Minutes:
Below are the headlines of the proposals as per the consultation announced Monday 7th March 2016 and additional comments from the conference.
The proposals cover the Schools Budget, High Needs Budget and the New Central Schools budget. The Early Years budget will be circulated shortly, with no indication of the timescale.
The Schools Block budget will be ring-fenced and LA’s will be required to spend the whole of this block on Schools – primary and secondary. The ability to move monies between the blocks is being removed. Appendix 1 shows the proposed factors for the National Funding Formula while Appendix B shows the provisional data sources for each factor. It should be noted that the LAC factor and mobility factor will NOT appear in the National Funding Formula from 2019-20 and the Post-16 factor (not used in Halton) will be removed from 2017-18.
To allow for this and in recognition of failings of the S.251 Budget return, each LA will be asked to identify the baseline of spend within each of the new blocks based on the 2016-17 budget. Where we have earmarked some reserves to support budgetary requirements, these reserves will NOT be taken into account for the baseline. The baseline will total the DSG allocation for the year and exclude any carry forward amounts being used to meet shortfalls.
The Central Schools budget will be made up of the current Schools Block central spend and the Education Services Grant. The central spend within the High Needs and the Early Years blocks of the DSG will remain within those sectors. The general funding rate of the ESG will disappear, but it is not completely clear when that will occur as the DfE recognise that the 2016/17 reduction can be met by “efficiencies”, but the rest cannot and the DfE are seeking views on the statutory duties that could be removed or reformed. The DfE will be consulting on a proposal to retain some of their maintained schools’ DSG to cover the statutory duties LA’s carry out for schools, which will over time diminish as more and more schools convert to academies. One of the main areas that the DfE are proposing to remove is School Improvement. Schools and academies will continue to be allowed to buy into LA services by way of SLA’s.
It is likely that there will be transitional arrangements, probably like an MFG, for the Central Spend block. Each of the blocks will have different transitional arrangements with High Needs being 5 years, while it may appear that the Schools Block could go beyond the 2 years to the NFF introduction in 2019/20.
There will also be MFG’s for each of the blocks that will build up into an MFG for each LA. The DfE have stated that there is a finite budget so if MFG amounts exceed that amount they will have to be funded by capping any gains. There is currently a requirement that the cap on gains cannot exceed the total MFG.
For 2017-18 and 2018-19 the EFA will calculate individual school budgets using the National Funding Formula – deemed a ‘shadow’ formula, add on any MFG required and will then pass the total of all school budgets for each LA to the LA. The LA can then ask its Schools Forum to decide on the actual funding formula to use and may be able to use different levels of MFG to the National MFG as part of the transition arrangements. From 2019-20 individual school budgets will be calculated by the EFA alone. Each LA will receive notification of the individual school budgets and be required to pass on the full amounts to each school in the same way as we currently work PP and AGS grants. There is NO requirement for non-chequebook schools to have their own bank accounts. LA’s will be allowed to continue to hold school budgets and pay staff/invoices on their behalf as currently.
For Multi Academy Trusts, the budgets for each academy within the MAT will be calculated individually in the same manner as for a maintained school. The budgets will then be added together and passed to the MAT. The flexibility currently allowing MAT’s to divert funding from one academy to another within the MAT is NOT going to be reviewed.
The role, functions and membership of Schools Forums will be reviewed for 2019-20 when the National Funding Formula is introduced.
The current arrangements for de-delegation of budgets from schools to be held centrally will end with the introduction of the National Funding Formula in 2019-20. Traded services will however be allowed to continue.
These arrangements should become clearer when Stage 2 begins and the detailed figures of the formula components become available.
Comments were made about the timing of the second stage consultation due to the London Mayoral elections, local elections and EU referendum and the purdah imposed before each one. Soon after the EU referendum, parliament will enter the summer recess and will not fully return until after the party conferences in October.
It was confirmed that the Pupil Premium grant will continue until 2019-20 at least. It is expected that funding for LAC through the PP+ grant will increase but it is unclear if the DSG will be cut to meet the cost of this increase.
High Needs Block
A stage one High Needs funding formula and other reforms consultation was also issued on Monday 7th March 2016.
