Items
No. |
Item |
60. |
Apologies and Changes of Membership
To note any apologies and changes to the
membership of the Forum.
Minutes:
Apologies were received
from Cllr Jane Davies
(Cabinet Member for
Adult Social Care, SEND, Transition and Inclusion
), Jo
Grenfell (Observer – Post 16, Wiltshire College), Jon Hamp
(Special School Academy
representative), Cllr Ross Henning (Observer – Local Youth
Network), Cllr Laura Mayes (Cabinet Member for Children, Education
& Skills), Cllr Dominic Muns (Portfolio Holder for Education),
Graham Nagel-Smith (Primary Academy
representative), Giles Pugh (Salisbury
Diocesan Board of Education representative), Nigel Roper
(Maintained Secondary School representative), Ros Sutton (Primary
School Governor representative) and from
Lucy
Townsend (Corporate Director – People/Director of
Children’s Services).
Substitutions
Nikki Bennett was the
substitute for Jo Grenfell.
Graham Pike was
substitute for Graham Nagel-Smith.
There were no changes
to the membership of Schools Forum.
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61. |
Minutes of the Previous Meeting
To approve as a correct record and sign the
minutes of the meeting held on 20 January 2022(copy attached).
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
The
minutes of the previous meeting held on 20 January 2022 were
presented.
Resolved:
That the Chair approve and sign the minutes of the
meeting of Schools Forum held on 20 January 2022.
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62. |
Chair's Announcements
To receive any announcements from the
Chair.
Minutes:
There were no announcements.
|
63. |
Declaration of Interests
To note any declarations of
interests.
Minutes:
There were no interests declared.
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64. |
Public Participation
Schools Forum
welcomes contributions from members of the public who are able to
ask questions or make a statement in relation to the
responsibilities and functions of the Forum at each meeting. A
maximum of 15 minutes will be allocated to this at the start of
each meeting. Please register with the
Officer named on the Agenda in accordance with the deadlines
below.
Statements
Members of the public
who wish to submit a statement in relation to an item on this
agenda should submit this electronically to the officer named on
this agenda no later than 5pm on Tuesday 7 June 2022 (1
clear working day before the meeting) Statements must not be defamatory,
frivolous, offensive, vexatious, unlawful or otherwise improper.
They must not name or identify individual service users, members of
staff or members of partner agencies. Statements should take no
longer than 3 minutes to be read aloud.
Questions
Those wishing to ask
questions are required to give notice of any such questions to the
Officer named on the front of this agenda no later than 5pm on
Tuesday 31 May 2022 to allow a response to be
formulated. Questions are limited to a
maximum of 2 per person or organisation.
Minutes:
No questions or
statements were received in advance of the meeting.
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65. |
Updates from Working Groups
The Forum will be asked to note
the minutes/updates from the following meetings:
·
Early Years Reference Group – 31 March
2022
·
Joint meeting of the School Funding Working Group
and SEN Working Group – 23 May 2022
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
The Forum noted the update received by
way of the minutes of the meeting of the Early Years Reference
Group meeting held on 31 March 2022.
There were no questions
arising.
The Forum noted the update received by
way of the minutes of the meeting of the School Funding and SEN
working group held on 23 May 2022.
There were no questions arising.
Resolved:
That Schools Forum note the minutes of
the Early Years Reference group meeting on 31 March 2022 and the
joint meeting of the School Funding and SEN working group held on
23 May 2022.
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66. |
Update on the work from the F40 Group
The report of Grant Davis (Schools Strategic
Financial Support Manager) seeks to provide members of Schools
Forum with an update on the membership of F40 and the current work
of the F40 group.
