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Children's funding in Kent slashed by a quarter per child

Some of the UK’s leading children’s charities have revealed that funding available for children’s services in Kent has fallen by a quarter per child since 2010.

The new analysis of official figures by Action for Children, Barnardo’s, NSPCC, The Children’s Society and the National Children’s Bureau has identified "kids’ cuts hotspots" across the South East where councils have faced the biggest real-term drop in funding.

In Kent, there has been a 25% drop in money available.

Scroll down to listen to mum Alexandra Chatfield from Rainham

Funding for children's services has fallen by 25% in the county. Picture: Think Stock
Funding for children's services has fallen by 25% in the county. Picture: Think Stock

In 2010/11 funding per child and young person for all children services except schools and early education was £668.37, now in 2007/18 it has fallen by £166.11 to £502.26 per child.

In Medway the figure has fallen by 30% during the same period from £743.90 to £521.21, a fall of £222.70.

Nationally, councils are facing a £3 billion funding gap for children’s services by 2025, with many services having already been stripped back or shut down.

Slough makes the top 20 worst-hit councils with funding slashed by 40%, followed by Southampton (37%), Reading (36%), Portsmouth (36%) and Milton Keynes (35%).

Thousands more children and young people could fall into crisis if these cuts continue. Picture: Think Stock
Thousands more children and young people could fall into crisis if these cuts continue. Picture: Think Stock

More than 1,000 children’s centres have closed since 2009, while 760 youth centres have shut since 2012 in the UK.

The charities are warning thousands more children and young people could fall into crisis if these cuts continue.

Julie Bentley, chief executive at Action for Children, said: “Children’s services are at breaking point and these alarming figures reveal the true scale of the devastating and dangerous funding cuts made year after year by successive governments.

“Every day at Action for Children we see that children’s services can be a lifeline for families - from helping mums suffering with post-natal depression or families struggling to put food on the table, to spotting children quietly living in fear of domestic abuse or neglect.

1,000 children’s centres have closed in this country since 2009. Picture: Think Stock
1,000 children’s centres have closed in this country since 2009. Picture: Think Stock

"Thousands of families across the South East rely on these services to step in and stop problems spiralling out of control.

“With the number of child protection cases and children being taken into care at their highest for a decade, it’s unthinkable to continue forcing councils to make crippling cuts to services.

"Without urgent cash from central government, thousands more children at risk of neglect and abuse will slip through the cracks and into crisis.”

Despite cuts to funding for children’s services, many councils have sought to protect this area as best they can - with spending falling by less than the funding drop.

Councils may be making up the difference by drawing on reserves or slashing spending on other areas - but the charity alliance stressed neither approach is sustainable in the long term.

Nick Roseveare, chief executive at The Children’s Society added: “Vulnerable children are continuing to pay the price as councils face a toxic cocktail of funding cuts and soaring demand for help.

"This shocking analysis lays bare the enormous scale of this funding challenge, which is making it near impossible for councils to offer vital early support to children and young people to prevent problems escalating.

“Funding cuts are not only an inhumane economy, they are also a false one.

"The reductions in early help for children they lead to simply intensify the need for more costly interventions further down the road - like taking children into care as they face growing risks, including everything from substance misuse and mental health problems, to repeatedly going missing, and being sexually or criminally exploited.

“The government now faces a stark choice at the next Spending Review: either continue to leave councils short of the money they need to keep children safe, or address the funding gap and give some of our most vulnerable young people hope of a brighter future.”

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