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Conservatives would reform Sure Start

Posted: 14 October 2004 | Subscribe Online


A future Conservative government would make Sure Start work more smoothly with other children's services, said shadow secretary of state for the family Theresa May.

"We are not going to throw Sure Start away but we will need to look at how it could work better," she said.

The programme had significant problems, such as moving child care workers away from areas such as health visiting and nurseries, she said.

"It is noticeable in areas where there is Sure Start that other provision - public and private - has closed," May said.
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She added that the Conservatives would consider ways to make the programme work with other services.

She said the party would publish details of a better deal for carers by Christmas.

Child carers, in particular, experienced problems and were often bullied because their lives were different, she said.

Meanwhile, Labour's policy of closing schools for children with special needs would be scrapped, said shadow education secretary Tim Collins.
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In a speech about the party's education policy, he said the Tories would focus on the most vulnerable children, reversing Labour's inclusive education drive.

"Some benefit from mainstream education, many do not. We must have diversity," Collins said, pledging to make an "immediate order" for closures to end.


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