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School-based Nursery Capital Grants 2025-04-02

02 April 2025

Lead MP

The Secretary of State for Education

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

Social CareEducationTaxationEmployment
Other Contributors: 45

At a Glance

The Secretary of State for Education raised concerns about school-based nursery capital grants 2025-04-02 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

Social CareEducationTaxationEmployment
Government Statement
Today I am updating the House on the roll-out of nurseries in our primary schools. This Labour Government is delivering promises to parents and children, including free breakfast clubs, curriculum reform, and improvements in social care. We are investing £37 million for 300 primary schools to open and expand nurseries, aiming for a total of 3,000 school-based nurseries by the end of our term. This initiative will provide up to 6,000 more nursery places starting in September this year, aligning with the final stage of the 30-hour childcare entitlement. The funding is part of £8 billion invested in early years education despite fiscal challenges inherited from the Conservatives. The policy aims to start children on the track to success by offering crucial support in their earliest years and improving access for those in disadvantaged communities. This contrasts sharply with previous Conservative promises that lacked funding or a clear plan.

Shadow Comment

Laura Trott
Shadow Comment
The shadow secretary of state criticised the government's announcement, highlighting that while £37 million is being invested in nurseries, the government is taking away half a billion pounds by failing to compensate nurseries for national insurance increases. This could force many nurseries to close or raise their prices, impacting parents and staff. She emphasised the previous Conservative plan that had already halved childcare costs for under-threes and argued that the current Labour plan is shutting nurseries due to unaffordable staffing costs from the jobs tax. Laura Trott demanded clarity on the financial impact of the jobs tax and questioned how school-based nursery locations were chosen, expressing concerns about equity in compensation between different providers.
Assessment & feedback
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