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Budget boost for early years services

Posted: 24 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Chancellor Gordon Brown has boosted funding for child care and early years services by £669m by 2008 - an annual growth rate of more than 17 per cent.

The money will go towards creating 1,700 children's centres - one for each of the 20 per cent poorest wards in England.

The chancellor also announced more financial support for teenagers. As well as introducing a £3 minimum hourly wage for 16 and 17 year olds, he promised a package of short-term measures including giving young people who undertake unwaged training the same financial support as those in school.
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Child care groups have responded warmly to the cash boost for early years services.

The Budget also sets out new measures to encourage non-working parents in couple families into employment even where the other partner is working, and also partners of jobseekers allowance claimants.

There are to be more "Discovery weeks" for lone parents, aimed at boosting their confidence to seek employment, and there will also be more "child care tasters" - giving lone parents the chance to try out child care for a week without committing themselves.

It was also announced in the Budget that extended schools are to be piloted in an extra four areas.

Brown said that there would be a 30 per cent cut in jobs at the Department for Educational and Skills' London headquarters.
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Budget plans to extend the minimum wage to 16 and 17-year olds have met with a broad welcome from children's charities. From October young workers will be entitled to at least £3 per hour.

NCH policy officer George McNamara said young people needed proper protection from the exploitation of unscrupulous employers.

"This brings long-awaited fairness into the workplace and will be applauded by teenagers up and down the country," he added.

Barnardo's, however, was disappointed that the minimum was set at a level it described as "inadequate."


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