Home / Funding increases to test wrap-around support in Scotland
Funding increases to test wrap-around support in Scotland
EB News: 22/01/2025 - 10:14
Funding for the Scottish Government’s Fairer Futures Partnerships will be doubled to more than £6 million by the 2025-26 budget.
The Fairer Futures Partnerships (FFP) are partnerships between local authorities and the Scottish Government set up to support families living in poverty.
The increase will allow the Fairer Futures Partnerships to expand to more areas, to test new approaches and identify lasting solutions.
On a visit to Irvine Royal Academy, Social Justice Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville met parents and pupils and saw how North Ayrshire Council’s work is supporting families and informing the Fairer Futures programme to drive innovations in tackling child poverty.
At Irvine Royal Academy, where 32% of pupils are in receipt of free school meals, parents have been helped to maximise their incomes through welfare and debt advice and provided with support to find employment, while pupils run a ‘cost of the school day’ initiative to help ease the pressures on families.
Ms Somerville said: “Through the Fairer Futures Partnerships we are working alongside local authorities, local communities and the Third Sector to test and improve how they deliver services to promote family wellbeing, maximise incomes and support people towards education and into sustained employment.
“I’m visiting Irvine Royal Academy to hear about some of the programmes and activity North Ayrshire Council has in place to tackle child poverty, support families and children in the local area with the cost of the school day and maximise incomes. The work with the school community is a great example of the results that can be delivered when services work together to provide wrap-around support for families. We want to explore how we can do this even better and that is why we have doubled our budget for Fairer Futures Partnerships to £6 million for the next financial year.”
North Ayrshire Council Leader Marie Burns added: “Tackling child poverty is the number one priority for our administration.
“We have the second highest rate of child poverty in Scotland and we are determined - with support from the Scottish Government and our hard-working partners in the public, private and third sectors – to improve life for families across North Ayrshire.
“We look forward to welcoming the Cabinet Secretary to Irvine to hear, first-hand, about some of the great work that is being done to support families who are struggling to make ends meet.”
The IFS's report on school spending in the Scottish Budget 2025-26, found that by 2040, the number of pupils in Scotland is estimated to be 90,000 fewer.
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