LGA - Councils boost school places but secondary crisis looms next year

27 Aug 2019 09:35 AM

Thousands of desperately needed new secondary school places have now been created by councils but parents and children still face the prospect of missing out on a place as early as next year, analysis by the Local Government Association warns.

In total, councils created 96,000 school places last year by working with their existing primary and secondary schools and, in some cases, commissioning places in academies and free schools.

Of that total, 37,000 new places were created by councils in secondary schools. But with two-thirds of secondary schools now academies, the LGA said councils have no powers to open more secondary schools or direct academies to expand.

As children and young people prepare to return to school after the summer holidays, the LGA’s latest analysis reveals that:

To address this looming crisis, the LGA is calling for the Government to use next month’s Spending Round to give councils back the power to open new maintained schools where that is the local preference; and hand back the responsibility for making decisions about opening new schools.

It should also give councils the same powers to direct free schools and academies to expand that they currently hold for maintained schools.

This is the only way to ensure councils can tackle the growing demand for places, meet their legal duty to ensure every child has a school place and cope with a surge in primary school pupils moving through the system.

Cllr Anntoinette Bramble, Chair of the LGA’s Children and Young People Board, said:

“Despite all odds, councils have been able to provide desperately-needed places for parents looking to secure their child’s place at secondary school in the past year.

“No family should face uncertainty over their child’s school place. But our secondary school places crisis is now just one year away and this will be the reality for thousands of families without action. 

“Councils need to be allowed to open new maintained schools and direct academies to expand. It makes no sense for councils to be given the responsibility to plan for school places but then not be allowed to open schools themselves. 

“The Government needs to work closely with councils to meet the challenges currently facing the education system.”

Notes to editors

1. The data is taken from the Department for Education’s School Capacity Survey, covering numbers of school places and forecasts of pupil numbers until 2023/24 for each local authority.

2. Full LGA analysis of DfE figures/projections is available on request.

3. Breakdown of the number of council areas that are oversubscribed:

Year             Count           Per cent

2020/21        15                10

2021/22        27                18

2022/23        49                33

2023/24        64                44

2024/25        71                8

4. The breakdown of children at risk of no place (assuming no new schools built)

Year             Number

2020/21        7,313

2021/22        26,173

2022/23        58,755

2023/24        96,834

2024/25        123,195

5. All areas that have middle schools have been excluded from these calculations. This is because middle schools are either deemed to be primary schools or secondary schools, which means the number of primary or secondary places in an area can be either over- or understated.

6. There are 152 local authorities in England with education responsibilities, 135 have been included in the analysis for the aforementioned reason.