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2,800 new places 'created in failing schools' by city

Supporters of the Government's controversial free schools policy have accused Birmingham City Council of creating 2,800 new primary places at failing schools in the city

Supporters of the Government’s controversial free schools policy have accused Birmingham City Council of creating 2,800 new primary places at failing schools in the city.

The New Schools Network, a charity which receives and community groups on how to set up free schools, criticised the quality of city primary schools as it published a report about new places.

But the comments were condemned as “outrageous” by a city MP.

Steve McCabe (Lab Selly Oak) said the claims were a slur on successful schools which had expanded.

Opponents of free schools, which are funded by central government independent of local authority control, argue that they are often opened in areas which already have sufficient school places, creating problems for existing schools and wasting money.

However, the Free Schools Network said its research showed new schools are needed not only to meet demand for places but also because some existing schools are not currently performing well enough.

It said more than 2,800 new primary places have been created in Birmingham schools that are failing or below average over the past five years.

Birmingham local authority created 10,360 new places in existing schools to meet rising demand but 27 per cent of these, more than one in four, were in schools that Ofsted had judged as “inadequate” or “requires improvement”.