head
Teachers. Understandably, they spoke of the current severe
financial pressures, the effects of tight funding, and the
strategies they have to deal with that, which will be
familiar to those who have listened to the debate so
far—things such as reducing the curriculum; increasing
class sizes; phasing out support for special needs and
mental health; cutting out extracurricular activities,
professional development and school trips; and increasing
teacher contact time.
Unsurprisingly, the officials from the Department did not
altogether recognise that picture. Interestingly, though,
Government Members should be aware that they did not
dispute any of the financial facts. There was no
disagreement whatever that schools have to save £3 billion
in the current spending round, which represents an 8% cut
by 2020, or that this is the toughest challenge since the
1990s, when the previous Conservative Government were in
power. The Department simply did not dispute the financial
facts that more schools are in debt and that debts are
growing bigger; nor could it, because it had agree the
report with the NAO.
The Department’s argument was not about the financial facts
themselves, but about the effects of those facts. It
suggested that if every school procured efficiently,
particularly on things such as heating and insurance, used
its available balances and managed its payroll effectively,
disaster could be averted. The Department stands ready, as
does the Secretary of State, with the advice, tools,
tutorials and data to help schools to do that. It thinks
that disaster can be averted—that it is, in the words of
the permanent secretary, “doable”.
My view is that there are good reasons for scepticism. The
DFE exercise, such as it is, has largely been a desk
exercise. The Department knows little about the individual
circumstances of schools, and how could it? There are just
too many for central Government to gauge and understand. It
is a fact that not every school can actually reduce its
payroll costs—not if it is endowed with experienced and
established staff, and not if it needs to take up the slack
caused by the reduction, or abolition, of the educational
support grant. The latter is particularly true for small
schools. Not every school can reduce its procurement
costs—not if it is in an old, leaky building, has already
reduced them, or is tied into long-term contracts. What is
doable in theory is simply not doable in practice.
The most chilling passage in the NAO report is at paragraph
2.6. I do not have time to enlarge on it, but I advise
Members to read it very carefully.
5.52 pm
-
(Mid Derbyshire)
(Con)
I rise to speak about school funding. Many people in this
place will not be aware that I was very involved in school
funding and in trying to get a fair formula for schools
many years ago, when I was the chairman of the Grant
Maintained Schools Advisory Committee, which is now called
FASNA—Freedom and Autonomy for Schools National
Association. Work has been going on for 25 years to get a
fair formula.
The civil service always says there will be winners and
losers; of course there are winners and losers—there are
now. In Derby City, the highest-funded school gets paid
£5,564 per pupil, while the lowest-funded gets only £4,739.
The gap is around £800 per pupil. If a school has 1,300 or
1,500 pupils and that £800 is multiplied up, it makes an
enormous difference to the quality of education that can be
provided. We know that some schools need more funding than
others, and we recognise that they do not all want to lose
£800—some of them need that extra funding—but those at the
bottom of the list are consistently at the bottom of the
list.
I am delighted that the Government have decided that we are
going to have the school funding formula, because it is
about time. We have wanted it for more than 25 years, so I
am delighted that the Government are tackling it and are
going to consult on it and get it right.
-
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Mid Derbyshire
(Pauline Latham) for giving way. Does she agree that the
formula is a good news story for Derby City, because we
need extra support and could gain 8.4%?
-
Yes, the new formula could make a huge difference to Derby
schools. It is important that the extra support is given to
the right schools, and that those schools that have been
underfunded for so many years get a fair crack of the whip.
We must not allow Derby City Council to skew it in any way,
shape or form so that the same old schools get extra money
and those that have been deprived do not.
There are issues with schools at the moment, and I know
that many are looking forward to the national funding
formula. Schools have fixed costs. Their costs are the same
whether they are in an inner city or a leafy suburb, so why
are they paid different amounts of money? The biggest
problem at the moment—certainly this applies to one school
in my constituency—is that the apprenticeship levy is
hitting now, but there is no more money for it. We must
look at how we can help fund it, because it is within the
overall budget. Schools have no choice over it, but it is a
very good thing.
Schools are also having to drop participation in the Duke
of Edinburgh Award scheme, because they cannot afford to
run it any more. The scheme is really important for Derby
schools. There are amazing opportunities for young people.
If we lose those extracurricular activities, we are not
giving pupils the all-round education that they should
have. I hope that the Minister will look at that.
When schools are full, they maximise the amount of money
that they can have. What I do not want to see this year is
schools having to increase class sizes and reduce teaching
time. I would like us to look at that again. The national
funding formula cannot come soon enough for the schools
that have been looking forward to it for years.
5.55 pm
-
(Wakefield) (Lab)
Every child in this country, and every disabled child in
this country, deserves a decent education. The principle
that no child should be worse off as a result of these
funding reforms should run through this consultation. Where
a child was born should not dictate their life chances, yet
that is the case for too many children in our country, and
too many children in Wakefield, where 25% of them are
growing up in poverty. I was proud to be a member of the
last Labour Government, who lifted nearly a million
children out of poverty, and I am so disappointed by what
this Government have done, overseeing the closure of 800
Sure Start centres and changing the goalposts on measuring
child poverty.
Wakefield schools have taken a very deep hit from these
proposals.
-
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
No, I am not giving way.
Fair funding should mean a levelling up, not a levelling
down. Every school in my constituency will see their
funding cut under the Secretary of State’s proposals. The
manifesto promise to protect education spending has been
broken, as we have heard from my hon. Friend the Member for
Liverpool, West Derby (Stephen Twigg). The Government have
not provided for funding per pupil to increase in line with
inflation; have not accounted for the increase in pupils
attending schools; and have not considered the costs of
higher national insurance and pension contributions, which
now have to be absorbed by the school budgets. When the
efficiency savings are factored into the funding formula,
funding in Wakefield per pupil will fall from £4,725 this
year to £4,211 in 2019-20—a real-terms cut of 11%.
-
(Chippenham)
(Con)
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
I will not give way.
Nine maintained schools across Wakefield district are
projected to be in deficit by 31 March, which means
increased class sizes, subjects dropped from the
curriculum, pupils with special educational needs and
disabilities losing vital support, and teacher vacancies
left unfilled.
There will also be a very worrying impact on special
educational needs. At the moment, there is some flexibility
to move money around and to move it into the high needs
block. Under the new formula, there will be disruption and
uncertainty around special needs funding for cities such as
Wakefield. The funds are simply not enough for children in
our city who need that extra support.