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Grant Davis (Schools
Strategic Financial Support Manager) referred to the report which
sought to provide Schools Forum with an update on the membership of
the F40 group and their current work and highlighted the
following:
- That Wiltshire were
members of the F40 group as one of the 42 lowest funded local
authority areas;
- The F40 group seeks
fairness and equal opportunities in education for all children,
regardless of where they live and to remove historical
discrepancies locked into how schools are funded;
- F40 more recently had
become in highlighting the underfunding of SEND funding and the way
it is calculated based on historic need and raises that there is a
£1billion overspend in local authorities for
SEND;
- A number of senior
politicians had been appointed to F40 – Sir Gary Streeter MP
(Conservative), Layla Moran MP (Liberal Democrats) and Emma Hardy
MP (Labour). It is good to have
political representation to bring issues to the fore;
- The recent work of the
F40 group included MP briefings, meeting with the DfE in relation
to the SEND review and working with the Education Policy
Institute;
- Wiltshire benefits from
its membership of F40 and follow their lead in the responses to
national consultation; and
- When
the DfE look at the per pupil funding rates on the ‘league
tables’ Wiltshire primary schools are 109 out of 150 and
secondary schools are 146 out of 150 worst funded
authorities. The overall position of
being 139 out of 150 of the worst funded does not sit
comfortably.
Marie
Taylor (Head of Finance – Children & Education) reported
that they had received a letter from the F40 group to encourage
local authorities and schools to ask their MP’s to attend the
MP briefings. WASSH were asked to write
on behalf of Wiltshire Schools to encourage the Wiltshire
MP’s. Ian Tucker (Chair of WASSH)
agreed to request this via WASSH.
Resolved:
That Schools Forum note the ongoing work of the F40
group on behalf of its members.
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67. |
Dedicated Schools Budget - Budget Monitoring - 2021-22
The
report of Marie Taylor (Head of Finance – Children and
Education) seeks to present the year end budget monitoring
information against the Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) for the
financial year 2021-22 as at 31st March 2022.
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Marie Taylor (Head of
Finance – Children and Education) referred to the report
which presented the year end budget monitoring information against
the DSG for the financial year 2021-22 as at 31 March 2022 and highlighted the
following:
- Despite low levels of
funding and with an overspend of £7.066 million against the
overall schools block, there was good recovery plan work being done
and the final outturns ended up with more favourable position than
previously forecast due to a slowing of EHCP plans;
- The Early Years
underspend was largely due to the lower take up of the 3 and
4 year old funding - it
was likely that some parents had decided not to send their children
to take up their entitled place. The
take up for disadvantaged 2-year-old take up was above what was planned and
this was due to success with active promotion through
Children’s Centres staff and health visitors;
- The underspend on the Schools Budget largely relates
to the schools growth fund which is helping to offset the overall
pressure on the DSG;
- High needs budgets were overspent by £9.723m.
The biggest areas of overspend are named pupil allowances and top
ups, particularly post 16, independent special school packages, and
Wiltshire pupils in non-Wiltshire provision. When the level of funding does not meet the local need the
budget cannot be set at an achievable level and so the location of
the overspend is not an indication of individual budget issues but
that the whole block is under significant pressure;
- Whilst the numbers of
EHCP’s was still rising it had slowed slightly, however, this
could be due to a number of factors including professionals having
reduced access to and contact with pupils due to the Covid
pandemic;
- The cost of Independent
Special School fees had gone up by £784 per student but this
would also be for the increase in teachers’ pay and pension
costs;
- The High Needs Working
Group continue to meet regularly to discuss the recovery actions
and look to investigate and address issues internally and with
external partners;
- The DSG reserve brought
forward of £18.717 million is adjusted by the negative early
years block adjustment of £0.189 million. The overspend takes the reserve into an overall
deficit position of £25.973 million which the local authority
is cash flowing; and
- The DSG Management Plan
is a live working document which continues to be
updated. Officers from Wiltshire and
two other local authorities had a meeting with the DfE in March to
learn more about the DfE’s Development Better Value (DVB)
programme and the assistance on offer from the national recovery
resources. Another meeting was planned
to discuss the next steps and SEN and finance speciality and
recovery plans and actions and funding attached to that
transformational work and any funding for it.
