Western Daily Press

Warning over shortage of secondary school places

- ADAM POSTANS adam.postans@reachplc.com

PARENTS of Bristol children starting secondary school next year are applying for places that “literally do not exist”, opposition councillor­s have warned.

The Green group fears that the local authority could fail in its “fundamenta­l legal duty” to give youngsters an education because it has not yet addressed a desperate shortage of Year 7 spaces despite saying it would by now.

Bristol City Council, however, says more time has been needed to be certain of cost and practical implicatio­ns because the issue is so complex and that a cabinet decision is now due in February, giving enough time to get the school places ready by next September.

Figures released by the authority in the summer showed there were 291 more pupils in the city due to start secondary school in September 2021 than places available, and that this was expected to soar to 515 within three years.

Schools are taking more than their official maximum number of children while some students are being sent to South Gloucester­shire for lessons, the first time this has had to happen, as the council meets its legal requiremen­t to provide a place for every Bristol youngster.

The situation is further compounded by delays to two large new Department for Education (DfE) secondary schools in Bristol for a total of 2,500 children.

Southville Cllr Christine Townsend told a recent council meeting that, according to the local authority’s education director in July, a decision would go to cabinet in October or November this year to allocate a new capital grant for Year 7 mainstream and SEND (special educationa­l needs and disabiliti­es) spaces. But the Green councillor said no such agenda papers were going to cabinet for the rest of 2021.

“This should be of great concern to us all,” she told the overview and scrutiny management board last week.

“Families with children in Year 6 are currently applying for Year 7 school places that literally do not exist and, as far as we are aware, are not being planned for, putting the council in a risk position of not being able to fulfil a most fundamenta­l legal duty for our city’s children, the universal service of education.

“Those currently with an EHCP (Education and Health Care Plan) or being assessed for an EHCP that might need a special school place are also in the same position – these families are also living with the uncertaint­y of not knowing where, or if, their child might be able to access a place that can fully cater for their needs.”

In a written reply to Cllr Townsend, the council said: “The complexity of identifyin­g how bulge classes can be introduced and the impact of a very volatile constructi­on market on anticipate­d costs for projects has meant that sufficient confidence in budget has not been available to enable cabinet to make a decision.”

Knowle Oasis secondary school was due to open in September 2023 for 900 pupils but the DfE told the council a few months ago that it had been delayed by a year, blaming “unavoidabl­e delays and risks” to planning and constructi­on. And the fate of the 1,600-place Oasis Temple Quarter Academy, for children in Lawrence Hill, Barton Hill and other parts of east Bristol, is to be decided by the local government secretary.

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