-
The hon. Lady said at the outset that it was important for
all children to get the same opportunities. She also
mentioned that class sizes would go up. Does she think it
is fair that, for the children in my constituency, class
sizes in every single secondary school are over 30, and
that those schools have been historically underfunded for
years and years and years?
-
The hon. Lady reinforces my point, which is that the
Government must take into account rising pupil numbers.
This formula and the efficiency savings fail to do that, so
she needs to have a word with her Secretary of State about
them.
We cannot have a situation in which there is just not
enough money to go around to educate all children well. In
Wakefield, we will see 1,000 more pupils start school in
September and yet no money has been allocated for that
increase, which means that the schools and the pupils will
miss out. The Institute for Fiscal Studies says that
schools in England face the steepest cuts to funding since
the 1970s.
Despite those circumstances, headteachers such as Martin
Fenton at Greenhill Primary, Rob Marsh at Cathedral
Academy, and Georgina Haley at Netherton Junior and Infant
School are doing excellent work in my constituency to
improve the life chances of children in Wakefield. I urge
the Secretary of State to drop her grammar school plans,
revise the national funding formula for schools, and make
sure that we do not go back to the bad old days. I was at
school at the same time as she was. I had to pay £12 for my
O-level physics textbook, and we did not have a teacher for
two years in the good old days of the 1984 teaching
budgets. We do not want to go back to those days.
6.00 pm
-
(Boston and Skegness)
(Con)
“This is welcome news for Lincolnshire schools as we are
one of the lowest-funded authorities in the country. We
have been campaigning for a fairer funding allocation for
some years because it can’t be right that authorities in
other parts of the country get more money to pass on to
schools due to historical allocations. This is long overdue
and we will be making our strong views known in any
consultation leading up to the changes. A fairer funding
allocation is what our schools deserve.”
Those are not my words, but those of Councillor Patricia
Bradwell, executive member for children’s services at
Lincolnshire County Council. She is right: she knows that
rural sparsely populated areas can be areas where
deprivation, special needs, the challenges of students
whose first language is not English, and a host of other
issues are just as common as they are in cities. The
Government’s proposed funding formula makes huge strides in
righting that historic injustice and I welcome it.
The funding formula is in a consultation phase, so I hope
that the Government will take the opportunity to make it
even better. The Library tells me that 29 of my 39 schools
for which they have data will see their funding rise by up
to 2.9%. On current form, 10 will see a slight fall—for the
same overall total, it would be perfectly possible to see
no fall at all.
I would make two pleas to the Department, with one
overarching theme: for the same amount of money,
distributed fractionally differently, we could do even
better. First, the Government are rightly committed to the
expansion of grammar schools, which are engines for social
mobility, with fine institutions in Boston and Skegness
and, indeed, across Lincolnshire. In the fourth-lowest
funded authority in the country, those schools were not
over-funded in the past. A tweak to the formula could
improve their situation markedly. Secondly, in many
communities, small rural primary schools bind together
friends and neighbours and keep villages sustainable,
functioning units for community cohesion. If the formula is
to have a sparsity factor, it is only right to acknowledge
that a county such as Lincolnshire is about as sparse as
they come. Again, for no overall increase, it could be done
slightly better. One approach might be simply to give local
authorities even greater powers to decide how spending
might be allocated.
In conclusion, Lincolnshire is on record as welcoming a £5
million boost for schools across the county. That rights an
historic wrong and will go a long way towards meeting
genuine needs and ending the pretence that urban areas have
a monopoly on deprivation. Lincolnshire further welcomes
the consultation as a way of making sure that the extra
money, which is very welcome, is spent even more
effectively after these very promising proposals are
implemented.
6.03 pm
-
(Ellesmere Port and
Neston) (Lab)
First, I should declare an interest, as my two children
attend a local school that is affected by the cuts. My wife
is the cabinet member for children and young people on our
local authority of Cheshire West and Chester. By happy
coincidence, my local council has an exceptional record on
education, with over 90% of schools rated “good” or
“outstanding”. Not one school is “inadequate”.
All that good progress, however, could be jeopardised if
the planned reductions to funding are implemented. The
extent of the reductions in both the lump-sum allocations
and the basic per pupil amount will remove almost £7.9
million from schools in Cheshire West and Chester. That
equates to a 2% cut across the board, with the biggest
losers facing a cut of just under 3%. Thirty-two of 33
schools in my constituency will not maintain their per
pupil funding in cash terms, contrary to what the
Government promised. With that in mind, I wrote to local
schools in my constituency to ask what they thought. I am
extremely worried by the responses that I have received.
Ellesmere Port Catholic High School has seen huge
improvements since being placed in special measures in
2013. The headteacher and the school worked exceptionally
hard to turn things around, and in June 2015 they were
awarded a “good” rating. So impressive was the improvement
that the chief inspector of Ofsted, Sir Michael Wilshaw,
referred to the school in a speech he made in November 2016
about schools that have made remarkable transformations,
stating:
“At Ellesmere Port Catholic High School, only a third of
pupils achieved 5 good GCSEs. Now almost three-quarters
do”.
Those improvements should be applauded, so I was deeply
concerned to learn that the school is projecting funding
deficits for the next few years, which will threaten the
improvements it has made. It tells me that early
indications show a £44,000 annual reduction from 2018-19,
on top of the deficit already forecast. That will make the
approved deficit reduction plan completely unachievable
unless cuts to staffing are made. The headteacher told me,
“we are already stretched to the limit and it is a very
bleak outlook knowing that we will have to make further
reductions...the Government must invest in schools for the
sake of our children and future.”
Whitby High School told me that it could face a funding
reduction of £111,000. By 2020, the School Cuts campaign
estimates that it could be facing a 10% real-terms budget
cut, equivalent to a staffing reduction of 17 if savings
are not found elsewhere. Governors of Little Sutton Church
of England Primary School told me that they are very
concerned about the school’s future sustainability
following the new funding arrangements. Cambridge Road
Primary School has told me that since 2013 it has already
experienced a real-terms reduction in income of 4.4%, or
£65,000; and that, combined with wage increases and
inflation, the real-terms reduction has been in excess of
£100,000.
-
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
I am sorry, but I do not have time.
St Mary of the Angels Catholic Primary School has estimated
that by 2019 its budget will be down by £90,138, which
could clearly lead to a loss of staff if savings are not
found elsewhere.
This is a terrible situation for local schools. As one
headteacher said to me,
“it does appear that the ‘fairer’ funding model being
discussed is far from fair.”
I could not have put it better myself.
