
Family hubs to be rolled out across every council in England
The Education Secretary has said that the scheme will 'give a lifeline' to families.
Family hubs were originally rolled out across 75 local authorities at the start of 2024 by the then-Conservative government.
Officials say that the hubs will be rolled out in every local authority by April 2026, and there will be expanded so there are up to 1,000 of them by the end of 2028.
Among the services available at the locations will be birth registration, debt advice, midwifery services and support for parents who are separating or have separated.
Officials hope that the spaces will also provide families access to other services and social care.
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson praised the scheme (Ben Whitley/PA)
Bridget Phillipson said: 'It's the driving mission of this government to break the link between a child's background and what they go on to achieve – our new Best Start family hubs will put the first building blocks of better life chances in place for more children.
'I saw firsthand how initiatives like Sure Start helped level the playing field in my own community, transforming the lives of children by putting in place family support in the earliest years of life, and as part of our plan for change, we're building on its legacy for the next generation of children.
'Making sure hard-working parents are able to benefit from more early help is a promise made, and promise kept – delivering a lifeline of consistent support across the nation, ensuring health, social care and education work in unison to ensure all children get the very best start in life.'
The Conservatives have said that the announcement 'brings little clarity on what's genuinely new and what simply rebrands existing services'.
Shadow education secretary Laura Trott (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Shadow education secretary Laura Trott said: 'That lack of clarity is part of a wider pattern.
'This is a Government defined by broken promises and endless U-turns.'
Charity Save The Children has said it is 'pleased' to see the Government 'making it easier for families to get the help they need'.
Dan Paskins, executive director of Policy, Advocacy and Campaigns at Save The Children UK, said: 'Focusing on family services for the under-fives will be vital in securing better outcomes for children, and we welcome the Best Start In Life announcement.
'We know from our work in local communities that bringing together parenting, healthcare and education support services in one place is an approach which works, so we are pleased to see the UK Government making it easier for families to get the help they need.
'With ministers now demonstrating an increasingly ambitious plan for children in the UK, we hope this drive for change continues when the child poverty strategy is released in autumn.
'This must include scrapping the two-child limit to Universal Credit, which is the only meaningful way to reduce the UK's record child poverty rate.'
The head of the NAHT union welcomed the move.
General secretary Paul Whiteman said: 'This is a positive step forward towards ensuring all children get the best start – and we are pleased to see tangible investment following this week's announcement of new targets for school readiness.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Rayner slams Tories for spreading 'made-up nonsense' on so-called banter ban
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said Labour workers rights' reforms were designed to protect employees from harassment and abuse, and would not police free speech Angela Rayner has accused the Tories of 'spreading made-up nonsense' about a so-called banter ban in workplaces. The Deputy Prime Minister said Labour's workers' rights reforms were designed to protect employees from harassment and abuse, and would not police free speech. The Employment Rights Bill contains a duty on bosses to take 'reasonable steps' to prevent third parties from harassing their staff. Ms Rayner rubbished claims from top Tory Andrew Griffith that "innocent office banter will be spied on by wokerati thought police" and denied businesses forced to hire diversity officers to monitor speech. She told the Mirror: "Nobody should be abused while doing their job, but we've seen a horrific rise in violent abuse and harassment of shop workers and other public facing staff. 'The Tories can't defend their opposition to the action this Labour government is taking to protect workers, so they've resorted to spreading made-up nonsense. 'It's the same old Tories – they're on the side of bad bosses, zero-hours contracts and fire-and-rehire.' Right-wingers and big businesses have mounted a concerted push to resist the Government's plans for stronger protections for workers. But a recent poll of 5,000 people for the TUC found eight in ten (79%) people support the plans to protect workers from harassment. Only 14% of respondents said they did not support the idea. TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak told the Mirror: "This is truly desperate stuff from the Tories. 'They're insulting people's intelligence by pretending that protecting workers from harassment is the same as banning banter. 'Stopping harassment at work is one of the most popular policies in the government's Employment Rights Bill. 'But yet again the Conservatives are siding with bad bosses over working people and showing how woefully out of touch they are. This is about basic decency and common sense.' A Government spokesperson said: "No business would be required to hire staff to monitor speech or diversity under the Employment Rights Bill. "The Bill will not affect anyone's right to lawful free speech, which this government stands firmly behind. "Upsetting remarks do not fall within the definition of harassment. "We are strengthening workplace protections to tackle harassment and protect employees from intimidating and hostile abuse as well as sexual harassment."


Channel 4
2 hours ago
- Channel 4
Labour launches £500m ‘Best Start' child support programme
The government has announced a £500 million scheme to help disadvantaged children – Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said the rollout of extra 'Best Start' family hubs would offer youth services and parenting support. The plans echo the Sure Start programme brought in by Tony Blair in the late 1990s. Phillipson also acknowledged that mistakes had been made during the government's first year in office, as new polling suggests Reform UK would crush Labour if an election was held today.


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Axing two-child benefit limit still on table but 'harder' after welfare U-turn
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson insisted the Government will 'continue to look at every lever to lift children out of poverty' after reports plans to scrap two child limit 'dead' Scrapping the two-child benefit limit remains on the table - but last week's welfare U-turn will make it harder, a top minister has said. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson insisted the Government was "looking at every lever and we'll continue to look at every lever to lift children out of poverty". But she said it would be more difficult to find the money to axe the austerity-era measure after Keir Starmer was forced to gut his planned disability benefit cuts to see off a Labour revolt. The welfare climbdown has left a £5billion hole in Rachel Reeves's spending plans. Ms Phillipson, who is working on a long-awaited child poverty strategy, distanced herself from reports that plans to scrap the two-child limit were now "dead in the water". Many Labour MPs oppose the cap, which could become a new focal point for tensions between backbenchers and Downing Street. The policy, introduced in 2017, restricts claims for Child Tax Credit and Universal Credit to the first two children. About 1.6 million children live in households affected by it, which would cost around £3.4billion a year to lift. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has estimated that getting rid of the cap would lift 500,000 children out of relative poverty. Asked if the Government could no longer afford to scrap it, she told the BBC: "We're looking at every lever, we will continue to look at every lever to lift children out of poverty. It will be the moral mission of this Labour government, to lift children out of poverty." But she said there was a cost to the decision to shelve plans to restrict eligibility for the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) until after a review next year. Ms Phillipson said: "The decisions that have been taken in the last week do make decisions, future decisions harder. But all of that said, we will look at this collectively in terms of all of the ways that we can lift children out of poverty." She said she was "not going to pretend that it hasn't been a tough or a challenging week" and acknowledged that the Government botched its handling of the welfare reforms. "What the Prime Minister has said, and what I also believe, is that what we set out, we pushed ahead too fast, we didn't listen enough to people, including, I would say, including to lots of people who had concerns about the nature of that change," she said.