Education crisis: Redundancies fear as schools struggle to meet Government savings targets
In an open letter to the Chancellor, the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) and the National Governors' Association (NGA) warned that schools were running out of things to cut.
NAHT general secretary Russell Hobby and Emma Knights, NGA's chief executive, called on Philip Hammond to use the March Budget to provide "desperately" needed funding.
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Hide AdThey wrote: "We are writing to underline the urgency of the school funding crisis and to ask you to use the upcoming Budget to deliver the investment that schools so desperately need.
"Governing boards and school leaders are being forced to make impossible choices as a result of insufficient funding.
"They are doing their best to 'make do', but there are only so many financial efficiencies a school can find before reaching breaking point. Schools are running out of things they can cut.
"For many schools, the only real way they can make the savings the Government is asking for is by making staff redundant."
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Hide AdThey urged the Chancellor to stick to the manifesto pledge to protect school funding.
"Every young person's experience of school matters because it is an investment in the future of our society and economy," they added.
"Greater investment in schools now will mean future costs associated with poor health, crime and unemployment are likely to be lower."