6.06 pm
-
(Newark) (Con)
When I met headteachers in my constituency campaigning for
fairer funding in the county of Nottinghamshire, my right
hon. and learned Friend the Member for Rushcliffe (Mr
Clarke), who is my parliamentary neighbour, told those
gathered there that he had only ever met two people who
understood how these formulae work; one of them was dead
and the other had gone mad. It gives me a lot of pleasure
to see that my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State has
at long last grasped the nettle and is tackling an issue
that our right hon. and learned Friend, as a former
Education Secretary, said no Education Secretary would ever
take on.
The funding formula was manifestly unfair, as many hon.
Members have said. On behalf of schools across the county
of Nottinghamshire, which was one of the f40 counties, I am
delighted to welcome an increase of 0.8%—admittedly small,
but an increase none the less.
I also think that it is incredibly important to take on
difficult issues and not to kick these cans down the road,
as happens time and again in politics, for example with tax
credits. It is immensely difficult to take money away from
people, even if the reasons have been proven to be wrong
and the formulae are outdated—the opposition is
considerable. This is an example of the Government taking
on a difficult issue, rather than kicking it further down
the road.
This formula also sends out a signal that there is poverty
in rural areas, and no county exemplifies that better than
Nottinghamshire. I may be privileged to represent the more
affluent rural parts of the county, but at least half of it
is made up of ex-coalfield communities, such as Ollerton,
Ashfield and Mansfield, with deep-rooted social problems,
left to fester by the Labour party. This formula will not
benefit my constituency; it will benefit those deprived
parts of Nottinghamshire. I am proud of that, even if it is
a difficult conversation to have with most of my
headteachers.
My last point—given that so little time is available—is
that there are parts of this country that have been well
funded but produced appalling results, and nowhere
exemplifies that better than the city of Nottingham. We
have heard today from representatives, colleagues and
friends who represent the city that their funding has
fallen. I feel sympathy for that, but those relatively well
funded schools have let down generations of students, with
an appalling local authority and poor-quality leadership.
As well as increasing funding for my schools in
Nottinghamshire, I look to the Secretary of State to find a
strategy to address the intergenerational failure in places
such as Nottingham, which desperately needs it.
6.09 pm
-
(Richmond Park)
(LD)
In my first week as an MP, I received a letter from the
headteacher of the school my two children attend—the local
school in the constituency I represent. The school
highlighted some of the very real issues that it and other
schools in my constituency will face in the next few years.
When I got to the end of the letter, I realised that I had
received it not because I was the newly elected MP but
because I was a parent, and every parent at my children’s
school had received the same letter. I thought to myself,
“This is surely unprecedented. This is surely an indication
of the deep anxiety felt by the headteachers of my
children’s school and the other schools in my constituency,
in both Kingston and Richmond, about the future of their
funding.” I therefore spoke to the headteacher of my
children’s school about the issue.
The Secretary of State refers to using staff more
efficiently. In my children’s school, that means cutting
teaching assistants, which means that the biggest impact
will be felt by those pupils who need the most help—those
with special educational needs or additional language
needs. These cuts, therefore, will increase the gaps in
attainment between those at the top and those at the
bottom, and they will limit opportunities for those who
already have the least opportunities.
I attended a meeting of headteachers in the Kingston
borough with the hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton
(James Berry), and one of the things that was
highlighted—it seemed extraordinary to me, but it was
confirmed to me by the headteacher of my local school—is
that schools have to pay an apprenticeship levy and that
that is adding to their costs. It is extraordinary that
schools have to find money from their budgets—to take money
that would otherwise be used for teaching staff and
resources—to pay a penalty for not providing training. I
find that an absolutely extraordinary anomaly, and I hope
the Secretary of State will look into it as a matter of
urgency, because it seems an unnecessary burden for schools
in my constituency and elsewhere.
I understand the motivation to ensure that the distribution
of funding is evened out across the country, and I
understand that that will be seen as fairer for some
people, but I urge the Secretary of State to achieve that
by looking for ways to increase funding to schools that are
already disadvantaged, not by taking it from schools that
have traditionally received more, because that will cause a
great deal of hardship for schools not just in my
constituency but elsewhere.
6.12 pm
-
(South Cambridgeshire)
(Con)
Of course I commend the Government’s determination to build
a new schools’ funding formula, but I am pleased it is
still at the consultation stage.
Representing South Cambridgeshire—a constituency in a
county that, until 2015, was the lowest funded in the
country and had been for decades—I understand only too well
how underfunded schools have struggled. The proposed new
formula, though it has laudable intentions to focus on
deprivation and poor educational attainment, does not yet
recognise three additional critical factors. First and
foremost, consideration must be given when a school has
been seriously underfunded for decades. My schools have
been mending and making do for years—I do not exaggerate
when I describe broken window panes and holes in roofs. For
us, teaching assistants are a luxury, and the purchasing of
text books and even basic equipment is the ask of local
businesses and the community. It is not a question of
cutting teaching assistants—filling even core teacher
vacancies is often not possible.
The Government showed an appreciation of that when they
provided a small but welcome interim funding boost last
year and this year, but I am afraid that the reality is
that the money has been completely absorbed in pension and
national insurance increases. Furthermore, under the
current funding proposals, not only will this interim
funding not be maintained as a starting baseline, but 27 of
my schools would be even worse off, with a real-terms cut
of about 4%. Every one of my rural primary schools with
fewer than 150 pupils would lose money, and Members have
spoken today about sparsity. So I urge the Secretary of
State to recognise that the new formula, though built on
many sensible principles, cannot simply be superimposed on
a landscape of significant historical under-investment—not
if we expect those schools to survive, let alone to halt
and close the widening free school meals attainment gap.
I now turn to the additional financial pressures
experienced by areas of high growth, which we have also
heard about today. In the next four years, we will have
opened 24 new schools in Cambridgeshire since 2012 just to
cope with basic need. It is not right that we subsidise
that in the early years with money from existing schools.
For example, a typical secondary school would contribute
£41,000 out of its annual budget towards it. I recognise
that the consultation is open-ended about growth and how we
should deal with it, but we clearly need to find a way of
fixing this, perhaps through a separate fund to help these
schools in the early years.
Finally, I ask that we look at the cost of living. In
Cambridgeshire, particularly South Cambs and the city,
house prices are about 16 times the average wage, so we
need to think about how we can help with teacher
recruitment, because people’s budgets simply do not go that
far.
Having spoken to the Secretary of State, I believe that
there is genuinely a sincere desire to offer up this
proposed model for road testing, and that is what we are
doing today—we are kicking the tyres.