A Primary School
Governor representative asked about the slowing rate of EHCP and
asked if that related to schools behaviour or the turnaround
process and the changes affecting that?
Marie Taylor responded that she ...
view the full minutes text for item 67.
|
68. |
Dedicated Schools Budget - Budget Statement 2022/23
The report of Marie Taylor (Head of Finance
– Children and Education) seeks to present the budget
statement for the Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) for the financial
year 2022-23.
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Marie Taylor (Head of
Finance – Children and Education) referred to the report
which presented the budget statement for the DSG for the financial
year 2022-23 and highlighted the following:
- This report was a
snapshot of the opening budget for 2022-23. The provisional allocation of the early years
budget was £28.521 million and there would be adjustment by
the DfE in the summer. The budgeted
spend for 2 year old funding was £1.175 million with
£25.254 million for 3 and 4 year olds. This budget was not
increased by the supplementary grant due to the national increases
to the hourly rates and other funds.
The Inclusion Support Fund has been extended to 30 hours from 15
for 2022-23 as part of the preparation for schools programme within
the high needs recovery plan. Any
unspent COMF grant for Early Years could be rolled forward and this
would be discussed with the Early Years Reference
Group;
- The Schools budgets
were increased and in addition schools have been allocated the
schools supplementary grant to
alleviate increases in energy, national insurance and other
costs. Following consultation, a transfer of 0.5% was agreed
from the Schools block to support the High Needs block and an
amount equivalent to the 50% reduction in the school improvement
brokerage and monitoring grant in January 2022 to replace the
removal of this funding;
- The High Needs budget
increased by £4.9 million (budget £65.105 million) but
the estimates of requirement for 2022-23 exceeded this at the time
of setting the budget by £11.160 million;
- The historical element of the Central Schools
Services budget has been reduced by 20% in line with recent years,
despite this a limited sum continues to be transferred to support
the high needs block:
- The significant
projected overspend for 2022-23 could create a deficit reserve of
£37.133 million. The Director for
Finance (Andy Brown) plans to co-ordinate a local authority
response to the SEN review consultation as that DSG reserve is
unsustainable for local authorities to manage; and
- It was hoped that the
ongoing working of the High Needs Block Recovery Working Group
would mitigate some of the projected overspend, however the impact
of the majority of schemes was longer term.
Resolved:
That Schools Forum note the original dedicated
schools budget statement and balance brought forward on the DSG
reserve.
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69. |
Update from the High Needs Block Working Group
The minutes and the papers of the High Needs
Block Working Group meeting held on 5 May 2022 is
attached. The Forum will also receive
an update on behalf of the Working Group.
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Cate Mullen (Head of
SEND and Inclusion) gave an update on behalf of the High Needs
Block Working Group and highlighted the following:
High Needs Block
Recovery Plan
- The recovery plan was
in place which detailed changes and mitigations in relation to the
high needs block overspend. They were
working to meet children’s needs within Wiltshire schools so
that there could be cost savings to reduce the overspend and to
provide education for children in places as close to their homes as
possible;
- There was DfE oversight
and support in place with this and there was the possibility of
additional support and funding for local authorities with
significant overspends from the DfE;
- Additional places were
being created through capital funding at special schools and
resource bases including the creation of new resource bases for
September 2022 at Silverwood School, Exeter House and other
satellite locations; and
- There was ongoing
consideration of gaps in available provision and how we can support
this, e.g. SEMH provision and the wide range of need that this
encompasses.
Wiltshire Costed
Provision Map
- This tool had been set
up to enable schools to detail what they are putting in place for
their children with SEND. Cheshire East
had developed a provision map and Officers had worked with them to
gain their approval to utilise their costed provision
map. Officers had worked with
SENCO’s in Wiltshire in its development and the feedback
received so far was that the provision map was easy to
use;
- A worked example an
individual provision map for an NPA was shown at the
meeting.
