Glasgow Times

‘POSTCODE LOTTERY’ FOR CHILDCARE FUNDING

Private nursery owners warn of ‘disaster’ for families

- BY CATRIONA STEWART

PRIVATE nursery providers have warned over a “postcode lottery” of childcare provision that could lead to severe disruption for families, job losses and potential closures.

The Glasgow Times has spoken to dozens of private nurseries that work in partnershi­p with local authoritie­s and has been told of widespread fear across the sector.

Owners and managers have said the situation is a “disaster” for families and private providers due to inaction by councils.

Nursery settings have worked to be ready to provide the new Scottish Government-mandated target of 1140 hours of funded childcare for all three and four-year-olds, plus some two-year-olds, from August.

Councils are individual­ly responsibl­e for implementi­ng the increase from the current 600 hours but due to the Covid-19 crisis, the government has paused the expansion.

Some local authoritie­s, such as East Renfrewshi­re, say they still plan to give families 1140 funded hours from August.

But others, such as Glasgow and North Lanarkshir­e, are offering 600 funded hours while East Dunbartons­hire said it will not have an answer for families until mid-July.

Children will still be attending private nurseries for 1140 hours, due to extended opening hours over a 50 week model, but this will be an additional cost for working parents now that the places will not be funded by the local authoritie­s with Scottish Government cash.

Fiona Leggat owns two North Lanarkshir­e nurseries, Papillon

Maxim Park and Papillon Bellshill, and said the situation has left her facing tough choices.

Nurseries are permitted to open from now to support the children of key workers so Fiona, after consulting North Lanarkshir­e Council, spent £20,000 making her setting suitable for social distancing and today brings back 19 staff from furlough.

But she has now been told that the local authority is only funding places for key workers in its own council-run hubs – and not in private settings.

Scottish Government rules state that key worker childcare must be free at the point of access, so Fiona cannot charge parents.

She said: “I wanted to support my families, first and foremost, and bring my children back to surroundin­gs they know and are familiar with. I also believed it would be good to open gradually to build up staff confidence and to get everyone used to the new way of working.

“Now the council says they will not fund my children to return. I have had costs of £37,000 a month while we have been closed, in staff costs and building costs.

“A colleague, when I told her I planned to reopen on June 29 to provide support for families, said this would be financial suicide and now it seems she was right.

“If this situation is not resolved then I could lose both nurseries by October.”

Fiona added: “When I reopen on June 29 any parent who is eligible to return but doesn’t and instead chooses to attend a council hub cannot have their place retained at Papillon,

“I will need to offer these limited places to other parents. Thus when hubs close in August these families could be left with no childcare.”

In a statement to the Glasgow Times, North Lanarkshir­e Council said it is read to implement 1140 hours yet a letter to private providers seen by this paper clearly says parents are to be offered 600 hours.

When asked for clarificat­ion, the local authority said it is prepared for 1140 but must make sure all settings are compliant with Scottish Government social distancing guidance.

However, the local nurseries we spoke to said the council had not been in touch with them, nor had they been offered any support with compliance.

Private providers have come together in a support group, Achieving Our Ambition, which now has around 200 members sharing concerns.

Jim Agnew runs Lochview and Parkview nurseries in North Lanarkshir­e and has similar fears for his families, staff and business.

He said: “The 1140 hours is devolved to local government so they have been allowed to come up with their own plans and models – that means 32 different plans from 32 different local authoritie­s.

“It’s a postcode lottery where councils have said they will provide funding for 1140hrs to providers but some have now backtracke­d.

“Parents will have been adapting all their childcare arrangemen­ts to fit around the expectatio­n of getting back to work with 1140 hours of funded childcare but now that will all be up in the air, leaving families struggling.”

Like many others, Jim has expanded capacity working with the council by opening a second setting at a cost of £750,000 with the expectatio­n of having children use the service with 1140 funded hours.

As well as the cut in hours, social distancing means the need for additional staff as ratios of adultsto-children in each age group increase, as well as the cost of additional cleaning and PPE.

He said: “There is going to be a workforce crisis. Our business model is based on running at high capacity but the business model now fails, we just can’t do it.

“We have asked local authoritie­s to support us with the money given up front by the Scottish Government to pay for the 1140 hours

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 ??  ?? Soryia Siddique said parents have contacted her over childcare concerns
Soryia Siddique said parents have contacted her over childcare concerns

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