Four in five councils overspent on school transport

The cost to councils of providing home-to-school transport has increased by £66 million between 2014/15 and 2017/18 and may rise by a further £127 million to reach £1.2 billion a year by 2024. This was revealed by a new report by the Isos Partnership, commissioned by the LGA and County Councils Network.

It also found that providing transportation for some of the most vulnerable pupils in the country is the most significant driver in the cost increase with pupils with SEND increasingly being sent to specialist schools much further away than their local school.
    
As a result, transport for children and young people with SEND now accounts for 69 per cent of all home-to-school transport expenditure.
    
Councils have reduced spend on their transport offer by 12 per cent and cut discretionary transport spending by 27 per cent in order to meet rising costs of providing transport for children. This has seen the number of children receiving free home-to-school transport reduce by more than 10,000 in five years.

The report shows that four in five councils overspent on home-to-school transport budgets last year in a bid to protect vital transport for children. Councils are also reviewing routes to school to ensure greater safety with the installation of new bridges, traffic crossings or pedestrian walkways.

Despite these efforts, many continue to have to tighten eligibility even further or strip back discretionary support altogether. For example, by removing any discretionary entitlements for travelling to multiple sites or homes so that children are now collected from central pick-up points.  

Latest government figures show a 27 per cent increase in pupils being placed in special schools since 2014. A combination of funding constraints, accountability pressures and curriculum changes in mainstream schools have reduced capacity to make available good quality provision for children with SEND.

The LGA says government could support and incentivise mainstream schools to improve inclusion by setting clearer national expectations of what every school should offer a child and young person with SEND, and put in place an accountability regime to hold schools to account which do not deliver against those expectations. Ofsted should also place more emphasis on the importance of how inclusive a school is in their new inspection framework, rather than focussing primarily on academic results, and hold to account schools with low numbers of children with SEND.

Cllr Judith Blake, Chair of the LGA’s Children and Young People Board, said: “Councils are working as hard as they can to ensure suitable travel arrangements are in place for children who could not reasonably be expected to walk or would otherwise find it difficult to attend school because of distance, mobility, special educational needs or the routes they have to take.

“This is becoming increasingly difficult with our research showing that ongoing funding pressures, rising demand and costs are pushing the scheme to breaking point. Free school transport is a lifeline for many pupils and their families but it must be adequately funded if councils are to meet their legal duties to all children and young people.

“This cross-government review of special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) support is good news and needs to identify how we can tackle the immense demand pressures councils are facing in providing vital care and support for children and young people with SEND, including home-to-school transport.

“While a special school may be the right setting for a particular child, it is also vital that mainstream schools are incentivised and rewarded for offering a high quality and suitable education for children with special needs.”

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