The High Needs Block funding is currently difficult to unpick – we are allocated a lump sum figure and don’t have any knowledge of any calculations behind that figure which doesn’t tie in with the Governments quest for transparency in funding. Research undertaken by the Isos Partnership were published in July 2015 and made 17 proposals on how the SEN funding system might be improved. The three main areas of these proposals are:
· Improvements to the
way funding is allocated to make it fairer and more transparent, and to make
sure that it is better targeted to where the needs are. The proposals include that the department
considers a more formulaic approach to distributing high needs funding from
national to local level;
· Better communication
about how the system is intended to work, and to highlight effective practice. The proposals cover what local and national
government might do to clarify expectations and to achieve greater
transparency;
· Proposals to enable
better decision making by frontline professionals, both those in local
authorities responsible for commissioning SEN provision and those in schools
and colleges who need to plan how to make the provision for their children and
young people with SEN.
The EFA are proposing to introduce a formula base method of distributing High Needs funding from 2017-18 using proxy indicators of need rather than historic spend.
Below is the proposed structure of the High Needs funding formula.
The ‘Children not in good health’ element is from the population census data and Disability Living Allowance data as these were found to give a better indicator than other alternatives such as low birth weight.
There are also proposals to have an overall Minimum Funding Guarantee that would prevent each local authority’s high needs funding from reducing by more than a specified percentage each year.
Summary
The closing date for each consultation is Sunday 17th April 2016.
Keith Howkins (EFA Team Leader for the LA and Funding Policy Team) is attending a NW LMS Officers meeting in Manchester next week which Nicola Unsworth and Anne Jones will be attending. This is an opportunity to gain further insight and understanding of the proposals before our response is submitted.
Appendix A
The proposed building
blocks and factors of the schools national funding formula
*Private finance initiative commitments, split sites and exceptional premises circumstances.
Appendix B
Provisional data sources for each factor in a national funding formula
For each of the factors below, we would expect to take into account local
authorities’ adjustments to data that are submitted through the authority proforma tool process.
Block |
Factor |
Data Source |
Pupil Costs |
Age-weighted pupil
unit |
Number of pupils on
roll at primary, key stage 3 and key stage 4 at each school, as recorded in
the October school census. |
Additional needs |
Deprivation FSM (Current) FSM (Ever 6) IDACI |
Number of pupils
registered as eligible for free school meals as at the October school
census. FSM eligibility is determined
by the household’s benefit entitlement status. The criteria are set out in the
regulations. Number of pupils
registered as eligible for free school meals as at the January census,
matched to FSM data in the national pupil database to identify any pupil who
has been eligible for FSM at some point in the last six years. Number of pupils
whose postcode falls in a lower super output area captured by the IDACI
bands. Data from the October census is
matched to the IDACI dataset, which is published by the Department for
Communities and Local Government every five years (and is a subset of the
indices of multiple deprivation). |
|
Low prior attainment |
Data on the number
of pupils who failed to reach the expected standard in the early years
foundation stage profile or at key stage 2 tests, matched to the October
census via the national pupil database. |
|
English as an
additional language |
Pupils recorded as
EAL in the October school census, on the basis of parental declaration – data
is matched to the preceding 3 years’ October census data for the EAL3
measure. |
School costs |
Lump sum |
Data on schools that
are open at the beginning of the financial year, or will open during the
financial year, as recorded in the authority proforma
tool. |
|
Sparsity |
Year group size:
total number on roll in reception to year 11, divided by number of year
groups present. Distance: derived
from pupil postcodes in October school census. |
|
Business Rates |
Historic data on
actual spend taken from the authority proforma
tool. |
|
Split sites |
Historic data on
actual spend taken from the authority proforma
tool. |
|
PFI |
Historic data on
actual spend taken from the authority proforma
tool. |
|
Exceptional premises
circumstances |
Historic data on
actual spend taken from the authority proforma
tool. |
|
Growth |
Amount held by the
local authority in their growth fund and falling rolls fund in the previous
year. Change in pupil
numbers between October census and authority proforma
tool submission. |
Geographic costs |
Area cost adjustment |
General labour
market data published by the DCLG. If hybrid ACA:
school workforce census data to calculate notional teacher salaries and
DCLG’s GLM data for non-teaching staff costs; data on school spending to
determine the proportion of staffing costs attributable to teaching and
non-teaching expenditure. |
Appendix C
Schools National
Funding Formula Consultation Questions:
1.
Do you
agree with our [the EFA] proposed principles for the funding system?
2.
Do you
agree with our [the EFA] proposal to move to a school-level national funding
formula in 2019-20, removing the requirement for local authorities to set a
local formula?
3.
Do you
agree that the basic amount of funding for each pupil should be different at
primary, key stage 3 and key stage 4?
4.
Do you
agree that we should include a deprivation factor?
Which measures for the deprivation factor do you support?
