HC Deb 29 March 2004 vol 419 cc1178-81W
Mr. Milburn

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills if he will list by local authority area how many children are(a) aged under five years old and (b) aged under eight years, and the number of registered child care places. [161984]

Margaret Hodge

The information requested is shown in the table. Statistics on the number of childcare places registered in England were published on 19 February 2004 in a report by OfSTED "Registered Childcare Providers and Places in England, 31 December 2003". The report is available on the OfSTED website, www.ofsted.gov.uk/ publications.

Number of children1 aged under five and eight years old and the number of registered childcare places2,3,4
LEA name Children aged under five years old Children aged under eight years old Number of registered childcare places
England 2,863,700 4,688,500 1,392,800
North East 134,000 223,700 58,800
Hartlepool 5,100 8,700 2,100
Middlesbrough 8,000 13,300 4,700
Redcar and Cleveland 7,300 12,400 2,800
Stockton-on-Tees 10,100 16,900 4,400
Darlington 5,600 9,300 3,400
Durham 25,200 42,300 9,800
Northumberland 15,500 2,600 8,100
Gateshead 10,500 17,200 4,000
Newcastle-upon-Tyne 13,900 22,600 7,100
North Tyneside 10,100 16,800 4,400
South Tyneside 8,000 13,600 3,900
Sunderland 14,700 24,600 4,100
North West 384,800 636,900 195,700
Halton 7,100 11,500 4,000
Warrington 11,400 18,700 8,300
Cheshire 36,700 61,400 23,500
Cumbria 24,400 41,100 11,100
Bolton 16,200 26,700 7,700
Bury 10,900 18,000 7,300
Manchester 25,400 40,600 12,900
Oldham 15,000 24,200 7,400
Rochdale 13,300 21,800 6,800
Salford 12,100 19,900 6,200
Stockport 15,800 26,300 7,900
Tameside 12,500 20,700 6,300
Trafford 11,900 20,700 6,300
Wigan 17,000 28,300 8,400
Blackburn with Darwen 10,400 17,000 4,100
Blackpool 7,400 12,400 4,000
Lancashire 63,300 105,200 31,000
Number of children1 aged under five and eight years old and the number of registered childcare places2,3,4
LEA name Children aged under five years old Children aged under five years old Number of registered childcare places
Knowsley 9,000 15,100 3,500
Liverpool 24,000 39,200 9,600
St.Helens 9,800 16,500 3,800
Sefton 14,200 24,500 5,300
Wirral 17,000 28,500 8,800
Yorkshire and Humberside 285,300 471,800 120,800
East Riding of Yorkshire 15,800 26,700 8,400
Kingston Upon Hull, City of 14,200 23,900 4,700
North East Lincolnshire 9,200 15,500 2,800
York 9,100 14,800 5,300
North Yorkshire 29,100 49,100 17,900
Barnsley 12,100 20,500 3,500
Doncaster 16,600 27,400 4,900
Rotherham 14,600 24,200 4,700
Sheffield 28,300 46,600 12,900
Bradford 33,600 53,700 10,800
Calderdale 11,800 19,400 6,500
Kirkless 25,100 40,900 11,000
Leeds 39,700 65,600 19,200
Wakefield 17,600 29,300 5,000
East Midlands 234,600 388,500 121,000
Derby 13,500 21,900 6,800
Derbyshire 39,600 66,500 17,400
Leicester City 18,900 30,200 8,400
Rutland 1,800 3,000 1,200
Leicestrshire 33,800 55,900 20,000
Lincolnshire 33,500 56,400 18,600
Northamptonshire 38,600 63,200 19,000
Nottingham 15,000 24,200 7700
Nottinghamshire 39,900 67,200 21,900
West Midlands 312,300 513,200 151,800
Herefordshire 9,200 15,400 5,800
Worcestershire 29,600 49,300 18,000
Telford and Wrekin 10,200 16,800 5,600
Shropshire 14,700 24,700 8,500
Stroke-on-Trent 13,400 21,800 5,700
Staffordshire 43,600 72,500 25,800
Warwickshire 28,200 46,700 16,000
Birmingham 69,300 111,000 28,100
Coventry 18,300 29,900 8,500
Dudley 17,100 28,400 6,200
Sandwell 17,900 29,200 5,600
Solihull 10,900 18,600 7,000
Walsall 16,100 26,300 5,200
Wolverhampton 13,800 22,600 5,800
East of England 315,300 518,000 156,800
Luton 13,200 21,100 4,000
Bedfordshire 24,000 39,100 12,300
Peterborough 10,100 16,600 6,600
Cambridgeshire 31,800 51,900 20,000
Southend-on-Sea 9,500 15,600 4,100
Thurrock 9,800 15,700 3,500
Essex 75,800 124,800 33,900
Hertfordshire 63,900 104,100 34,600
Norfolk 39,900 66,900 20,100
Suffolk 37,300 62,200 17,700
London 472,400 742,800 182,500
Inner London 189,500 290,200 69,200
City of London 300 400 400
Camden 12,100 18,500 5,100
Hackney 16,900 25,500 3,800
Hammersmith and Fulham 10,300 15,500 3,600
Haringey 14,800 23,000 3,900
Islington 10,900 16,800 5,100
Lambeth 17,800 27,200 6,400
Lewisham 17,300 27,000 6,300
Newham 20,400 32,300 5,500
Southwark 17,100 26,600 7,600
Towers Hamlets 15,300 23,500 3,800
Number of children1 aged under five and eight years old and the number of registered childcare places2,3,4
LEA name Children aged under five years old Children aged under eight year old Number of registered childcare places
Wandsworth 16,400 24,500 9,500
Westminster 9,900 14,400 4,000
Outer London 282,900 452,600 113,300
Barking and Dagenham 12,300 19,900 3,100
Barnet 20,100 32,300 8,000
Bexley 13,000 21,400 5,100
Brent 16,300 25,600 5,700
Bromley 18,200 29,200 9,100
Croydon 21,900 35,600 9,500
Baling 18,800 29,700 7,800
Enfield 18,100 29,000 6,100
Greenwich 15,500 24,100 6,200
Harrow 12,000 19,500 4,900
Havering 12,200 20,600 4,600
Hillingdon 15,600 25,500 6,300
Hounslow 13,900 21,800 4,500
Kingston-upon-Thames 9,100 14,300 4,400
Merton 12,300 19,200 5,200
Redbridge 15,400 25,000 5,400
Richmond-upon-Thames 11,800 17,900 6,400
Sutton 11,200 18,200 4,500
Waltham Forest 15,200 23,800 6,500
South East 462,000 757,400 261,900
Bracknell Forest 7,300 11,900 4,400
Windsor and Maidenhead 8,100 12,900 5,200
West Berkshire 8,600 14,100 5,600
Reading 8,600 13,600 5,200
Slough 8,100 13,000 2,300
Wokingham 8,900 14,600 6,300
Milton Keynes 14,200 23,000 8,300
Buckinghamshire 30,000 48,600 17,200
Brighton and Hove 12,900 20,500 7,100
East Sussex 25,700 42,900 14,100
Portsmouth 10,700 17,100 6,600
Southampton 11,700 19,100 6,800
Hampshire 70,400 116,600 42,200
Isle of Wight 6,200 10,700 3,400
Medway 15,800 26,100 7,900
Kent 76,900 127,600 38,300
Oxfordshire 35,000 56,600 22,100
Surrey 61,500 100,200 36,500
West Sussex 41,400 68,300 22,400
South West 263,000 436,200 143,500
Bath and North East Somerset 8,800 14,300 4,500
Bristol, City of 22,700 35,700 10,100
North Somerset 10,300 17,100 4,900
South Gloucestershire 14,700 24,500 7,700
Cornwall 25,600 42,600 12,200
Isles of Scilly 100 200 100
Torbay 6,000 10,300 2,400
Plymouth 12,800 21,100 6,500
Devon 33,900 57,600 20,000
Bournemouth 8,000 13,100 4,600
Poole 6,900 11,500 3,200
Dorset 18,100 30,900 9,000
Gloucestershire 31,600 52,100 20,500
Somerset 26,500 44,200 15,900
Swindon 11,000 18,100 6,700
Wiltshire 26,000 42,900 15.200
1Mid year estimates 2002.
2 Registered places are not the number of places occupied, nor the number of children who may benefit from receiving places through providers offering sessions at different times of the day. The number of registered places is likely to be higher than the actual number of registered places as not all providers will immediately inform Ofsted that they have ceased their provision. For about 7 per cent. of providers, the database does not hold the number of registered places. In these cases, the number of places has been estimated and included in the figures shown.
3Figures are rounded to the nearest hundred. Due to rounding, data may differ from that published by Ofsted.
4Includes childminders, full day care and sessional day care, out of school care and crèches.

