Alliance voices concern over final stage of early entitlement expansion as applications open

Please find below a comment from the Early Years Alliance following the news that applications for the next phase of the early entitlement expansion – where families of eligible children who will be at least nine months old by September can apply to access 30 hours of funded early years provision a week.

Neil Leitch, CEO of the Early Years Alliance, said:

“Despite the positive spin that the government is putting on the progress of the early entitlement expansion, we remain extremely concerned about the long-term viability of this offer. 

“As the Labour Party rightly highlighted when in opposition, the early years sector in England has been severely underfunded for many years, creating an unsustainable financial pressure on nurseries, pre-schools and childminders across the country.

“Now, despite welcome positive rhetoric on the importance of the early years, not only has this situation not improved, but recent increases in National Insurance contributions and the national minimum and living wage, combined with a tightening of the rules on charging, have – for many providers – made things worse. As our own recent research has found, these combined pressures have meant that a large proportion of providers are likely to be forced to limit the number of funded places they offer or, in some cases, opt out of the offers altogether.

“Add to this the fact we are experiencing one of the worst recruitment and retention crises in recent memory, and it’s clear that without further investment into the sector, current policy is simply unsustainable.  

“If the government is to have any chance of successfully delivering this policy – which means ensuring that parents can not only access a funded place, but on the days they want, at the times they need, and at the setting of their choice – then the solution is clear: it must provide the financial support the sector needs, both now and in the future."