Pupil-level
only (current FSM and Ever6 FSM)
Area-level
only (IDACI)
Pupil-
and area-level
5.
Do you
agree we should include a low prior attainment factor?
6.
Do you
agree that we should include a factor for English as an additional language?
Do you agree that we should use the EAL3 indicator (pupils registered at any
point during the previous 3 years as having English as an additional language)?
7.
Do you
agree that we should include a lump sum factor?
8.
Do you
agree that we should include a sparsity factor?
9.
Do you
agree that we should include a business rates factor?
10. Do you agree that we should include a split
sites factor?
11. Do you agree that we should include a private
finance initiative factor?
12. Do you agree that we should include an
exceptional premises circumstances factor?
13. Do you agree that we should allocate funding
to local authorities in 2017-18 and 2018-19 based on historic spend for these
factors?
Business
rates
Split
sites
Private
finance initiatives
Other
exceptional circumstances
14. Do you agree that we should include a growth
factor?
15. Do you agree that we should allocate funding
for growth to local authorities in 2017-18 and 2018-19 based on historic spend?
16. Do you agree that we should include an area
cost adjustment?
Which methodology for the area cost adjustment do you support?
general labour market methodology hybrid methodology
17. Do you agree that we should target support
for looked-after children and those who have left care via adoption, special
guardianship or a care arrangements order through the pupil premium plus,
rather than include a looked-after children factor in the national funding
formula?
18. Do you agree that we should not include a
factor for mobility?
19. Do you agree that we should remove the
post-16 factor from 2017-18?
20. Do you agree with our proposal to require
local authorities to distribute all of their schools block allocation to
schools from 2017-18?
21. Do you believe that it would be helpful for
local areas to have flexibility to set a local minimum funding guarantee?
22. Do you agree that we should fund local
authorities’ ongoing responsibilities as set out in the consultation according
to a per-pupil formula?
23. Do you agree that we should fund local
authorities’ ongoing historic commitments based on case-specific information to
be collected from local authorities?
24. Are there other duties funded from the
education services grant that could be removed from the system?
25. Do you agree with our proposal to allow local
authorities to retain some of their maintained schools’ DSG centrally – in
agreement with the maintained schools in the schools forum – to fund the duties
they carry out for maintained schools?
Appendix D
High Needs funding formula and other reforms Consultation
Questions:
1.
Do you
agree with our [the EFA] proposed principles for the funding system?
2.
Do you
agree that the majority of high needs funding should be distributed to local
authorities rather than directly to schools and other institutions?
3.
Do you
agree that the high needs formula should be based on proxy measures of need,
not the assessed needs of children and young people?
4.
Do you
agree with the basic factors proposed for a new high needs formula to
distribute funding to local authorities?
5.
We [the
EFA] are not proposing to make any changes to the distribution of funding for
hospital education, but welcome views as we continue working with
representatives of this sector on the way forward.
6.
Which
methodology for the area cost adjustment do you support?
7.
Do you
agree that we should include a proportion of 2016-17 spending in the formula
allocations of funding for high needs?
8.
Do you
agree with our proposal to protect local authorities’ high needs funding
through an overall minimum funding guarantee?
9.
Given
the importance of schools’ decisions about what kind of support is most
appropriate for their pupils with SEN, working in partnership with parents, we
welcome views on what should be covered in any national guidelines on what
schools offer for their pupils with SEN and disabilities.
10. We are proposing that mainstream schools with
special units receive per pupil amounts based on a pupil count that includes
pupils in the units, plus funding of £6,000 for each of the places in the unit,
rather than £10,000 per place. Do you
agree with the proposed change to the funding of special units in mainstream
schools?
11. We therefore welcome, in response to this
consultation, examples of local authorities that are using centrally retained
funding in a strategic way to overcome barriers to integration and
inclusion. We would be particularly
interested in examples of where this funding has been allocated on an
“invest-to-save” basis, achieving reductions in high needs spending over the
longer term. We would like to publish
any good examples received.
12. We welcome examples of where centrally
retained funding is used to support schools that are particularly inclusive and
have a high proportion of pupils with particular types of SEN, or a
disproportionate number of pupils with high needs.
13. Do you agree that independent special schools
should be given the opportunity to receive place funding directly from the EFA
with the balance in the form of top-up funding from local authorities?
14. We welcome views on the outline and
principles of the proposed changes to post-16 place funding (noting that the
intended approach for post-16 mainstream institutions which have smaller
proportions or numbers of students with high needs, differs from the approach
for this with larger proportions or numbers), and on how specialist provision
in FE colleges might be identified and designated.