6.15 pm
-
(Oldham West and Royton)
(Lab)
Unsurprisingly, I am here to speak for the children of
Oldham, who, under these proposals, will be significantly
affected by money being taken away from their much-needed
education. I should declare an interest: I have two young
boys, one at secondary school and one at primary school,
both of whom will see cuts—
-
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
I am going to carry on for a time because I am conscious
that other people want to speak.
Both of them will see real-terms cuts to their education
provision, as will another 60,000 young people in the town.
Every single one of Oldham’s 99 schools will see a cut,
with the average being 9%. We are meant to be an
opportunity area. According to the Government, the roads
are paved with educational opportunity gold. They say that
they have recognised that there are issues and are
determined to turn things around, so we should welcome the
investment of £16 million. Unfortunately, they then come
and take £17 million away. So let them tell me, and tell
the young people, parents and teachers in Oldham, where the
new money is. How can we turn around educational attainment
when the problem is so deep-rooted and the situation is so
unequal—when education has not been valued in previous
years and we are desperate to realise the opportunities
that these young people deserve for the future? Let the
Government tell Oldham how it has a positive future when
the rungs are being taken from under it.
We have seen money being taken away from early years. We
have seen nearly £1 million taken away from a sixth-form
college. We have seen £3.5 million taken away from Oldham
College. Time and again, money is being taken away. I do
not resent for one second any other Member of this House
saying that their area needs more money to provide a decent
standard education. If they represent a Tory shire, then
that is fantastic—they can make that case and I will
support them in doing so, but not at the cost of children,
and their families, who have been let down for generations,
and who need this chance more than most.
The world is more complex than it has ever been. The skills
that people need will be more complex than ever before, but
people are being set up to fail under this model. I make
this plea: next time the Secretary of State visits Oldham
and my constituency, instead of just giving a courtesy
notice, why not attend a roundtable with the headteachers
and the governors to really listen and understand the
impact of these cuts? If the Government really do care, let
us have fewer words, more action, and more investment.
6.18 pm
-
(Solihull) (Con)
Solihull is mentioned in many surveys as being one of the
best places to live not just in the west midlands but in
the UK as a whole and that is due in no small part to its
schools. My schools have put in a Herculean effort for
years. They do more with less. They have embraced change
and gained the benefits from so doing, despite having been
one of the losers in the fairer funding formula for many
years. I welcome the Government’s commitment to making the
necessary changes. Although this is a consultation at the
moment, I hope that they will take on the comments that
many hon. Members are making so that we can get this right
and set for the future.
In my constituency, although secondary schools gain, and I
am very grateful for that, some primary schools do not,
with some losing up to 2.5%. In addition, the unequal
treatment of Solihull schools compared with those of
neighbouring Birmingham has not yet been fixed, with those
in the city still enjoying a substantial per-pupil
advantage, currently standing at £1,300 per year.
To put that into a real-world context, schools in
Birmingham can use the extra cash to offer more competitive
salaries and attract newly qualified teachers, especially
in subjects such as mathematics and science, and that hurts
schools in neighbouring communities that do not have the
money to spare. Schools in Birmingham also have more funds
to set aside for facilities, extracurricular activities,
school trips and all the other things that allow schools to
provide a rich and well-rounded education.
In a compact, urban region such as the west midlands, even
small inequalities of that sort can have serious
consequences for those who are left out, and the
inequalities are more visible than they might be elsewhere.
Local headteachers tell me that parents regularly ask them
why pupils in Birmingham schools are taken on exciting
school trips, but their own children are not. Such
unfairness is made all the worse by the fact that so many
Birmingham children are educated in Solihull. I believe
that up to 40% of the children in some of our local schools
come from outside the borough, but those pupils do not
bring their funding advantages with them.
I am pleased that the need for fairer funding in our
schools is widely recognised, and that the Government are
grasping the nettle. The proposals are an important first
step, and now we have our consultation, but we must go
further to end the unequal treatment of communities such as
Solihull.
6.21 pm
-
(Brentford and
Isleworth) (Lab)
Teachers in the borough of Hounslow have achieved amazing
results over the last 10 or more years. Almost all our
schools are good or outstanding, and value-added is
positive in every school. That is in a borough where all
schools and all classrooms contain children with additional
needs of some kind—children who arrive not speaking
English, children with disabilities and special educational
needs, children who are homeless and keep having to move on
or who are sofa surfing with their parents, and children
with many other needs. Most of our schools suffer from
severe aircraft noise from planes approaching Heathrow.
The overall savings proposed by the Department for
Education for schools in my constituency by 2018-19—a
combination of the national funding formula and the wider
cost pressures that they face now—amount to £5.1 million.
That is a 6.2% cut. The existing cost pressures include, as
other Members have mentioned, inflation, the apprenticeship
levy, pension and national insurance costs, the requirement
for independent careers advice, and more children with
special needs in our mainstream schools.
As in the Secretary of State’s constituency, the cost
pressures that my heads face will mean, on the whole, fewer
teachers and support staff, plus other cuts. We have
established that each of our secondary schools will have to
lose between nine and 18 teachers, and primary schools will
have to have up to 11 fewer teachers. Fewer subjects will
be taught at key stages 4 and 5, there will be fewer
external visits and fewer specialists will come in to teach
and enthuse children about future jobs and careers, staying
safe or other specialist issues that we want our children
to learn about and get their heads around. There will be
less specialist and individual support for children who
have additional needs, who do not speak English, who are
very gifted or who have mental health problems and need
counselling. Agency costs for supply teachers, as our
headteachers face the recruitment and retention crisis that
is affecting all subject areas, will add to the salary
bill.
In classrooms where there are children who need additional
attention, teachers and children will feel the impact of
the cuts every day. More classes will be taught with only
one adult—the class teacher—in the room. The lack of
additional support is a cost for every child in the
classroom, both those who have additional needs and those
who do not. The cuts will mean that less is spent on
repairing buildings, improving outdoor space or buying the
equipment and materials that the curriculum requires.
6.24 pm
-
(The
Cotswolds) (Con)
For reasons that will become evident to the House, I am
particularly grateful to have caught your eye in this
debate, Mr Speaker. I commend the Secretary of State for
tackling this issue, because it is quite clear from the
debate that, in a modification of the Lincoln dictum, on
this issue one can only please some of the people some of
the time. Inevitably, when there is no more cash around,
there will be winners and losers. Unfortunately, my
constituency is one of the big losers.
