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无码天堂 gives evidence at Treasury Select Committee

The 无码天堂鈥檚 chief executive, Neil Leitch, gave evidence yesterday at the Treasury Select Committee鈥檚 inquiry on business rates. 

The session was chaired by former Education Secretary Nicky Morgan - and the 无码天堂 provided the sole witness representing the early years sector.

The invitation to give oral evidence followed the 无码天堂鈥檚 written consultation response which called for the government to create and fund a business rate relief scheme in England similar to schemes available to childcare premises in Scotland and Wales. 

The panel found heard that business rates relief is just one cost faced by a sector that is woefully underfunded. He was clear that childminders would not benefit from any exemption, nor would childcare premises that are run by charities which currently get relief 鈥 and these organisations are still closing at alarming rates. However, for childcare premises that do not enjoy any relief through the existing, complex system, business rates often represent the second most important cost and can mean the difference between investing or closing down.

Early years in unusual position

He said: 鈥淲e are in an unusual position as much as we are trying to deliver a free entitlement that is commercially restrictive, and just about every report, including one from the Treasury Select Committee, has found that the sector is grossly underfunded.

鈥淲e have a mandatory requirement in terms of space, we are inspected by Ofsted, and the environments are absolutely critical. We have had more and more drives in recent years for outdoor play, which means we have to invest in equipment and resources. So it鈥檚 fundamental for us. When you walk into a nursery it has to feel right, it has to feel safe and it has to feel good for parents, and that means investment.鈥

When asked about why local authorities may not be offering business rates relief to childcare premises, Mr Leitch said: 鈥淪uccessive early years ministers have tried to steer local authorities to do what they would describe as the right thing and give discretionary relief. At this point in time we are only aware of one local authority that has done so which is Harrogate. I think there is a general conflict of interest here. If you are faced with cuts yourself, and then you have to give even more money away, you鈥檙e conflicted. Isn鈥檛 it interesting that when a directive is given by either Scotland or Wales, it happens. It鈥檚 a tall order to expect local authorities which have all sorts of challenges to 鈥渏ust do the right thing鈥. So it needs a strong directive and I think we should look to Scotland and Wales and follow the example.

Cost of doing nothing

鈥淭he cost of not doing it is enormous, the position will get worse, and somebody needs to be brave enough to do something about it. We鈥檙e dealing with social responsibility. Just last week the Social Mobility Commission said we should be extending the 30 hours. Then we鈥檝e got the economic position of getting parents back into the working environment - so the cost of not doing this is much greater than the cost of giving relief.鈥

"We should adequately fund the sector. We should pay the right rate, and have an annual review which keeps it in line. There is no denying that rate relief is a tool, one of the tools that should be there and shouldn鈥檛 stifle expansion. If it stifles expansion, that鈥檚 contrary to everything we would want.鈥

The Treasury Select Committee's report on business rate will be published in the coming months. 


If you're struggling to remain financially sustainable because of rising costs such as business rates - join the Fair Future Funding Action Week to campaign for fairer funding for the early years.