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24
Mar 2022
A Harrogate district private school receives over £8m a year from the government to pay the school fees of children whose parents serve in the British Army.
Queen Ethelburga’s Collegiate is an independent boarding school for boys and girls at Thorpe Underwood, close to Little Ouseburn.
The school has a capacity of 1,600 pupils and around 400 are children of people serving in the armed forces. It's situated about 30 miles from ITC Catterick and 17 miles from Harrogate's Army Foundation College.
Members of the military are entitled to use the Continuity of Education Allowance grant, which is a state payment that covers 90% of the cost to send a child to private boarding school.
The grant is paid so children do not have their education disrupted when their parents' army jobs require them to move around the world.
However, it can also be used by troops serving in the UK and many of the families using it are well-paid officers.
One critic of the CEA grant told the Stray Ferret the payments to Queen Ethelburga's were effectively a "state subsidy of a very large private school" and an obstacle to social mobility.
Robert Verkaik
Dan Machin
A British Army spokesman said:
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