I campaigned with the f40 group for over 10 years, and the
absolute sun on the horizon was the national funding
formula, but now that the consultation on the formula has
arrived I find that my schools will actually get less
money. In Gloucestershire, we will get a 0.8% cash-terms
increase this year, and in the Cotswolds, there will be a
0.3% cash-terms increase. Two thirds of my schools will get
a cut, and a third of them will get a very small increase.
In Gloucestershire, schools were already very efficient.
They had amalgamated a lot of back-office functions and had
formed partnerships. The secondary schools had done
everything they could to become academies, being among the
earliest in the country to do so. Gloucestershire is
therefore a very efficient county, but we now find that our
schools will get cash-terms cuts. That is on top of the
Government having imposed limits on above inflation
increases in relation to funding teachers, the national
minimum wage, pensions, national insurance and procurement.
A cash-terms cut for over half my schools means a real
squeeze on education in Gloucestershire.
I should pay tribute to the parents and governors of my
schools, because the vast majority go well beyond the extra
mile to give my children the very best education. As a
result, on very meagre funding, we get reasonable results
in Gloucestershire. However, the figures I have given from
the consultation will put Gloucestershire down from 108th
to 116th in the f40 league. That is simply unacceptable
because it means that some teacher posts will definitely be
lost, and it is likely that some of my smaller schools will
close.
-
Will my hon. Friend do what I am doing, which is to
encourage all my governors, teachers and parents to feed
into the consultation? I suspect there are some anomalies
because it is the same in my area, in that we expected more
and it has not been delivered.
-
I do urge all people to do so. My hon. Friend the Member
for Cheltenham (Alex Chalk) is sitting beside me, and I am
sure that all Gloucestershire’s MPs will feed into the
consultation. I am also sure that many of my aggrieved
headteachers, parents and governors will do so.
It is inevitable that some of my secondary schools, which
face some of the largest cuts, will have to reduce the
breadth of the curriculum they currently offer. That would
be unfair because every child in the country should have
roughly the same breadth of curriculum in their schools. I
accept that that is often difficult in smaller secondary
schools, but it will be very hard for children and their
parents to bear if their A-level choices are no longer
available as a result of Government policy.
I simply say to my hon. Friend the Minister that I know
this is a consultation, but I am looking for some very
radical changes. The weighting for deprivation and other
measures in the consultation is too high, and the basic
pupil funding should never in any circumstances be cut.
6.28 pm
-
(Wirral South)
(Lab)
I pay tribute to the shadow Secretary of State, my hon.
Friend the Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner),
who made a brilliant speech. She demonstrated, as has the
fact that a large number of Members wanted to speak in this
debate, that education truly matters in our country.
I will make a few brief points. The first is that the
narrative of this discussion is completely wrong. It is a
typical Tory divide-and-rule strategy. I do not believe
that schools that might gain from a change in the funding
formula want to do so at the expense of other children,
teachers and schools. For example, I know that the folks
who are set to gain from the changes in Knowsley, just
across the River Mersey from where I live, do not want to
do so at the expense of children and schools in Liverpool,
Sefton and Wirral. We should not be dividing people, but
bringing them together.
Schools in Wirral are set to lose hundreds of pounds per
pupil. That plays into another classic Tory narrative,
which is that people do not need money to get anywhere in
life or to help in education. The hon. and learned Member
for South East Cambridgeshire (Lucy Frazer) said that money
is not sufficient to drive achievement. In fact, money may
not be a sufficient condition, but it is a necessary one,
as all the evidence shows. I am next to my hon. Friend the
Member for Liverpool, West Derby (Stephen Twigg), who led
the London challenge. I know he would say that it was
reform and improvement, alongside decent funding, that
resulted in those achievements under the last Labour
Government that we are all proud of.
-
Will my hon. Friend join me in welcoming one element of the
funding formula, which is the inclusion for the first time
of a mobility factor to reflect the additional costs of
high pupil turnover? However, does she agree that it ought
to be larger than the 0.1% of the total that is being
allocated on that basis at the moment?
-
I have never disagreed with my right hon. Friend yet and I
do not now.
As a Member of Parliament, I am afraid of very little, but
I still get nervous when I have to go and see local
headteachers. I want to give the final words of my speech
over to those headteachers. To begin with, Mark Whitehill,
who is head of Gayton Primary School in Heswall, spoke this
simple truth:
“If Education really is a priority, we need the staff to
help us deliver it!”
Another brilliant head in my area, Catherine Kelly, agrees
with that. She said that her job is about life chances, but
colleagues whom she respects as fantastic educationists are
talking about leaving the profession because, as heads,
they are not focusing on the right things as they are
having to balance the books and make ends meet. She said
that they are
“invariably being set up to fail”.
She is frugal and knows that if the school is overstaffed,
it is a waste of the students’ resources, so she would
never make that happen. She says she is afraid that the
Government “clearly doesn’t understand education”, which I
believe is true.
The last word goes to David Hazeldine, a great head from
Wirral, who says:
“The fundamental issue is that there is not enough money in
the system. Teacher recruitment shortages and massive
underfunding are placing children’s education and
well-being at risk.”
He says that that is “creating a perfect storm”.
Those three heads have put it better than I ever could. I
ask the Secretary of State to learn the lessons of schools
in her own constituency and recognise that although money
is not all that schools need, they cannot do without it if
they want to give kids a chance.
6.32 pm
-
(Rugby) (Con)
Many parents are attracted to my constituency by the
excellence of its schools. I look forward to visiting
Oakfield Primary Academy and Brownsover Community School
this Friday. We have a broad range of schools, including a
bilateral school that provides co-educational grammar
school places, which is incredibly popular and
oversubscribed.
Under the consultation, Warwickshire will remain one of the
counties with the lowest funding at £4,293 per pupil. That
is among the lowest figures we have heard today. It is a
credit to the heads and staff of the many schools in my
constituency that they achieve such excellence with that
sum. There will be a 1.1% increase, which is very welcome.
That will affect 29 schools in my constituency, most of
which are rural primaries. Nine schools will receive the
same or rather less. In many cases, those are the excellent
secondaries to which I have just referred, one of which
will lose £90,000 a year. Of course, many of those schools
have sixth forms and so face a particular challenge because
there are smaller classes and they want to offer specialist
subjects—often the very A-levels that lead to the
qualifications that our country so badly needs.
