Scores Of Primary Schools At Risk Of Closure Due To Birth Rate Decline

More than 90 schools are at risk of closure due to low pupil numbers, falling birth rates and an exodus from cities caused by the cost of living crisis.

According to LBC:

Schools are funded per pupil, so lower enrolment numbers mean less money – which can lead to schools struggling to survive.

Some 88 primary schools were more than two-thirds empty in the last academic year – roughly matching the 66% vacancy rate of the 156 schools that have closed since 2009/10, according to a Guardian analysis.

Four more schools are already set to close, taking the total shutting down or at risk to 92.

Nearly half the schools at risk are in cities and towns, with the problem particularly pronounced in the south of England.

Almost 50% of the schools in inner London and a third in the south-west of England had fewer pupils in 2021/22 than in 2009/10, or the first year for which data is available.

Meanwhile some 11.5% of total primary school places across England are unfilled, equivalent to 570,000 children – the highest level since 2009/10.

The government expects the number of students at all state schools to fall by 944,000 over the next ten years.

Primary school numbers are already falling, said Jon Andrews, the head of analysis at the Education Policy Institute, a think tank.

He said: “That peaked in 2019 and it’s fallen by about 0.5%. In secondary schools it will peak in the next academic year and then start to fall after that.

“Most of the funding that schools get is on a per-pupil basis, so when numbers start to fall, their overall funding falls.

“Government will still be able to say, we’re maintaining per-pupil funding; but that doesn’t make much difference if you’re a headteacher who’s lost £30,000 a year.”

The Local Government Association, which represents local authorities, said the problem was made harder by the existence of academies.

An LGA spokesperson said: “Councils should be given powers to reduce the size of, or close academies – as they do with maintained schools – where there is evidence of a significant drop in demand and a need to ensure a school remains financially viable.

“Councils should also be given the responsibility for in-year admissions, and powers to direct all schools to accept local children on to their roll, where appropriate.”

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
2 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
PodCast
Listen LIVE!

The Richie Allen Radio Show is live Mon – Thurs  5-7pm and Sun 11am -12pm

Click the button to listen live. Stream opens in a new tab.

Support

Support the show!

The Richie Allen Show relies on the support of the listeners.  Click the button to learn more.
2
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x

The Richie Allen Show relies on the support of the listeners. Help Richie to keep producing the show and talking about that which the mainstream media won’t. Please consider a contribution or becoming a Patron, it’s greatly appreciated. Thank you!

Halifax Manchester SORT CODE 11-05-16 ACC No 12130860

New Report

Close