
MANCHESTER is to close all council-run Sure Start services and nurseries and end day care to slash another £21million from public spending.
Nearly all of its 460 early years staff will lose their jobs as a result of the planned cuts.
Day-care centres will be kept open as meeting or activity spaces for groups or rented out to other organisations.
For the first-time ever the city council will cease to provide any day care for young children – from new born babies to 5-year-olds. All Sure Start provision will end.
Council chiefs say the changes will be phased in over four years and will affect the 11 per cent of families who use local authority daycare facilities.
A 90-day consultation period will begin on October 3rd.
The council had hoped that new organisations – social enterprises, voluntary organisations, church groups and charities – would take over early years services as part of £170million worth of savings, forced by the Coalition cuts.
But its believed that few organisations had come forward, leaving the council with no other option but to scrap the service entirely.
Now 60 outreach posts will be created with every family of a newborn baby visited at home by an outreach worker who will stay in touch until the child is three. Parents will also get a monthly newsletter advising them on their child’s development.
From September 2012, the council’s legal requirement to provide 15 hours a week early education for three to four-year-olds will be delivered through the private, voluntary and independent sectors and schools.
Parents have formed a ‘Save Manchester Sure Start’ campaign against the cuts.
They say: “There are many reasons why they shouldn’t dismantle the Sure Start service and their plans to solely focus on the most vulnerable families will leave those families with universal needs at a far greater risk of falling into the vulnerable and needy groups.”
One parent of a 3-year-old said: “ This will be a big blow for working parents who rely on the daycare services.”
In his Leaders Blog, Council leader Sir Richard Leese described the planned cuts as a “difficult decision.”
“This will involve very radical changes…The Council, which incidentally only provides 11% of the daycare in the city will withdraw as a direct provider of day care but will continue to ensure all 3 and 4 year olds get the 15 hours a week free daycare they are entitled to alongside a new universal offer focusing on 0-3 year olds with the most service going to greatest need.
“Targeted ” assertive outreach ” should take the proportion of children reached from under 30% to nearer a 100% , and children centres will be maintained as community hubs. Sure Start will do what it was always intended to, give those children who need it most, the support to get a good start in live, something that’s good for them, their families, and the city as a whole.”
The council’s report can be read at: /egovdownloads/UrgentEarlyYears.pdf