A Primary Governor
representative asked about the rates of EHCP assessments had
returned to the pre Covid rates? Cate
Mullen responded that the rate of requests for EHCP’s was not
behaving in the way it was before Covid, the rate per month had
remained steady with some ups and downs. There had usually been
predicable patterns before Covid but since Covid there were fairly
unpredictable patterns.
SEND Review (Green
Paper)
- This was a large
consultation document and there would be an additional SEND Board
meeting to look at the 22 consultation questions. Responses were also being collated from colleagues
to gather a multi-agency response across the local area and a
response would be drafted by the local authority.
The Parent Carer representative reported that
the Wiltshire Parent Carer Council had some
consultations coming up for any parent carers who were struggling
to make sense of the green paper.
What we do - Have your say! - Important Opportunity
to Have a Say on the SEND System & Alternative Provision in
England - WPCC (wiltshireparentcarercouncil.co.uk)
Resolved:
That Schools Forum
- Note the
minutes of the meeting of the High Needs Block Working Group held
on 5 May 2022.
- Note the
updates on behalf of the High Needs Block Working
Group.
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70. |
DFE Consultation - 'Completing the reforms to the National Funding Formula'
The report of Grant Davis (Schools Strategic
Financial Support Manager) seeks to provide an update following the
DfE consultation with stakeholders regarding their reforms to the
National Funding Formula (NFF), which took place between July and
September 2021.
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Grant Davis (Schools
Strategic Financial Support Manager) referred to the report which
sought to provide Schools Forum with an update on the DfE
consultation with stakeholders regarding their reforms to the
National Funding Formula which took place between July and
September 2021. The DfE have published
their response following the consultation and the report sets out
the outcome from the response and the proposed next
steps. Grant highlighted the
following:
- The consultation
reflected the continued DfE journey towards a ‘hard’
formula with not or little local flexibility. In Wiltshire, the formula had been already aligned
to the NFF and so there would be no or very little impact on
budgets for Wiltshire schools;
- The key outcome was
that the Government would bring forward the relevant legislation to
achieve this change when parliamentary time allows. It was not known when this would be, however in
the second consultation (that was released on 7 June 2022), 2027-28
is mentioned which is some 5 years away;
- The second consultation
refers to split sites funding, exceptional premises factors (e.g.
schools that down have their own hall or playing field etc), PFI
funding and a national approach to funding growth and falling
rolls;
- As part of the first
consultation, stakeholders were asked about their views for moving
maintained schools to being funded on an academic year
basis. In the findings there was no
clear majority in favour of a move so this would not be prioritised
as a move towards the direct NFF;
- The move to a direct
NFF would mean that the role of schools forums would change but the
DfE expect they would continue to play an important part in local
decision making and stakeholder engagement and the DfE also plan to
review how schools forums engage with high needs funding issues
following the SEND review;
- Officers would look to
arrange a meeting towards the end of Term 6 of the School Funding
and SEN Working Groups to gather feedback to be able to prepare a
response on behalf of the local authority and to also provide a
suggested response for schools to be able to respond.
Resolved:
That Schools Forum note the DfE’s response to
their consultation on reforms to the NFF.
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71. |
Annual Schools Consultation - Delegation of Central Expenditure 2023-24, Funding for Education Functions 2023-24, Transfer of Funding from Schools Block to High Needs Block 2023-24
The report of Grant Davis (Schools Strategic
Financial Support Manager) seeks to brief Schools Forum and agree a
set of questions to be sent out to all schools in the Autumn of
2022.
