Halifax Courier

SEND school places are ‘at crisis point’ say concerned parents

- John Greenwood Local Democracy Reporter @HXCourier

SEND education in Calderdale is in crisis with Halifax’s outstandin­gly-rated specialist secondary school in danger of being overwhelme­d.

That is what Calderdale councillor­s have been told by parents and the headteache­r at Ravensclif­fe School, who warned the school will not be able to cope with expected demand in coming years and is already oversubscr­ibed with every possible space converted into extra classrooms.

In coming weeks councillor­s will be presented with options over what to do next.

Parent Sarah Campbell, speaking on behalf of a number of other worried parents of children with education, health and care plans (EHCPs), criticised “a lack of strategic planning” over at least the past five years.

“This can’t be put off for another day,” she said.

“This is a crisis and requires urgent attention and immediate action by all involved.”

Ms Campbell said there were “huge gaps” in available places for special educationa­l needs and disabiliti­es (SEND) children and by September 2028 , if predicted numbers of children were allocated to Ravensclif­fe, it would need at least 12 more classrooms to house them.

Currently four have been approved, and are yet to come before planners, she said.

She added a 2022 report found Ravensclif­fe “to be under constant pressure to take additional pupils and severely overcrowde­d, using unsuitable places to provide the facilities necessary to educate and support pupils”.

She said students not admitted were clearly vulnerable as mainstream schools struggled to differenti­ate three to five years behind age-related expectatio­ns.

Specialist schools provide the very high levels of supervisio­n, small class groups, high level care, and experience­d staff delivering education in creative and imaginativ­e ways, she added.

The number of such pupils in Calderdale in mainstream schools was not a positive but there were no plans for another specialist secondary school in the borough after local authority plans for one were turned down by government early in 2023, said Ms Campbell, who said the situation was unsustaina­ble.

“How many tribunals and out-of-area placements have to be made and at what cost – what could be accommodat­ed within the authority if there were more special school places?” she said.

Ravensclif­fe headteache­r Chris Lingard told the council’s Children and Young People’s Scrutiny Board the school might need an additional 92 places this year and an extra 110 the year after.

“The local authority is telling us its a worse situation than even I anticipate­d.

"This is a very, very serious situation and we’re already way over capacity,” she said.

It put huge pressure on staff and space such as storage and dining areas, and there was not enough room as a result to, for example, give children who had extreme behaviour the space they needed.

“Everything is stretched beyond capacity,” said Ms Lingard.

“Our ‘outstandin­g’ status will not be able to remain much longer if we were inspected again because we are so overcrowde­d.”

She urged the council to consider further developing one of the two Ravensclif­fe sites – at Spring Hall – as the most cost effective solution.

Council officers said the picture was reflected nationally with placements being a major pressure on many local authoritie­s.

The council’s new interim head of special educationa­l needs and disabiliti­es, Victoria Coyle, said Calderdale had many positives including a higher attendance rate than nationally.

Educating children where possible in mainstream schools was seen as a positive by the council .

“When they have to leave special school, they have to come back into the community and we want them to, where possible, be local to that,” she said.

Ms Coyle said she understood the frustratio­n and although some work had been done on making new provision it probably felt reactive.

Options would soon be presented to councillor­s to decide next steps and it all had to be done within available budget.

“In terms of the specific issue around special school places, we are providing an options paper to set out Ravensclif­fe’s options alongside other suggestion­s about developing new provision,” she said.

 ?? ?? Ravensclif­fe High School, Skircoat Green, Halifax.
Ravensclif­fe High School, Skircoat Green, Halifax.

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