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Schools facing catastrophic winter

327 replies

noblegiraffe · 31/08/2022 10:18

Schools are starting their Autumn term facing an unprecedented funding crisis. Headteachers are becoming increasingly frantic in their disbelief that the government has done fuck all about it, and appears to be planning to continue to do fuck all about it.

There are few issues contributing -

The energy crisis - school energy bills are not capped, unlike household ones. To give an idea of the scale of the issue, Ormiston Academies Trust which sponsors 43 schools will see its energy bills rise from £5.1 million to £14.3 million. Grant Shapps, transport minister, says that schools could consider switching to LED lightbulbs.

Teacher and support staff payrises - the government have recommended payrises for teachers and support staff, but crucially will not be giving schools extra money to fund them. If schools give staff the recommended pay rise, they will have to cut services to fund this (even before you consider the energy bills)

The cost of living crisis - schools are facing increased prices just as households are. Food for the canteen, stationery orders, everything is more expensive. Sam Freedman tweets "Very rough calculation is that energy bills plus teacher pay increase plus higher food costs are going to add around £5bn to school budgets nationally. Just under 10% of the total budget. And none of it was built into the funding model."

On top of that, covid still needs to be considered. Last Jan/Feb schools were in chaos due to staff absences (the government widely trumpeted their call for an army of volunteers to step in, which didn't appear). At the end of the summer term, all the education unions wrote to James Cleverly, temp Ed Sec asking for a covid plan that included increased funding to schools for supply teachers to cover staff absence. Given that we haven't actually got a functioning government at the moment, I'm pretty sure he hasn't replied. Signs are that we're facing a bad flu season too, vaccinating school staff should be a consideration. Some schools already pay for the flu jab for staff, most won't be eligible for a covid booster, no idea what the impact of that will be. Obviously there will be pressure to close windows to keep any heat in, which goes against covid guidance for ventilation.

Some academy trusts appear to have large reserves which will help them weather the storm, most very much don't. twitter.com/ajjolley/status/1564562763443277825?s=21&t=nmM2Q_vFCmo5GzILNNKhfg

School leaders are reporting that they will have to make support staff and/or teachers redundant or pause recruitment, restrict heating, cancel school trips and extra curricular activities. This will inevitably have an impact on children, and on the quality of education on offer.

I'm not sure what either Truss or Sunak have said about the crisis facing education, all I've heard is wittering about grammar schools. An intervention is needed urgently.

www.tes.com/magazine/news/general/energy-bills-cost-of-living-crisis-schools-face-catastrophic-winter

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verdantverdure · 08/09/2022 11:26

I agree with all you say @HouseOfGuineas

Everything is in such a mess and every area of our lives suffering from under investment in infrastructure and failure to plan for the future it's going to cost a fortune now it's all hit crisis point at once.

Children's lives just seem to have got worse and worse over the last few years. When we decided to have a family it was a time of optimism and success in this country, now it's all just failure and misery. I have very little optimism that Liz Truss and her party can fix it.

1dayatatime · 08/09/2022 13:07

@HouseOfGuineas

"If Truss is all about economic growth, we need exceptionally well educated children to innovate and compete internationally to deliver that. Cutting education budgets is not how you achieve growth. "

++++

I also fully agree with you.

The interest bill on the national debt of £2.5 trillion and rising is now £95 billion and about the same as the entire education budget £102 billion.

Tax payers money spent on interest payments is entirely unproductive whereas money spent on education is an investment in the short term, medium term and long term economic success of the UK. Or in purely economic terms the best returns you will ever get on tax payers money is on education.

The problem is that the Conservatives (and to be fair all the other parties to a lesser degree) are targeting the older generation vote which having already benefited from an education see nothing in it for them in money being directed to education.

Truss announcement on energy subsidies will have not make this situation worse as it is funded from further increasing national debt rather than a windfall tax on energy producers as proposed by Labour.

Children and young people were thrown under a bus on Covid and Covid spending and it is now happening again on energy.

Young people are effectively giving up their tomorrows so that older people can have their todays. It's morally wrong.

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