Department for Education
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£53m to help disabled children, young people and their families

£53m to help disabled children, young people and their families

DEPARTMENT FOR CHILDREN, SCHOOLS AND FAMILIES News Release (2007/0234) issued by The Government News Network on 8 December 2007

-Cash Announced Through Children's Plan-

Disabled children will get better quality short breaks to experience new things and give their parents some time off, thanks to a £45million fund to be announced by Secretary of State for Children Schools and Families, Ed Balls at the End Child Poverty event on Monday.

The money will build on the Government's long term strategy Aiming High for Disabled Children: Better Support for Families which is backed by £340m over the next three years from the DCSF, announced in the Spring. The ambition is to transform in services for families with disabled children by 2011.

The money will help the public, private and voluntary sector providers improve equipment, transport and facilities for short-breaks and enable more inclusive breaks, where severely disabled children and young people can take part in activities with their non-disabled peers.

Disabled young people are also to receive £8.4million in extra support. As part of the Children's Plan, low income families with disabled young people aged 16 and 17 will be able to access a grant, through the Family Fund.

The Family Fund is the country's largest charitable provider of grants to disabled children and a leading player in the fight against poverty among disabled children. They make grants for items related to the child's needs such as home appliances, family holidays, driving lessons, computers, clothing and bedding.

The DCSF already provides £23million annually through the Family Fund to help families with children under 16. It is estimated that the new funding will result in more than 16,000 grants over the next three years.

The Family Fund is a charitable organisation which provides grants to families with severely disabled children, based on the families' needs.

On improving the provision of short breaks for disabled children Ed Balls said:

"We want every child to have the opportunity to be happy and achieve, no matter their background or the challenges they face. This is all part of the ethos enshrined in the Children's Plan. This funding renews our commitment to providing valuable breaks for both disabled children and their families. I know from the many parents I have spoken to about this that this is something that really matters to them.

"The public, private and voluntary sectors have a key role to play. They must come together to offer real choice for families with disabled children."

On the extra money for the Family Fund, Ed Balls said:

"Providing low income families with a tailored package of support is all part of the philosophy of the Children's Plan and part of our drive to end child poverty. Now grants will be available not only to families with severely disabled children under the age of 16, but to16 and 17 year-olds as well."

Marion Lowe, Chief Executive of the Family Fund, said:

"Teenagers are expensive for all families but especially for those with disabled children, who cost three times as much to bring up. The extra £8.4m will enable the Family Fund to keep families with severely disabled children aged 16 and 17 from falling into the debt-poverty trap. At the moment, when our grants stop, many families are driven into debt, which they find hard to pay off as they are caring unpaid for their disabled child."

The DCSF, together with the Devolved Administrations - provides core funding to the UK-wide Family Fund. With annual DCSF funding of £23m per annum, the Fund distributed 38,857 grants to low-income families in England in 2006-07.

NOTES TO EDITORS

* £45 million for short breaks is capital funding, the break-down is: 5/15/25m over 2008-11. This builds of commitments made in May as part of Aiming High for Disabled Children: Better Support for Families. http://www.dfes.gov.uk/pns/DisplayPN.cgi?pn_id=2007_0085

* A joint HM Treasury and Department for Education and Skills report, Aiming High for Disabled Children: Better Support for Families has examined how to improve outcomes and life chances of disabled children through the development of effective and accessible services for disabled children (0-19) and their families.

* The report Aiming High for Disabled Children: Better Support for Families is available on the Treasury website at http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/spending_review/spend_csr07/reviews/cyp_review/cypreview_index.cfm If you would like Treasury press releases to be sent to you automatically by e-mail you can subscribe to this service from the press release site on the website.

* As part of the Children's Plan an extra £8.4m will be made available over the next three years, to 2010-11 for families with disabled children under the age of 18. Previously, only families with children under 16 are able to apply for the grant.

* The grants will be delivered through the Family Fund. For more information on their work go to: http://www.familyfund.org.uk/

* There are around 570,000 disabled children in England. Around 100,000 disabled children are severely disabled.

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