Since coming to office, the Government have been steadfast
in their commitment to ensuring that all children,
irrespective of their background and where they live, get a
world-class education. This consultation levels the system
out. It will be a fairer system. The shadow Secretary of
State spoke about cuts. There are no cuts. The Secretary of
State has made it very clear that the overall budget will
remain the same. This is about ensuring that we allocate
the funds within our system fairly and that there is a
level playing field for pupils across our country.
6.34 pm
-
(Bury St Edmunds)
(Con)
In the two minutes I have to speak, I would like to welcome
the Government’s commitment and commend the Secretary of
State for tackling this difficult issue. The hon. Member
for Wirral South (Alison McGovern) spoke about fairness.
Children in the area represented by the hon. Member for
Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner) currently receive £178
more per pupil than my children in Suffolk. After the
change, her area will receive £219 more per pupil. I would
like the consultation to iron out these anomalies. We in
Suffolk are grateful for the uplift, but I, like many
others, have campaigned for fairer funding—my children
deserve to be treated equally.
I appreciate that it is too complex to make the change in
one go, because that would mean walloping some schools
harder than others, so we need to have a gentle trajectory.
That said, we must not stand back and fail to grasp the
nettle. For too long, our children, particularly in rural
areas—we have heard from Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and
Essex—have been underfunded. We have had to play second
fiddle to large metropolitan areas. Children in those areas
do not deserve better life chances; they deserve the same
life chances as others. I have areas of deprivation in my
constituency and children who could do with more money
spent on their education. This is the right way to
continue.
This morning, I held a roundtable of businesses and
educationists from across the region. They are talking
about skills. Please let us concentrate on early years.
That is a bit difficult in Suffolk, because we are losing
more than we currently spend on it, but we provide
outstanding education. Please can we also look at rural
England? Hon. Members should not assume that we have
everything. When we consult—
-
Mr Deputy Speaker (Mr Lindsay Hoyle)
Order.
6.36 pm
-
(Plymouth, Sutton and
Devonport) (Con)
I will be brief, pithy and to the point, if possible.
I am a school governor of St Andrew’s primary school, which
is in a very deprived community. I have to tell the
Secretary of State and the Minister that there is an 11 to
12-year difference in life expectancy between the
north-east of my constituency and the south-west, around
Devonport, so I understand some of the issues of
deprivation. Moreover, in the 1980s, I was the agent to the
Education Minister who introduced the local management of
schools, the national curriculum and other such things.
I am grateful to the Government for taking a fresh look at
the funding formula. My constituency has done quite well—we
have an increase of about 4% for schools, which is
incredibly good news. The one concern is what happens to
the grammar schools. I am incredibly grateful to my hon.
Friend the Minister for Schools Standards for agreeing to
meet my grammar schools to talk about how they could
improve their position.
My constituency has a very good education offer. We have
not only three grammar schools, but a university technical
college and a creative arts school. I am grateful to the
coalition Government and this Government for delivering on
that. Without further ado, I conclude by saying: carry on
going, and please do not let anyone down.
6.38 pm
-
(Bexhill and Battle)
(Con)
I was proud to stand on an election platform representing a
Government who had delivered 1.4 million good and
outstanding school places over the preceding five years.
That that was delivered in the most challenging financial
circumstances is to the Government’s credit and that of
schoolteachers across the country.
I am conscious that the Government are spending a record
amount—£40 billion—on our schools, thereby protecting the
schools budget. However, I also recognise that the
Government’s laudable policies to invest in our workers and
give them a pay rise are eating into a schools budget that
is largely spent on employees. I had hoped that the school
funding formula would address some of the shortfalls in my
constituency, but although my constituency overall gets a
1.5% increase, with 16 schools getting an increase,
unfortunately 23 will see their funding drop, which causes
me concern. I hope that the consultation will iron out some
of those anomalies.
I recognise that it is the Opposition’s job to oppose. It
is fine to be long on talk and to say the right things, but
it is appalling that Opposition Members have delivered no
ideas or policies to make things better during this debate.
On that note, I suggest three things that would help but
not affect our wish to eradicate the deficit. First,
schools and education have to be the No. 1 priority for
increasing productivity. We have set up a £23 billion
productivity fund, so is there a way to tap into it to help
our schools? Secondly, is there a way of finding room for
schools not to be included within the apprenticeship levy?
Thirdly, given that our schools are looking after mental
health, can we find a way to get some of the funding for
that through their doors?
6.40 pm
-
(Morecambe and
Lunesdale) (Con)
I shall be brief. I fully support funding every school in
the same way, creating a level playing field for pupils
across the country. In 2010, the Labour Government tried to
implement a funding formula. At that time, it was £4,000,
and most of it went on private finance initiative schemes,
which was why it was never put forward. At a time when more
than £40 billion is going into education—the highest amount
spent in our history—we should be positive, rather than
looking at the policy negatively. We should not have a
system in which schools in some areas get less money per
pupil, as that makes it harder for them to attract teachers
and to put in place the support that students need. For too
long, and for no real reason, the disparity of funding
throughout the country has been ignored. I was proud to
stand on a manifesto that pledged to change that.
I have looked at schoolcuts.org, which is run by the NUT
and Association of Teachers and Lecturers unions. Quite
frankly, it is irresponsible. Some of the figures on the
site have been quoted in the Chamber today, but they have
been plucked out of thin air. They are worked out by
dividing the money for an area by the maximum money to be
claimed per school—it never is—without taking the number of
pupils into account. The website published information
about areas and schools before the Department even
announced any figures. It must have had luminaries and
soothsayers like Nostradamus working for it. I am fed up of
the unions politicising my children and constituency. There
are heads in my area who are unionising the kids to make
them strike and stay off school. Surprise, surprise—their
schools did the worst in the area, and therefore lowered my
area’s results in the national SATs, which is unforgivable.
To wrap up, I think that this is a very good move. I hope
that the Government will implement the formula sooner
rather than later to give all our children a fair fighting
chance.
6.42 pm
-
(Wythenshawe and Sale East)
(Lab)
For the first time in a generation, schools will face
spending cuts to their budgets—[Interruption.] Right out of
the gate, the Secretary of State is chuntering. In her
authority area, that equates to a 15% cut, with £13 million
coming out of her schools’ budgets by 2020. I look forward
to campaigning in her constituency on this issue.
The Department expects schools to find £3 billion of
savings in this Parliament to counteract cumulative cost
pressures, including pay rises, the introduction of the
national living wage, higher employer national insurance
contributions, contributions to the teachers’ pension
scheme and the apprenticeship levy, as the hon. Member for
Kingston and Surbiton (James Berry) and Labour Members
said. The hon. Gentleman is happy with the national funding
formula, but I have to point out that his schools will
receive an overall cut of 12% in this Parliament. We are
talking about an 8% real-terms reduction in funding per
pupil in this Parliament.