Mr. Milburn

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills what plans he has to register sitting services as accredited child care providers. [161988]

Margaret Hodge

[holding answer 18 March 2004]Sitter services are becoming increasingly popular, particularly in Scotland, and we are actively investigating the role they could play in England. We believe they can be very useful as a means of enabling parents, especially lone parents, to work atypical hours, and for providing parents of disabled children with child care in their home or with respite care. In particular, using a sitter service to provide home-based child care removes the need for the parent to act as employer. The availability of such a service could also make it much easier for 24 hour service sector employers to recruit and retain employees.

Currently, sitter services do not have to be registered under the Children Act. However, as announced in the Budget, we shall be consulting in the early summer on extending the scope of accredited child care through a new light touch voluntary scheme, to be implemented by April 2005. Accreditation would enable eligible parents to gain working tax credit support for their child care costs, such support currently not being available for users of sitter services. Child care carried out in the parents' home will be considered as part of this consultation.

Lynne Jones

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills if he will make a statement on the(a) availability and (b) affordability of quality child care.[162621]

Margaret Hodge

The National Childcare Strategy was established in 1998 to ensure that accessible, affordable and quality child care for children up to the age of 14, and 16 for those with special needs, is available in every area.

We have funded a substantial expansion in child care provision of the public, private and voluntary sectors, with a wide variety of types of child care—nurseries, childminders, before and after school provision increasingly delivered alongside early education and other family services—to ensure diversity and choice for parents. To ensure quality National Standards for Under Eights day care and child minding were introduced from September 2001. They set a national benchmark below which no provider may fall. Responsibility for registration and inspection transferred from local authorities to the Early Years Directorate of Ofsted at that time.

By December 2003, more than 920,000 new child care places had been created since 1997, benefiting over 1.6 million children. This means that we have met our target of creating new places for 1.6 million children by March 2004, and are on track to create places for over 2 million by 2006.

At January 2004, 300,000 lower and middle income families were benefiting from the child care element of the new working tax credit, 120,000 more than benefited under the previous arrangements through working families tax credit—and over six times as many as the 47,000 who benefited from the child care disregard under the previous administration's family credit.

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