Cost of living crisis: Sheffield schools face 'triple funding challenge' as new year begins

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This is a big week for schools as they face up to a looming funding crisis.Learn Sheffield’s CEO Stephen Betts has his say.

The organisation is a not-for-profit schools company which is focused on school improvement and is owned by Sheffield's schools and colleges in partnership with Sheffield City Council.

The absence of a Government across the summer should finally come to an end today, with the appointment of a Prime Minister presumably shortly followed by a new Education Secretary.

This needs to be followed, in similar short order, by announcements about how the Department for Education will support schools to deal with a triple funding challenge.

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Stephen Betts, chief executive of Learn Sheffield, want to make Sheffield a wolrd-class city. Photo by Dan Hobson.Stephen Betts, chief executive of Learn Sheffield, want to make Sheffield a wolrd-class city. Photo by Dan Hobson.
Stephen Betts, chief executive of Learn Sheffield, want to make Sheffield a wolrd-class city. Photo by Dan Hobson.
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The first funding challenge is rising wage costs. The pay awards for teachers and support staff were announced over the summer. They are truly well deserved and do not fully address the cost of living crisis that staff are experiencing, but they are also currently not funded.

The impact of this on school budgets, if the government do not address this, will be catastrophic.

The second funding challenge is energy costs. Schools are not protected (if that is the right phrase) by the price cap. At whatever point their existing arrangements are open to the market cost of energy they will face eye watering cost increases.

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Many will have included increases in their budgets, but the extent of the rising cost has moved on several times since those budgets were set.

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The third funding challenge is the starting point for school budgets as they face up to the two issues above. School budgets continue to be significantly below 2010 levels. The Institute for Fiscal Studies had projected that rises in core spending per pupil would have seen the level of funding return to 2010 levels by 2024/25.

This now looks unlikely with current inflation pressures and it should also be noted that the situation is worse in the FE sector.

School leaders are very adept at managing funding challenges, but this one simply cannot be overcome by trimming already tight budgets.

At a time when investment in education needs to be rising to overcome the legacy of Covid, which is profound across so many of the communities we serve, it is facing an unprecedented funding challenge.

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We can only hope that the government understands this and now, finally, responds appropriately.

The Star is campaigning for new Prime Minister Liz Truss to:

Stop the cost of energy from going above double the levels seen last winter, for both households and businesses;

Help those on prepayment meters so they are no longer facing higher energy prices;

Tell energy companies that they cannot cut off the supply to any homes this winter if people fall behind on their bills.