Extra £427m for education in Northern Ireland requested

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Stock photo of children in a classroom.Image source, Getty Images
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The Department for Education said extra funding is needed

The Department of Education (DE) has bid for an extra £427m in funding in the 2020/21 budget.

Pressures have increased across a number of areas, a DE official told MLAs.

By 2022, an extra £716m will be needed compared to this year, according to the DE's director of finance Gary Fair.

The education budget - which covers schools and youth services - is one of Stormont's biggest at about £2bn a year.

Mr Fair detailed the need for extra money while giving evidence to Stormont's education committee.

He said the increase was needed to pay for things like a teachers' pay settlement, increasing special educational needs (SEN) support costs and essential maintenance work in schools.

Image source, NI Assembly
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Director of finance Gary Fair said front line cuts would be needed in the absence of extra funding.

Mr Fair said many schools had "significant" maintenance problems.

"All we've been able to do is fund the minimum, the real things that might hit the crisis point in terms of health and safety," he said.

"The reality is there's a lot of work required across the education estate."

About £44m extra was required to meet increased SEN costs for pupil support in mainstream schools, special schools and transport.

Mr Fair said that the department was also bidding for £23m for a voluntary exit scheme to allow about 200 teachers and also an unspecified number of classroom assistants to leave their jobs early.

The committee chairman, Alliance MLA Chris Lyttle, asked Mr Fair how realistic that total rise in funding was.

Funding for New Decade, New Approach

Image source, NI Assembly
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Committee Chair Chris Lyttle questioned how realistic the funding request was

In response, Mr Fair said cuts to "front line" services to children and young people would have to be considered if significant extra funding was not provided.

"Invariably you're having to make people redundant, stop quite critical services that are having significant impact on the educational welfare of children and young people," he said.

"If we didn't get a significant proportion of what we're seeking here we'd be in that position again, that's the reality."

Mr Fair also said some of the extra funding would be needed to meet additional commitments agreed in the New Decade, New Approach (NDNA) agreement. which restored devolved government at Stormont in January.

However, he said it was up to the executive to decide which aspects of the deal should be taken forward and when.

"There's obviously discussions going on in terms of some of the detail within the NDNA agreement and whether that can be taken forward in the short term or perhaps longer term," he said.

The DUP MLA William Humphrey asked Mr Fair if the financial situation would be better if we had "one education system in Northern Ireland."

Mr Fair replied that it would be cheaper to run, but officials had to develop a budget strategy based on the current situation.

"It's not a straightforward sector in many ways, but any significant transformation would take quite a bit of time," he said.