DAD OF BOY WHO DIED AT NURSERY SAYS HUNT'S CHILDCARE PLANS POSE 'MASSIVE RISKS'

The parents of a nine-month-old boy who died when he choked on his food at a nursery has said the government’s planned childcare changes ‘puts lives at risk’.

At last week’s budget, chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced a proposal to increase the staff ratio at nurseries from one adult per four children to one adult per five children.

This would boost capacity, he said, allowing parents to get back to work and helping to get the economy back on track.

But Lewis and Zoe Steeper, whose son Oliver died after becoming unable to breathe while eating at his nursery in September 2021, said the idea posed a ‘massive safeguarding risk’.

Lewis said: ‘I don’t understand how the government thinks taking a staff member out of a room would somehow pass cost savings onto parents.

‘We spoke to hundreds of nurseries over the past two years during our campaign to stop these changes and not a single one of them said they would implement it, even if it went ahead.’

The couple, from Ashford in Kent, previously fought plans to change the ratio in nurseries when they were raised last year.

Together, they launched a petition on the UK parliament website which was signed more than 100,000 times, leading to a debate in the House of Commons last November.

Lewis said: ‘We made the government shelve the plans once, and we can do it again.’

Mr Hunt announced the plans as part of a larger package of changes to childcare in the budget, which also included 30 hours of free childcare for all under-fives from the moment maternity care ends.

That scheme is expected to cost an extra £4 billion.

However, Lewis said: ‘Unfortunately, this £4 billion they are putting into the pot is not going to make a single difference.

‘It poses a massive safeguarding risk on children and puts them at significant risk.

‘We need eyes on children from nine months onwards to two years.’

He added: ‘I just wish that the government would come and spend a day in a nursery and see how people who work in these settings actually deal with these children.

‘They are underpaid, overworked, and they have been abandoned by the government for years.’

A spokesperson for the Department for Education said: ‘The safety of children will always be our utmost priority.

‘The proposed changes to ratios support nurseries by giving them flexibility, but providers are free to staff above these minimum requirements if that is their preference.

‘To keep our youngest children as safe as possible, we are updating the EYFS framework to increase food safety and help prevent choking incidences in early years settings.’

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2023-03-19T11:46:52Z dg43tfdfdgfd