I move:
That Dáil Éireann:
notes that:
— there is an ongoing failure by the State to adequately plan for school places for children with special or additional educational needs;
— parents have resorted to sleeping outside the Department of Education to raise awareness of the lack of appropriate places;
— significant sections of the Education for Persons with Special Educational Needs (EPSEN) Act 2004 remain un-commenced, and a review of the EPSEN Act was begun in 2021 with a public consultation in 2023 but to date no report or recommendations have been published;
— schools that have been assessed as requiring additional Special Needs Assistant (SNA) positions are being blocked from recruiting for these essential roles;
— there is no timeframe or sufficient budgetary provision in place for ensuring the national provision of in-school therapies through the Educational Therapy Support Service (ETSS), building on the work of the School Inclusion Model pilot; and
— the training and supports provided to teachers, SNAs, and other educational staff have not kept pace with developments in the field of additional needs education;
recalls that:
— 126 children with Special Educational Needs (SEN) had no school place at the start of this school year in September, and the number of children accessing the Home Tuition Grant scheme due to the lack of an SEN placement has increased;
— there is no national centralised system operated by the National Council for Special Education (NCSE) to determine sufficiently in advance the number of additional special educational school places required;
— there are no protocols in place for the sharing of information on SEN between pre-schools, primary schools, post primary schools and special schools to support children as they advance through the educational system; and
— 14,221 children were overdue an assessment of needs in December 2024, nearly 13,000 children are waiting for initial contact with a Children's Disability Network Team, and tens of thousands of children are on primary care wait lists for treatment, adding further pressure on schools and educators to support children with additional unmet needs;
recognises that:
— parents and educators continue to have significant concerns about the current system of planning for SEN provision where schools are put under pressure at short notice to open classes without adequate resourcing, appropriate accommodation or training for staff, and with minimal specialised support; and
— 399 new special classes were announced for the 2025/26 school year earlier this month, but many children will struggle to secure places appropriate to their needs in their local community; and
calls on the Government to:
— ensure the right of every child to an appropriate school place in their general locality is fulfilled in September 2025;
— introduce a central application system for special educational places to commence for the 2026/27 school year, and develop protocols on the sharing of information at every step of the educational system;
— provide appropriate means of transport for children with additional educational needs to access their school place;
— guarantee that every school will receive sufficient funding for the full equipping of classrooms including modular builds, sensory and play spaces, and assistive technology when new special classes are opened;
— publish the finalised review of the EPSEN Act and commit to bringing forward amending proposals as necessary and to commencing the long delayed measures;
— provide a timeline for the national rollout of in-school therapists through the ETSS to provide certainty for schools and parents, and introduce play, art, music and other relevant therapies and in-school counselling where appropriate;
— lift the arbitrary cap on SNAs, and ensure that positions are funded when the NCSE has recommended a post is required, remove the 72 hour obligation on SNAs, and continue to support the professionalisation of the SNA role;
— introduce an initial teacher education programme for student teachers allowing them to complete at least one school placement in an additional needs setting, and introduce free upskilling in SEN for existing teachers; and
— ensure every teacher is fully trained in seizure first aid, amend the assault leave scheme, and develop a new position in schools of a Special Education Needs Officer.
I will start off with how interesting it is that the Government has chosen to oppose our motion so rigorously. The Minister knows as well as I do that what we are requesting is needed but I now question, looking at the Government's amendment, whether the Department realises or understands the extent of the concerns raised daily by genuine families.
Since being elected to the House in December, one of the biggest issues brought to my attention has been that of school places, or the lack thereof, and special educational needs as a whole. Today, we are tabling a motion to support the families of children with additional needs, families who slept outside the Minister's Department, protested through the streets of Cork city and established equality and education groups right throughout the country.
In 2025, no child should be left without an appropriate school place within his or her own locality. There are two important parts to that statement, namely, "appropriate" and the words "within his or her own locality." We in the Labour Party will no longer accept figures being thrown around the place like the Taoiseach did yesterday regarding the number of classes being opened in mainstream or special schools and about having the highest number of SNAs we have ever had in our system. The reality is Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael have led Governments for the life of this State. It is a complete failure of the State to adequately resource our schools with infrastructure, teachers, SNAs and genuine long-term supports. Now, the Department finds itself scrambling at the eleventh hour to paper over the cracks of this Government's making.
We make nine requests in our motion. They are genuine and come from parents and the various educational organisations I met throughout the country in recent months. The word "appropriate" is essential when describing the sanctioning of new school places or classrooms for children with additional needs. I was lucky and grateful to get the opportunity up until not so long ago to teach in a special educational needs setting. Unfortunately, there were students in that classroom with varying needs. It was not an appropriate setting. We need to realise that just because opening a class adds to the figure of new classes, it does not necessarily mean every child's needs are being met.
