logo
Leicester City Council school transport funding decision to be reviewed

Leicester City Council school transport funding decision to be reviewed

BBC News15-05-2025
A decision to cut post-16 transport for special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) children and young adults in Leicester will be reviewed. The move to reduce the service was confirmed by Leicester City Council on Tuesday, and means few SEND students over the age of 16 will be offered dedicated home-to-school taxis or a seat on council-funded transport.Council documents state the cut, set to come into effect from the start of the 2025/26 academic year, will save money by "reducing entitlement".It will now be discussed at a meeting of the council's children, young people and education scrutiny commission on 22 May.
If the cuts remain in place after the move has been scrutinised, the city council has estimated the savings will be £2.1m per year.Elaine Pantling, assistant city mayor for children and young people, defended the move, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service."Many councils stopped funding post-16 transport some time ago, while in Leicester we have continued to support it for as long as we can," she said."Unfortunately, our financial position means we can no longer do this."Five Labour councillors – Stephen Bonham, Melissa March, Lynn Moore, Yasmin Surti and George Cole – called the decision in for further examination. In a joint statement they said: "We feel that this is such an important policy it requires scrutiny oversight."A spokesperson for the city council said if the scrutiny commission decides to send the decision on to full council, it cannot change a decision made by an executive member.The spokesperson added: "If [it] sends the policy to full council, they could recommend a change to the decision – i.e. scrap it entirely or make specific changes – but the executive member who made the decision has to then decide whether to accept the council recommendation or not."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK's immigration hotspots revealed where 1 in 20 residents are migrants who arrived last year… how does YOUR town fare?
UK's immigration hotspots revealed where 1 in 20 residents are migrants who arrived last year… how does YOUR town fare?

The Sun

time22 minutes ago

  • The Sun

UK's immigration hotspots revealed where 1 in 20 residents are migrants who arrived last year… how does YOUR town fare?

NEW analysis has revealed that up to one in 20 residents in parts of England and Wales are immigrants who moved here in the last year. Government statistics published last week show the total population change of England and Wales skyrocketed by 700,000 in 2023/24. It marks the second largest surge in population since World War 2. The male population grew faster than the female population with net international migration 18,000 higher for males than for females. The Daily Mail revealed that net international migration, the difference between the number of people arriving and leaving the country, was positive in all but one of 318 local authority areas. Newham, London, saw an influx of more than 17,000 people in the year to mid-2024. A total of 17,224 people came to the borough as international migrants, the local authority area is home to just 374,000 people. The data suggests that migrants arriving from abroad in the last year now make up 4.6 per cent of the London borough's population, roughly one in 20 people. According to the Office of National Statistics (ONS) Luton and Coventry had similarly high figures with 10,200 international migrants coming to Luton and 15,446 coming to Coventry. This marked a 4.3 per cent population increase for Luton and a 4.2 per cent increase for Coventry. Current immigration levels are at an all time high and experts warn that this is pilling pressure on housing, schools and the NHS. Robert Bates, research director at the Centre for Migration Control told the Daily Mail: "Assimilation has been made impossible by the sheer scale of mass migration and our national culture is damaged as a result. The Sun watches as hundreds of illegal migrants arrive at Dover "Stretched public services - from the NHS and GP surgeries to public transport and schools - are being further eroded by a low wage, low-skill immigration system. "Politicians have ignored the concerns of voters due to a misguided belief that open borders benefit the economy. "We fast need a government which rejects this dogma and starts work to scrap a whole raft of failed visa routes, end foreign nationals ' access to the welfare system, and invests in skills for the British workforce." He added that mass migration is changing the fabric of Britain. 4 4 According to the ONS' estimates there were roughly 61.8 million people in England and Wales in mid-2024. This is up from just 61.1 million people in mid-2023. The increase of 706,881 people was overshadowed by the 821,210 population rise in the months to mid-2023. Growth in both years was driven almost entirely by record rises in the number of international migrants. Nearly 1.1 million people are thought to have immigrated in the last 12 months compared to the 450,000 thought to have emigrated. There were only slightly more births than deaths in the year to mid-2024, adding just 29,982 to the population. In raw numbers, the larger local authorities had the most international migrants arriving. The City of London, home to just 15,111 people saw an 11 per cent increase in its population, this was down to net international migration. Only one local authority area, South Holland, Lincolnshire, experienced more international migrants leaving than arriving. The ONS said the area had 557 arrivals from abroad last year but 695 people emigrated. Internal migration - movement within the UK - is recorded separately. The ONS said there may be some overlap in the data but determining how much is difficult because of the difficulties in examining population flow. For example, the same person could be classed as an international immigrant and internal emigrant, they could also die, further confusing the picture. It comes after the Prime Minister announced a crackdown on immigration in May. His package of policies to curb immigration involved a hiking of the skills threshold for immigrants and a toughening of the rules on fluency in English. Under the new rules migrants will also be required to wait 10 years for citizenship rather than the current five and face deportation for even lower-level crimes. Keir Starmer also recently came to a "one in one out" deal with French president Emmanuel Macron in a bid to solve the small boats crisis. It comes as the total number of migrants who arrived in 2025 by small boat so far reaches 25,436, Home Office figures show. Some 898 people made the journey in 13 small boats on Wednesday, the arrivals figure is up 51 per cent on this point last year, and is 73 per cent higher than in 2023. 4 4

