Funding cut for disadvantaged pupils in Northern Ireland
The ending of a long-established funding programme for schools to help disadvantaged children has been described as “devastating” and “shameful” by a trade union.
The Department of Education in Northern Ireland has written to the headteachers of schools in the Extended Schools Programme to tell them funding is “no longer available”.
The project, which started in 2006, has supported breakfast and homework clubs, sport, art and drama. More than £150 million of funding has been provided since it began.
In its letter to headteachers, the department said schools should plan on the basis of no further funding after the end of the 2022-23 school year.
- Related: Sudden end to school holiday food grants in Northern Ireland
- Funding: Proposed Northern Ireland cuts condemned as “catastrophic”
- Children’s commissioner: Northern Ireland’s children “deserve better”
The letter said the programme has been supported in recent years with £5.8 million funding from the confidence and supply agreement in Northern Ireland.
“This funding is no longer available and, due to the extent of budget pressures, it is not possible for this to be covered from the Department of Education’s budget,” it said.
Headteachers were told the interim allocation for the programme has been set at £2.285 million, and the letter added: “This represents a reduction in budget of £6.868 million from that available in the 2022-23 financial year and an overall reduction of 75 per cent.
“Consequently, unless additional funding is allocated by [Northern Ireland secretary Chris Heaton-Harris], funding can only be provided for the Extended Schools Programme to the end of the academic year, June 2023.”
Funding scheme for disadvantaged pupils ends
The letter said: “Only those schools that continue to fully meet the Extended Schools criteria will receive funding and they will shortly be advised of the indicative funding available for the period April to June 2023 to allow provision to continue until the end of the current academic year.
“Schools should plan on the basis that no further funding will be available after June 30 2023.”
Justin McCamphill, national official for Northern Ireland in the NASUWT teaching union, said the cuts come after the news in March about the ending of the Engage Programme, the Holiday Hunger programme and the Healthy Happy Minds pilot.
“If these cuts go ahead we will see the end of breakfast and homework clubs, after-school sports, art clubs, drama clubs, ICT clubs and programmes for parents and families, as well as community use of school premises,” he said.
“There can be no expectation that teachers will fill the gap on an unpaid basis.”
Mr McCamphil added: “This decision is being made in the context of wider cuts to education and against a backdrop of accelerating real-terms pay cuts.
“The Department of Education should be in no doubt that cutting services will only strengthen the resolve of NASUWT members as they take strike action next week.”
Mark Baker, chief executive of the Controlled Schools’ Support Council, which supports controlled schools in Northern Ireland, said financial pressures facing education are worse than elsewhere in the UK.
“The Department of Education has been given no choice but to end this programme as a result of the shortfall in funding being made available to Education in Northern Ireland,” he said.
“As we have previously stated, these critical financial pressures facing education in Northern Ireland are starker than elsewhere in the United Kingdom.
“Over their school education, our young people are being further undervalued in comparison to their compatriots in Scotland to the amount of £18,000 each.”
Mr Baker added: “Again we ask the secretary of state the question: why is the education of a young person in Northern Ireland valued less than those in England, Scotland and Wales?”
Alan Law, assistant secretary at Nipsa, the Northern Ireland Public Service Alliance, said: “This announcement will be devastating for the futures of children and young people across Northern Ireland.
“It is yet another example of the failure of politicians to govern and leaving the futures of a generation of young people to the indifference of an unaccountable secretary of state.”
Mr Law added: “The programme is being wrecked and the valuable and important work destroyed. It is shameful that these decisions are being taken without anyone being accountable.”
A spokesperson for the Department of Education said the department had yet to receive its confirmed budget for 2023-24, but the indicative allocation from the Northern Ireland Office is “extremely challenging and will require further significant reductions across a wide range of areas”.
The spokesperson said the department will finalise the Extended Schools allocation following confirmation of the education budget, adding: “However, there is currently no funding available for the programme beyond June 30 2023 and schools have been advised to plan on that basis.
“We regret the uncertainty this will create and are grateful for the work, dedication and commitment of those who support the Extended Schools programme and the benefits they deliver to our children and young people on a daily basis.”
You need a Tes subscription to read this article
Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content:
- Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
- Exclusive subscriber-only stories
- Award-winning email newsletters
Already a subscriber? Log in
You need a subscription to read this article
Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content, including:
- Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
- Exclusive subscriber-only stories
- Award-winning email newsletters
topics in this article