Karen Bradley, Member of Parliament for Staffordshire Moorlands has welcomed today’s announcement from the Department for Education that Biddulph High School and James Bateman Middle School will receive part of the £450 million investment to improve school buildings across the country.
859 academies, sixth-form colleges and voluntary aided schools in every region of the country will receive a share of a £456 million pot created to help refurbish and repair school buildings. The funding will ensure that pupils can learn in safe, warm and energy efficient classrooms.
Overall, the government has committed £1.8 billion of capital funding for the financial year 2023-24 to improve the condition of school buildings – including £1.1 billion for local authorities, large multi-academy trusts and voluntary aided bodies announced in March.
Karen said:
“It is great news that two of our local schools - Biddulph High School and James Bateman Middle School will receive part of the £450 million investment from the Condition Improvement Fund.”
Minister for the School System, Baroness Diana Barran MBE said:
“Our Condition Improvement Fund has already completed over eleven thousand projects, making a difference to pupils and teachers across the country. These projects help to create safer learning environments that make a difference to the quality of education for pupils.
“It’s hugely important that every school has access to high-quality learning facilities and these funding allocations will make sure that responsible bodies can start to plan ahead and get projects started to replace roofs, boilers and windows – so pupils and teachers can learn and work in a comfortable space.”
The Department has allocated over £15 billion since 2015 to support the government’s priority for schools to have safe, well-maintained facilities that support a high-quality education for pupils.
The announcement follows on from 239 new school buildings confirmed in December as part of the Schools Rebuilding Programme, with 400 out of 500 schools and sixth form colleges now been selected for rebuilds through the ten-year programme.