News / SEND

£15m to address shortage of SEND places in Bristol

By Alex Seabrook  Thursday Sep 1, 2022

A major investment of £15m will see 204 extra places for pupils with special educational needs in Bristol.

Bristol City Council will use new funding from the Department for Education to expand special needs schools across the city, with the new specialist places created in two years.

The money will be spent on constructing new school buildings and refurbishing current ones.

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Demand for special needs places in Bristol is rapidly rising, and the city has faced several problems with its special educational needs and disability (SEND) provision.

Mayor Marvin Rees said the new investment will help meet this growing demand.

In his blog, Rees said: “We all want children to have the best opportunities in life, no matter their background. That’s why we’re supporting the opening of new schools and expanding existing ones, to make sure we meet the growing demand for school places.”

The council’s cabinet is expected to approve the investment on Tuesday which forms the second phase of a major upgrade of SEND provision in Bristol.

The first phase is creating 142 specialist places by February next year, including a new £8.5m building for the Elmfield School for Deaf Children, due to open by Easter.

Elsewhere, two new high schools will open next year, as demand is also rising for mainstream places. Both will be run by the Oasis Community Learning, and initially be in temporary accommodation, before moving to newly constructed buildings. Parents can apply for places from Monday, September 12.

The new Daventry Road school will open in temporary accommodation in Hengrove next September, next to the existing Oasis Academy John Williams.

It will then move to a planned new building on Daventry Road in Knowle from September 2024.

The new Temple Quarter school will open on Spring Street in Bedminster, before moving to Silverthorne Lane in 2025.

Alex Seabrook is a local democracy reporter for Bristol

Main photo: Bristol City Council 

Read more:
Plans to increase SEND provision significantly delayed
Calls for urgent independent inquiry into Bristol City Council surveillance of SEND parents
Plans approved for much-needed secondary school and hundreds of homes 

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