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<p>There were 15,100 more childcare places in 2023 than the previous year, with 12,900
paid staff added to the same period according to the department’s latest Childcare
and early years provider survey (2023).</p><p>To support providers to expand their
provision further, the department is investing over £400 million of additional funding
to uplift the hourly rate for the entitlements next year. This investment consists
of £67 million in new funding to reflect the latest National Living Wage increase,
an additional £57 million to support providers in respect of teachers’ pay and pensions,
and the £288 million for the existing entitlements in 2024/25 announced in the Spring
Budget in March 2023. It also builds on the £204 million of additional investment
to increase funding rates this year. To further support the sector delivering the
expansion of childcare support, the government is confirming that the hourly rate
providers are paid to deliver the free hours offers will increase in line with the
metric used at Spring Budget 2023 for the next two years. This reflects that workforce
costs are the most significant costs for childcare providers and represents an estimated
additional £500 million of investment over two years. Additionally, hundreds of thousands
of children aged 3 and 4 are registered for a 30-hour place, saving eligible working
parents up to £6,900 per child per year, helping even more working parents and making
a real difference to the lives of those families.</p><p>Local authorities are responsible
for ensuring that the provision of childcare is sufficient to meet the requirements
of parents in their area. The department has regular contact with each local authority
in England about their sufficiency of childcare, including supporting them through
our childcare delivery support contract where appropriate.</p><p>The government has
allocated £100 million in capital funding to local authorities to support the expansion
of childcare places and the supply of wraparound care. The funding is anticipated
to deliver thousands of new places across the country.</p><p>On top of the department’s
funding reforms, it is also providing significant support for local authorities to
deliver the early years expansion from April, such as:</p><ul><li>Appointing a delivery
support contractor (Childcare Works) to provide local authorities with support, advice,
guidance and best practice sharing to help them deliver the expansion and deliver
enough childcare places for residents. Coram are part of the Childcare Works consortium,
and the department is delighted to be working with them to support local authorities
to deliver.</li><li>Providing £12 million of delivery support funding to local authorities
in financial year 2023/24, to help them meet the costs associated with the rollout.</li><li>In
February 2024, the department launched a new national recruitment campaign for the
early years and childcare sector, ‘Do something Big, Work with small children’, and
a financial incentives pilot. Eligible joiners and returners will receive a tax-free
payment of up to £1,000. This followed the introduction of workforce flexibilities
to the Early Years Foundation Stage in January 2024.</li><li>The department has also
introduced Skills Bootcamps for Early Years which will create a pathway to accelerated
Level 3 Early Years Apprenticeships.</li></ul>
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