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"description": "Reform bosses are being urged to rethink proposals for Leicestershire’s Early Years Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) service",
"path": "/council-urged-to-rethink-unfair-send-proposals/",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-12T16:30:44.000Z",
"site": "https://www.leicester.news",
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"textContent": "This story was written by the ****local democracy reporting service (LDRS),**** a BBC-funded scheme to improve the coverage of issues relating to local democracy. The Leicester Gazette has been a partner in the scheme since March 2024, and so receives some stories as part of it.\n\n****Because LDRS reporters are not employed by the Gazette, their stories do not follow our style guide or**** standards code****.****\n\n\n Learn more\n \n\nReform bosses are being urged to rethink 'unfair' proposals for Leicestershire’s Early Years Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) service.\n\nLeicestershire County Councillor Naomi Bottomley, who has experience working with SEND, said she was concerned by the ongoing dispute between the council and members of the National Education Union (NEU) within the Early Years SEND service.\n\nThe councillor said the dispute, which centres on plans to make teachers redundant before requiring them to reapply for their own roles – a practice commonly known as fire and rehire – is “potentially unfair” on staff.\n\nUnions say the move would see local staff moved off teachers’ terms and conditions, while the requirement for Qualified Teacher Status is removed too – something which adds to “uncertainty about future jobs and responsibilities” in the sector, supporters claim.\n\nCllr Bottomley’s comments come after specialist teachers supporting young children with physical, sensory, behavioural and learning disabilities announced they were to go on strike this week over the row.\n\nWriting on Saturday, June 6, Deborah Taylor, the Conservative leader of the opposition said she was aware members of the NEU had voted to take strike action.\n\nShe said: “We recognise the concerns raised by staff and their union, particularly regarding the removal of Qualified Teacher Status requirements and the possible impact on children with complex needs.\n\n“Staff have consistently highlighted the importance of maintaining high levels of specialist knowledge, continuity of support and trusted relationships with families and education settings.\n\n## Join the conversation\n\nOur app is more than just a way to keep up – it's a gateway to award-winning journalism and the local community.\n\n\n\n\n__Want to support our work?__ Click here for membership__.__\n\n“The proposals put forward by the council would introduce changes to roles, as well as terms and conditions of employment.”\n\nAcknowledging the council’s intent to modernise the roles “and provide year-round support”, the leader of the opposition said, however, “we understand why these proposals have created uncertainty and concern among staff.”\n\nShe raised concerns about the five-day strike, taking place this week, saying it was expected to disrupt early years specialist provision across the county, “affecting support for some of Leicestershire’s most vulnerable young children”.\n\nBoth Deborah Taylor and Green party councillor Naomi Bottomley urged Reform-led Leicestershire County Council to “engage in meaningful discussions” with the union.\n\nNaomi Bottomley said: “Early Years SEND professionals provide vital support to some of the most vulnerable children and families in our county. Their expertise and experience must be valued and protected.\n\n“At a time when demand for SEND support is growing, we should be strengthening, not undermining, the specialist workforce that children rely on.\n\n“I am calling on Leicestershire County Council to engage constructively with the NEU, to reassure staff that any new roles will be genuinely equivalent in level, pay and expectations, and to work towards a negotiated solution that safeguards both staff and the quality of support provided to children and families.”\n\nResponding to the announcement regarding the NEU strike action, Leicestershire County Council said it was disappointed staff are striking over changes which it claimed were designed to ensure children with additional needs receive the right support all year round.\n\nA spokesperson said: “This is about making sure our most vulnerable children and families receive consistent, year-round support. Modernising the service will ensure we can support children with additional needs to access wraparound and holiday care, which is not currently available, and we’re following the correct, legal process required to do this. To be clear, this is not ‘fire and rehire’.\n\n* * *\n\n**Before you go…** We've recently surpassed 1,000 subscribers, which is amazing considering we're a small team on a shoestring budget.\n\nNow, we're ready for the next stage of the Leicester Gazette. **Download our new app and get all of our journalism anytime, anywhere.**\n\nThe app connects with **Bluesky** , **Mastodon** and **Threads** , giving you access to a network of around 60 million people. It's a safer, more meaningful alternative to mainstream social media – owned by the community.\n\n* * *",
"title": "Council urged to rethink ‘unfair’ SEND proposals",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-12T18:30:46.421Z"
}