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16

Nov 2020

Last Updated: 16/11/2020
Education
Education

Harrogate and Knaresborough schools 'could be forced to axe teachers'

by Connor Creaghan

| 16 Nov, 2020
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A North Yorkshire County Council report reveals four schools in Harrogate and Knaresborough have debts totalling £1.6 million, and the situation is forecast to get worse. A councillor warns schools may be forced to lay-off teachers.

schools-stock-picture
More schools are falling into debt. Photo: Flickr/Elinerijpers

Schools in Harrogate and Knaresborough could be forced to lay-off teachers because of spiralling debts, a councillor has warned.

Cllr Geoff Webber, a Liberal Democrat who represents Harrogate Bilton and Nidd Gorge on North Yorkshire County Council, said schools may be forced to act after new figures showed debt increasing.

A council report published last week on schools in Harrogate and Knaresborough showed four schools are projected to have debts totalling £1.6 million by March 2021.

By March 2023, this is forecast to have risen to five schools with total debts of £1.6 million.

Cllr Webber told the Stray Ferret:

"The schools will start off with an overspend one year and will not be able to bring that debt back under control. It just spirals from there.
"When the schools are in debt the only way for them to save money is to make staff redundant. It's usually the more experienced ones that go first."


The financial situation is bleak across the county: 37 schools in North Yorkshire have total debt of £7.2 million.

This is expected to soar to 93 schools with total debt of £18.3 million by 2022/23. This would mean 40 per cent of schools in the county will be in debt.




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Two primary schools, one secondary school and one special needs school are currently in debt in Harrogate and Knaresborough. The council paper does not name them.

The government has frozen education funding in recent years.

North Yorkshire misses out


The funding formula focuses on deprivation. So schools in more affluent areas like the Harrogate district tend to miss out.

The report says:

"North Yorkshire secondary schools are placed 133 out of 149 local authorities in terms of funding.
"On average, a school in North Yorkshire will receive £5,151 per pupil in 2020/21 compared to a national average of £5,496.
"Comparing the funding for a 1,500 pupil secondary school this equates to a difference in funding of £0.5m."


Cllr Webber said the council should use its reserves to plug funding shortfalls if the government does not increase funding.

Cllr Patrick Mulligan, the Conservative executive member for education and skills at the council, who represents Airedale, told the Stray Ferret:

"I do sympathise with the schools. It has been difficult for them since the funding was frozen with austerity. This puts us in a difficult position.
"We have been lobbying MPs to ask for more school funding. We had a 3% rise in funding per pupil this year and hope that continues."