The Gazette

Rising school transport costs in the spotlight

SPENDING WISELY IS AIM AS BILL TOPS £5.5M

- By STUART ARNOLD

COUNCIL officers are “pushing back” and challengin­g some requests for home to school transport support amid concern over the rapidly increasing multi-million pound bill.

Redcar and Cleveland Council told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) it spent an overall sum of £5.59m in 2022/23, having arranged transport for 1,689 children to get to school each day.

Annual spending on home to school transport has been on the rise for the past several years in line with an increasing number of youngsters issued with education, health and care plans.

These are legal documents for children with special educationa­l needs and disabiliti­es (SEND) that oblige local authoritie­s to set out – and provide – the help they require for their education and the formal outcomes intended. There were approximat­ely 1,400 of these in existence in Redcar and Cleveland in the last financial year, a figure that has doubled since 2015/16.

The spiralling bill for home to school transport hasn’t been helped by an increase in fuel costs and other costs that have been pushed up by inflation, such as wages.

A presentati­on for councillor­s seen by the LDRS described a home to school transport panel that meets weekly to make decisions over support offered to parents and carers “challengin­g criteria”. It said there was “push back” to schools who requested passenger assistants for pupils on journeys, another cost.

Meanwhile, parents were being offered help to pay their own mileage costs – as an alternativ­e to the local authority providing transport – as a “cost effective” alternativ­e. The council’s external auditor Veritau, which carries out counter-fraud work, had also been engaged to “report on policy and adherence”.

Councils have a legal duty to assist with travel arrangemen­ts for children aged five to 16 who have conditions meaning they could not be reasonably expected to walk to school. This can be by providing funding, a public transport permit, or putting on a mini-bus, people carrier or taxi.

Children are eligible if they fulfil certain criteria with some at the same time being sent to specialist schools outside of Redcar and Cleveland, because of insufficie­nt provision in the borough, adding to the expense.

In line with other local authoritie­s, Redcar and Cleveland Council pays for taxis to make some journeys with recent analysis by the Northern Agenda politics newsletter showing 348 children are being sent to school by taxi at a cost of £54,704 a week, which over the course of a year equates to more than £2.8m.

In a statement, Councillor Luke Myer, the cabinet member for children at the council, said: “Our priority is meeting students’ needs, whilst ensuring efficient use of resources. We regularly review our procedures to see how the service can improve and reduce costs, for example we look at ways passengers can share taxis, and we offer independen­t travel training for students who we feel would benefit.”

A spokesman for the council said all applicatio­ns for transport were submitted to the transport panel, who either agreed or disagreed to provide assistance in line with its home to school transport policy.

Contractor­s providing external transport needed to be part of a procuremen­t framework and work was advertised on a portal before being awarded to the lowest bidder.

The spokesman added: “The council uses a variety of transport options including taxis, minibuses, wheelchair accessible seat buses and medium and large coaches for children who have many different needs.

Under special circumstan­ces the council also meets the cost of Arriva

Cllr Luke Myer

and school bus passes for children, as well as the mileage of parents taking children to schools outside of their catchment area.”

The council said a total of 256 routes were catered for across all modes of transport, while 77 bus passes were also paid for in 2022/23.

The Local Government Associatio­n, which represents local councils, also acknowledg­ed free school transport was a “lifeline” for many pupils and their families.

But a spokesman said: “It must be adequately funded, if councils are to meet their legal duties to all children and young people.”

Una Summerson, head of policy and campaigns at the charity Contact, which supports families with disabled children, said school transport was one of the top issues its helpline gets calls about.

She said: “If a child can’t get to school, or has such a stressful experience getting to school, then they are not able to learn and take part in the school day like other children.”

The Department for Education said it was for local councils to decide how they arranged free travel for eligible children.

We regularly review our procedures to see how the service can improve and reduce costs.

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