Schools in the locality are vital. The greatest thing we can do for children with additional needs is to integrate them into their communities, show them the areas they live in and provide them with support to use their amenities. However, if they are travelling long distances in the morning and afternoon, that is not possible. Parents of these children met the Minister and the NCSE just last month and were informed that there was no central application system for children with special educational needs. When I spoke to them, they were horrified by this. It is an immediate and vital request. We need to be able to track the number of children who need support. We have the data but what we do not have is the political will. The Minister controls the purse strings. Unfortunately, we do not, so we are bringing solutions forward in this forum.
Children of schoolgoing age should be a priority. I guarantee that, if I went into the centre of Cork or Dublin or anywhere else throughout the country and stopped a person to ask if he or she believed this Government of Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and regional Independents is doing enough to resource our schools, I could nearly guess the answer. The stories parents have shared with me and my colleagues in the Labour Party in recent months are harrowing. I have such sympathy and empathy for these families and children, but they do not want that. They want to see correct action. It should not have to come to a stage where they are forced to protest.
I was lucky up until recently to be in schools with such dedicated special educational needs co-ordinators. These are not stand-alone positions, as the Minister will know, but assistant principal roles. It is also important to note that the extra money for this role is pitiful. The role is so broad and intensive that I have seen at first hand these teachers coming in on their Easter, summer and mid-term breaks to cover the administrative work that goes with the job. That should not be the case. The SENCo role should be a stand-alone position. I spoke with a SENCo last Wednesday, who taught me previously. She said she was in the school and conveyed to me that she was "inundated, tired, exhausted and worn out", to use her words. That should not be the case. School staff are going above and beyond for their students and, more importantly, they are putting students at the centre of learning. Unfortunately, as we all heard at the teacher conferences last week, they believe they are not getting the resources from central government.
I have met several charities, educational and advocacy groups in recent months. Their requests are not being recognised. I implore the Minister to consult these groups on any new policy initiatives. They are the ones on the ground who understand the issues, are speaking with parents and students, and who must play an important role in developing policy.
Having worked with such dedicated and hardworking SNAs, I can see how undervalued they are in our education system. I ask the Minister to get rid of the 72-hour obligation on SNAs. I have seen SNAs being used for various tasks, mainly at the end of the school year, to meet these hours. They find themselves cleaning out school lockers, cleaning classrooms and doing administrative work that is not under their remit. How does the Minister think this makes an SNA feel? They do the work because they are hardworking individuals but if asked, they would all say they were undervalued and often went unnoticed in the work they were doing.
SNA provision can never be capped. If the NCSE and the SENO tell the Department that the school must be sanctioned an SNA, it must be done. I asked previously in this House about an SNA freeze. The Department and the Taoiseach assured me that no such directive had been sent out. Why did a school principal then come to me and tell me this was what the school had been told? Like many parts of the Government, there is a complete lack of accountability.
The school therapists initiative is a fantastic PR stunt. We cannot get therapists to fill our HSE roles, yet the Minister says we will roll them out in special schools.
Where is the Government getting these therapists from? Please provide the figures and information on the incentives. We cannot allow schools to believe that they are going to get therapists when it is just not possible.
In its amendment, the Government will state that 3,700 new special classes will be available across the country for the coming school year, which should ensure that every child has access to a school place in his or her locality. The three words "which should ensure" are not the most comforting or confident language that parents contacting my office want to see. It is complete guesswork because there is no central application system. The Government does not know whether these special schools will ensure that every child will get a school place in the locality. That is a fault of this Government's own making. It committed to introducing this application system in the programme for Government, but when will that be? Is it the next time academic year or will it be the academic year five years from now?
Another failure of this Government is the EPSEN Act. Failure to implement part of the Act is not acceptable. Section 13 outlines that the Ministers for education, children and health will provide the moneys and other resources as determined by the Minister for the purposes of the preparation and implementation of education plans. It strikes me that, since 2004, this has not been introduced. The Minister will have the power to provide the money needed. I do not want to hear any more percentages or a figure of how much of the education budget is going to special education. That is probably in the Minister's speech. It is not enough. There is no point denying it. Until appropriate plans are in place, do not just keep throwing money at the issue.
Introducing Bills and motions is providing solutions, so the Government cannot beat us with the "no solutions" stick. If the Government is not willing to take them on board, that is the Government's mistake, not ours. We will continue to advocate on behalf of the most vulnerable people in our society.