The Scotsman

SNP plan to double free childcare faces ‘risks’

- By SCOTT MACNAB

Edinburgh would need to double its workforce by employing 700 staff by 2020 to meet the Scottish Government’s expanded childcare plans, a damning report has warned.

The report from the capital’s city council says “significan­t risks” are posed by a shortage in staff and nursery buildings.

Edinburgh alone is confrontin­g a shortfall of more than 3,000 places, with parents warned they may not get the “level of choice” needed.

Flagship plans to double the level of free childcare across Scotland by the end of the decade face“significan­t risks” over a looming shortfall in staff and nursery buildings, a key Snpled council has warned.

And parents may not get the “level of choice” they need to tailor childcare around their working day despite flexibilit­y being a key demand of campaigner­s, the report prepared by Edinburgh City Council has found.

The Scottish capital alone needs to more than double its workforce to 1,350, the report has said, while the constructi­on industry may struggle to meet competing demands across Scotland for new and refurbishe­d facilities.

Nicola Sturgeon has hailed the scheme for three and fouryear-olds, as well as some twoyear-olds, as “transforma­tive”, with hopes it would allow a generation of mothers to return to the workplace.

Edinburgh, run by an Snplabour Coalition, is facing a shortfall of more than 3,000 places, according to the report on the expansion of childcare from 600 to 1,140 hours. This is the equivalent of 30 hours a week and mirrors the primary school timetable.

The report said: “Delivering the required infrastruc­ture and the ability to recruit the number of staff within the required timeframe continue to provide significan­t challenges in the council’s ability to deliver the expansion from 2020.” The timescales for the new infrastruc­ture was also “extremely tight” and represente­d “a significan­t risk” to

the delivery of the childcare commitment.

The Scottish Government’s consultati­on also said the scheme should allow families to access funded childcare in the “provider of their choice”.

But the report warned: “Parent expectatio­ns around choice of provision, flexibilit­y and accessibil­ity may not be operationa­lly sustainabl­e.”

Public spending watchdog Audit Scotland recently raised concerns about risks to the scheme over an anticipate­d shortfall in staffing and infrastruc­ture.

The Scottish Government has already pledged an extra £150 million a year to fund the scheme, taking the annual cost to almost £1 billion a year.

Private nursery leaders warned last year that investment won’t be enough, with almost half (46 per cent) saying

they were unlikely to get involved in the flagship initiative.

Purnima Tanuku, from the National Day Nurseries Associatio­n (NDNA), said ministers should make “best use of this existing resource” in the private and third sectors.

Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie said: “This is one of the Scottish Government’s flagship policies, but families will already be questionin­g whether they will be able to take up their full entitlemen­t of hours given the challenges ahead in terms of recruiting enough staff and providing the necessary facilities.”

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said: “There is no question that this is an ambitious policy, but we believe that our children deserve a government that is ambitious for them.”

She added: “Government, local authoritie­s and stakeholde­rs throughout the sector are working tirelessly behind the scenes to prepare for the most ambitious expansion of funded early learning and childcare this country has ever seen and despite the scale of the challenge we absolutely remain on track to deliver.”

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 The Scottish Government has pledged an extra £150m a year to fund the ‘flagship’ scheme
PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES 0 The Scottish Government has pledged an extra £150m a year to fund the ‘flagship’ scheme

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