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Grant Davis (Schools
Strategic Financial Support Manager) referred to the report which
sought to brief Schools Forum and agree a set of questions to be
sent out to all schools in the autumn of 2022 and highlighted the
following:
- Officers were getting
organised early with the three areas of consultation that would be
sent out to all schools in the autumn which related to
de-delegation, funding for education functions and a proposed
transfer of funding from the School Block to the High Needs
Block;
- In relation to
de-delegation, traditionally maintained schools had agreed
collectively that central budgets be de-delegated and provided by
the local authority;
- In relation to the
funding for education functions, the DfE decided to reduce the
Local Authority Monitoring and Brokering Grant (LAMB) by 50% in
2022-23 with full removal in the 2022-23 year. A local
consultation exercise was undertaken in advance of the 2022-23 year
to
determine whether maintained schools would elect to de-delegate
funding from their budgets to support the loss in the LAMB
grant;
- The School Effectiveness team were working to set out
proposals regarding options for the delivery of the service from
2023-24, in order to consult with maintained schools and understand
the most appropriate route to fulfil their needs; and
- A transfer of funding
from the Schools Block to the High Needs Block was agreed to
contribute to the High Needs Block recovery plan in the 2022-23
financial year. As we move towards the
2023-24 year, Officers would consult with ALL schools which would
cover a range of options ranging from transferring funds from
Schools Block.
An early years
representative asked that within the consultation Officers make it
clear of the amounts involved with the proposals and included the
total quantum.
Resolved: That Schools Forum
1.
Decide on the consultation questions for
maintained schools around delegation/de-delegation of budgets for
central services within the schools’ block.
2.
Decide on the consultation questions for all
schools around setting the 2023-24 Schools budget.
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72. |
Household Support Fund (HSF) - 2022-23
The report of Marie Taylor (Head of Finance
– Children and Education) seeks to present the
Council’s expenditure plan for the Household Support Fund
grant received from the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP).
Supporting documents:
Minutes:
Marie Taylor (Head of
Finance – Children and Education) referred to the report
which presented the Council’s expenditure plan for the
Household Support Fund grant received from the Department of Work
and Pensions and highlighted the following:
- This fund was
introduced in December 2021 as the ‘Winter Grant’ which
was to support children and families during the pandemic. This then
became the ‘Local Grant’ and has now become the
Household Support Fund;
- The total Wiltshire
allocation to date was £5.3 million and originally the
majority of this funding had been for families with children but
would now be split equally between individuals and families without
children and families with children;
- The planned use of the
current year’s allocation of £2,728,656.41 sees 45%
going to families with children, 33% allocated to pensioners and
remaining funds going to other vulnerable residents by way of food
banks, housing services, and Working Age Households.
- No Council admin costs
had been factored into the grant as this was being absorbed but
there would be payment card costs of £22,034;
- There was also a
contingency fund if there was higher take up than planned, e.g.
food banks; and
- There would be another
allocation in Autumn 2022.
Resolved:
That Schools Forum note the expenditure plan for the
Household Support Fund and the change of focus from a majority of
funding aimed at support for families to support both families and
other households equally.
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73. |
Schools Finance Manual Update
Schools Forum will receive a verbal update on
the Schools Finance Manual (this is information for maintained
schools).
Minutes:
Grant Davis (Schools
Strategic Financial Support Manager) gave a verbal update on the
Schools Finance manual that relates to maintained schools and
highlighted the following:
- That there had been a
complete update and re-write of the schools Finance Manual for
maintained schools in April 2022.
Academies would use their own Trust financial handbook. The manual was available on Rightchoice and there was a range of topics
covered.
Resolved:
That Schools Forum note the update on the Schools
Finance manual that relates to maintained schools.
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74. |
Confirmation of Dates for Future Meetings
To confirm the dates of future meetings, as
follows:
6 October 2022
8 December 2022
19 January 2023
16 March 2023.
Minutes:
The Forum noted that the future
meetings would be held on:
6 October 2022
8 December 2022
19 January 2023
16 March 2023.
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75. |
Urgent Items
To consider any other items of business, which
the Chair agrees to consider as a matter of urgency.
Minutes:
There were no urgent items.
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