The Department regularly compiles a list of future policy
changes that will affect schools, but it has no plans to
assess the financial implications for schools of these
changes. We have no assurances that the policy is
affordable within current spending plans without adversely
affecting educational outcomes. The Government are leaving
schools and multi-academy trusts to manage the consequences
individually. The Department has clearly not communicated
to schools the scale and pace of the savings that will be
needed to meet the expected cost pressures.
The proportion of maintained secondary schools spending
more than their income increased last year from 33% to
59%—[Interruption.] No matter what the right hon. Member
for East Devon (Sir Hugo Swire) says, this Government have
racked up a £1.7 trillion debt on their watch and now want
to pass on part of that debt to our school system. The
Department expects much of the savings to come from
procurement and the introduction of shared services.
Changing procurement and shared services requires strong
leadership, clear plans for achieving savings, effective
risk management and support from stakeholders. That
leadership is clearly lacking among the Government Members.
The Minister himself has said that he is confident that
pages of guidance on the Department’s website will provide
enough support for schools—it will not.
-
(Cheltenham) (Con)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
I have literally seconds left.
As the National Audit Office has suggested, school leaders
who do not have support are likely to make decisions that
make the teacher retention crisis worse. The NAO went on to
say that the Government’s current
“approach to managing the risks to schools’ financial
sustainability cannot be judged to be effective or
providing value for money”.
It is important to recognise the impact that the required
efficiency savings will have on staff. We expect already
unsustainable workload pressures to increase as staff
efficiencies eventually start to bite. Moreover, the size
of the savings that schools will have to find will lead to
worse educational outcomes, and the biggest impact will be
felt by those in the most deprived areas and those with
special needs.
We know that staff costs represent any school’s largest
expenditure—74% of schools’ budgets are spent on staff—so
it is not hard to see that to save money over the next few
years, schools will inevitably end up cutting back on
staff. That will have a knock-on effect on workload,
morale, class sizes and the breadth of the curriculum that
schools can offer. All this is happening at a time when we
are expecting a 3% increase in the number of children
entering school.
A bad situation is compounded by the national funding
formula. Some Conservative Members, who really missed the
point, had been expecting “jam tomorrow” from the formula,
which was a manifesto commitment, but now they are waking
up to the reality that the schools in their constituency
will not benefit from its introduction. Hardly any area is
left unscathed. In their excellent speeches, the hon.
Members for The Cotswolds (Geoffrey Clifton-Brown) and for
South Cambridgeshire (Heidi Allen) said that the funding
formula was not the point; the point was the cuts and
pressures faced by schools.
I ask the hon. Member for South Cambridgeshire to speak to
her hon. and learned Friend the Member for South East
Cambridgeshire (Lucy Frazer), who completely missed the
point. The House will have been astonished by the slap in
the face for northern teachers, who are apparently not
ambitious enough for their pupils, and that is from a
Government who introduced the Weller report on raising
standards.
-
If the hon. Gentleman had listened to my speech carefully,
he would have understood that I was quoting the 2016 Ofsted
report. Those were not my words; they were the words of
Ofsted.
-
It was a slap in the face, and the hon. and learned Lady’s
authority in Cambridgeshire will face a 4% cut on top of
all the other pressures that are going on.
The Tories are failing our children. They are overseeing
the first real-terms cut in the schools budget for over two
decades—indeed, since the 1970s, as was pointed out by my
hon. Friend the Member for Wakefield (Mary Creagh). By
their own preferred measure on standards, we have declined
in the world PISA—programme for international student
assessment—rankings.
In a moment the Minister will stand up and either talk
about synthetic phonics, or say that 1.8 million children
are in better schools. That, of course, is because Labour
identified those schools in 2010 and Ofsted came back to
reassess them, and because there are now more children in
the system—the primary system. This dire situation for our
schools will only continue to get worse as a result of the
Government’s cuts and their new funding formula.
6.48 pm
-
The Minister for School Standards (Mr Nick Gibb)
Of course, the PISA students who were tested in 2015 spent
their primary school years being educated under a Labour
Government, not under the reforms implemented by this
Government.
This has been an important debate, featuring excellent
contributions from Members in all parts of the House, at a
time when the Government are consulting on the details and
weightings of the factors that will make up the new
national funding formula.
The hon. Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner)
launched our debate today with her joke about robbing
Peterborough to pay Poole. Alas, her facts are as weak as
her joke, because Peterborough will see a rise of 2.7%
under the formula, an increase of £3.7 million, and Poole
will also see a rise of some 1.1% under the formula. What
we have learnt from Labour today is that it does not
support the principle of equal funding on the basis of the
same need, and half of Labour Members will see a net gain
in funding as a result of the new formula, including the
hon. Member for Oldham West and Royton (Jim McMahon), where
funding will increase by £1.7 million, with an extra £1.2
million for schools in the constituency of the hon. Member
for Ashton-under-Lyne.
My hon. Friend the Member for Stroud (Neil Carmichael)
asked us to look again at the deprivation block. The
proportion of the formula that we have applied for
deprivation reflects what local authorities are already
doing across the country at the moment. The hon. Member for
Liverpool, West Derby (Stephen Twigg) asked about
high-needs funding; Liverpool is due to gain 14.4% in
high-needs funding under the formula, with increases of 3%
per year in 2018-19 and again in 2019-20.
My hon. Friend the Member for Louth and Horncastle
(Victoria Atkins) was right to say that the new national
funding formula is resulting in the cake being cut a little
more fairly. My hon. Friend the Member for Mid Dorset and
North Poole (Michael Tomlinson) was right to point out the
flaw in Labour’s motion. The Government are not cutting
school spending; it is at an all-time high.
I welcome the constructive and supportive speeches from my
hon. and learned Friend the Member for South East
Cambridgeshire (Lucy Frazer), and my hon. Friends the
Members for North Dorset (Simon Hoare), for Kingston and
Surbiton (James Berry), for Mid Derbyshire (Pauline
Latham), for Boston and Skegness (Matt Warman), for Newark
(Robert Jenrick), for Solihull (Julian Knight), for Rugby
(Mark Pawsey), for Bury St Edmunds (Jo Churchill), for
Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport (Oliver Colvile), for
Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) and for Morecambe and
Lunesdale (David Morris).
