Cheshire East has no plan in place to deal with its massive special needs budget deficit

By Belinda Ryan - Local Democracy Reporter 30th Jul 2025

The DSG (dedicated school grant) overspend was reported to be about £112.1 million at the end of the 2024/25 financial year. (Photo: Nub News)
The DSG (dedicated school grant) overspend was reported to be about £112.1 million at the end of the 2024/25 financial year. (Photo: Nub News)

Cheshire East has no plan in place to deal with its massive special needs budget deficit, just a seven-year proposal to bring spending back in line with grant income, a councillor said.

The DSG (dedicated school grant) overspend was reported to be about £112.1 million at the end of the 2024/25 financial year.

At this week's meeting of the audit and governance committee, chair Michael Beanland (Con) again expressed concern about the deficit which Cheshire East, like many other councils, is holding as a 'negative reserve'.

Cllr Beanland said: "It isn't recoverable. It's not a seven-year plan to eliminate the deficit, it's a seven-year plan to bring expenditure back in line with the grant incomes.

"There's no provision within this MTFS (medium term financial strategy) for a reduction of the deficit before or even after the seven years…

Cllr Michael Beanland, Poynton West & Adlington, Con Cllr Michael Beanland, Poynton West & Adlington, Con (Photo: Cheshire East)

"I understand there's an override, and it's not required for payment, but this is a draw on the council's finances."

The DSG is a ring-fenced grant handed out by the Department for Education for school budgets.

The high needs funding block of the DSG is used to pay for SEND (special educational needs and disabilities) provision.

But, for many councils, the cost of SEND provision has outstripped government funding by tens of millions of pounds.

To stop local authorities going bust, any deficit associated with the DSG is kept off their books thanks to a statutory override.

This means Cheshire East is holding this deficit in a 'negative reserve', but it is paying interest on it.

The government recently announced it will extend the statutory override to keep councils' SEND spending deficits off their books for another two years, until the end of March 2028.

Cllr Sue Adams (Disley, Con) told the meeting by doing this 'it's really reduced the incentive for people to actually get on top of this, so that's a concern'.

Want to know more about Alsager?

Free from clickbait, pop-up ads and unwanted surveys, Alsager Nub News is a quality online newspaper for our town.

Please consider following Alsager Nub News on Facebook or Twitter

You can also sign up for our weekly newsletter here - it features the top five stories of the week

     

CHECK OUT OUR Jobs Section HERE!
alsager vacancies updated hourly!
Click here to see more: alsager jobs

     

The Ball is in your court. Our long-term GOAL
is to help our local community to grow.

On our part, we are making a connection between local news, local people and local businesses.
This connection is the key to community success.

Now the ball is in your court.
You can support us with a small payment or at least read us for free.
Take a shot yourself and then pass the ball to your friends!
Monthly supporters will enjoy:
Ad-free experience

Share:


Sign-up for our FREE newsletter...

We want to provide alsager with more and more clickbait-free news.

     

...or become a Supporter.
Alsager. Your Town. Your News.

Local news is essential for our community — but it needs your support.
Your donation makes a real difference.
For monthly donators:
Ad-free experience