Kate Forbes choosing family over Holyrood leaves a vacuum in the SNP
Kate Forbes choosing family over Holyrood leaves a vacuum in the SNP

Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Times

Kate Forbes choosing family over Holyrood leaves a vacuum in the SNP

T here are not many public figures in Scotland whose loss to politics can be regarded as a calamity. Kate Forbes's decision to stand down as deputy first minister and MSP at the next election, is not just a blow to the SNP — a party singularly lacking in sound business sense and independent thinking — it diminishes Holyrood as well. Hers was a voice in parliament worth listening to, whether explaining the balance between religious belief and political affiliation, or setting out the path for a faltering economy. Her partnership with the first minister John Swinney was a strong one, and together, in the run-up to next year's Scottish elections, they would have offered a powerful challenge to their opponents, including a rampant Reform party.

Man remanded in custody over Palestine Action RAF break-in
Man remanded in custody over Palestine Action RAF break-in

BBC News

time22 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Man remanded in custody over Palestine Action RAF break-in

A man has been remanded in custody over his alleged involvement in a demonstration that saw two military aircraft damaged at RAF Brize Umer Khalid, 22, faces charges relating to criminal damage and compromising the security of the United incident in June saw a group of protesters break into the Oxfordshire air base and spray paint on two RAF Voyager planes, causing what police said was £7m of Action claimed the incident, saying it was a protest against the UK's weapons sales to Israel. The group was proscribed as a terrorist organisation soon after. Mr Khalid appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court wearing a black hoodie and grey tracksuit. He spoke only to confirm his name and Peter Ratliff told the court the alleged offending happened at about 01:40 BST on the morning of 20 jet engines, one on each Voyager aircraft, had to be replaced following the incident at a cost of £2.5m each, the court heard. Fire extinguishers marked with the words Palestine Action and Palestinian flags were recovered at the court heard Mr Khalid, of Stockport, was born in Manchester and was a British citizen. He was arrested at an address in Bedford on was denied bail and was remanded in custody for his next appearance at the Old Bailey on 22 Khalid is the fifth person to be charged in connection with the Gardiner-Gibson, 29, Jony Cink, 24, Daniel Jeronymides-Norie, 36, and Lewis Chiaramello, 22, were all remanded in custody following a hearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court last will next appear together at the Old Bailey for a plea hearing on January 16, 2026. A provisional trial date is set for 18 January, 2027.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store