In our manifesto, we promised to remedy the unfair and
anachronistic funding system that no longer reflects the
genuine needs of pupils and schools. It had become
atrophied on the basis of factors as they stood in 2005,
rather than the make-up of the student population today: an
outdated system, fixed in amber where a pupil in Brighton
and Hove secured £1,600 more than a pupil in East Sussex,
with countless other examples of unfairness up and down the
country.
The Government have already consulted on a set of
principles that should drive this new formula—a basic unit
of funding; one for primary schools, one for key stage 3
secondary pupils and one for key stage 4 secondary pupils.
This figure would make up the vast bulk of the formula, and
would be the same figure for every school in England.
On top of this, there is a factor for deprivation, ensuring
that schools are able to close the educational attainment
gap between those from wealthier and poorer backgrounds.
There is also a factor for low prior attainment, ensuring
that schools are able to help children who start school
educationally behind their peers. There is a factor for
sparsity, addressing cost pressures unique to rural
schools. There is a mobility factor for schools that
routinely take pupils part way through the year. There is a
lump sum to help address the fixed costs that
disproportionately affect small schools. And there is a
factor that takes into account higher employment costs in
London and some other areas.
These are the right factors, as responses to the first
stage of the consultation confirmed. They are the right
factors because they will help drive our education reforms
to the school curriculum, which are already resulting in
higher academic standards and raised expectations. They
will further drive our determination that all children,
regardless of background or ability, will be well on their
way to becoming fluent readers by the age of six, which 81%
of six-year-olds are now, compared with just 58% five years
ago. They are the factors that will help further drive the
introduction of new, more academically demanding,
knowledge-based GCSEs, putting our public exams and
qualifications on a par with the best in the world.
As part of our consultation, we wanted to be transparent
about the effects of the new formula on every school and
every local authority on the basis of this year’s figures,
and 54% of schools will gain under the new formula. But
with any new formula there will be winners and losers. Even
within local authority areas that gain overall, some
schools with few of the factors that drive the additional
funding will see small losses in income. That is the nature
of any new formula, built on whatever basis or
weightings—unless, of course, the new formula maintains the
status quo.
Accepting that a new formula, by definition, produces
winners and losers, accepting that we will ensure that the
losing schools lose no more than 1.5% per pupil in any year
and no more than 3% in total, accepting that the gaining
schools will see their gains expedited by up to 3% in
2018-19 and by up to 2.5% in 2019-20, and accepting in
principle that the factors of deprivation and low prior
attainment are right, what is left is the question whether
the weightings are right. These weightings are crafted to
drive social mobility. They are calculated to help children
who are falling behind at school, and they are motivated by
our desire to do more for children from disadvantaged
backgrounds.
The national funding formula is not about the overall level
of school funding or the cost pressures that schools are
facing over the three years from 2016-17 to 2019-20. The
formula is about creating a nationally delivered and fair
school funding system. We wanted to grasp the nettle—a
nettle that previous Governments have assiduously
avoided—and introduce a new national funding formula,
ending the postcode lottery and ensuring that over time we
have a much fairer funding system.
Despite all the pressures to tackle the budget deficit that
we inherited from the last Labour Government—an essential
task if we are to continue to deliver the strong economic
growth, the high levels of employment and the employment
opportunities for young people that we want—we have managed
to protect core school spending in real terms. Indeed, in
2015-16 we added a further £390 million, and for 2018-19
and 2019-20 there will be a further £200 million to
expedite the gains to those historically underfunded
schools that the new formula seeks to address.
Despite this, we know that schools are facing cost
pressures as a result of the introduction of the national
living wage and of increases to teachers’ salaries, to
employer national insurance contributions, to teachers’
pensions and to the apprenticeship levy. Similar pressures
are being faced across the public sector—and, indeed, in
the private sector—and they are addressed by increased
efficiencies and better procurement. It is important to
note that some of these cost pressures have already
materialised. The 8% that people refer to is not an
estimate of pressures still to come. In the current year,
2016-17, schools have dealt with pressures averaging 3.1%
per pupil. Over the next three years, per-pupil pressures
will average between 1.5% and 1.6% a year. To help to
tackle those pressures, the Department is providing high
quality advice and guidance to schools about their budget
management, and we are helping by introducing national
buying schemes for products and services such as energy and
IT.
We are consulting, and we are listening to the responses to
the consultation and to the concerns raised by my hon.
Friends and by Opposition Members. The Secretary of State
and I have heard representations from some low-funded
authorities about whether there is a de minimis level of
funding that their secondary schools need in circumstances
where few of their pupils bring with them the additional
needs funding. We will look at this, and at all the other
concerns that right hon. and hon. Members have raised.
This Government are taking the bold decision, and the right
decision. We are acting to right the wrongs of a seemingly
arbitrary and deeply unfair funding system. Over the past
seven years, while fixing the economy, the Government have
transformed the education system. We have ended grade
inflation, breathing confidence back into our public exams.
Effective teaching methods such as Asian-style maths
mastery and systematic synthetic phonics are
revolutionising the way in which primary pupils are being
taught. More pupils are being taught the core academic
subjects that facilitate study at this country’s
world-leading universities. Some 1.8 million more pupils
are now in schools judged by Ofsted to be “good” or
“outstanding”. The attainment gap between disadvantaged
16-year-olds and their better-off peers has closed by 7%.
That is a record to be proud of.
-
Mr (Newcastle upon
Tyne East) (Lab)
claimed to move the closure (Standing Order No. 36).
Question put forthwith, That the Question be now put.
Question agreed to.
Question put accordingly (Standing Order No. 31(2)), That
the original words stand part of the Question.
-
(Surrey Heath)
(Con)
You can’t take it. You can’t stand the truth.
-
Mr Deputy Speaker (Mr Lindsay Hoyle)
Mr Gove, I think you need to calm a little. A little
peppermint tea might help the rest of us.
Division 133
25 January 2017 7.00 pm
The House divided:
Ayes: 178 Noes: 285 Ayes: 178 Noes: 285
Question accordingly negatived.
Question put forthwith (Standing Order No. 31(2)), That the
proposed words be there added.
Question agreed to.
The Deputy Speaker declared the main Question, as amended, to be
agreed to (Standing Order No. 31(2)).
Resolved,
That this House shares the strong commitment of the Government to
raising school standards and building a country that works for
everyone; and welcomes proposals set out in the Government’s open
schools national funding formula stage two consultation to move
to a fair and consistent national funding formula for schools to
ensure every child is fairly funded, wherever in England they
live, to protect funding for deprived pupils and recognise the
particular needs of pupils with low prior attainment.
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