
1 

(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Education Standards Fund (England) Regulations 2001 and shall come into force on 1st April 2001.
(2) These Regulations apply only in relation to England.
2 

(1) In these Regulations—
 “the 1989 Act”means the Local Government and Housing Act 1989;
 “the 1996 Act ” means the Education Act 1996;
 “the 1998 Act ” means the School Standards and Framework Act 1998;
 “advanced skills teacher” means a teacher who has been certified by an assessor appointed by the Secretary of State for Education and Employment as eligible for appointment to that post and who has been so appointed;
 “approved expenditure” means any expenditure which is approved as provided in regulation 3 below;
 “asylum seeker” means a person who has made a claim for asylum which has been recorded by the Secretary of State as having been made and which has not been recorded by the Secretary of State as having been finally determined or abandoned;
 “claim for asylum” means a claim that it would be contrary to the United Kingdom’s obligations under the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees done at Geneva on 28th July 1951 and the Protocol to that Convention for him to be removed from, or required to leave, the United Kingdom;
 “class” means a group in which pupils are taught in an ordinary teaching session;
 “determine” means determine by notice in writing;
 “education authority” means a local education authority;
 “Excellence in Cities” means the programme of action by the Department for Education and Employment to raise education standards in selected urban areas;
 “family literacy programmes” means programmes which enable parents to improve their own literacy skills while helping their children to learn to read and write;
 “family numeracy programmes” means programmes which enable parents to improve their own numeracy skills while helping their children with numeracy;
 “financial year” means a period of 12 months beginning on 1st April;
 “fresh start school” means a maintained school which replaces a discontinued school—
(i) which immediately before its discontinuance was a school to which section 15 of the 1998 Act applied, or
(ii) which was a secondary school, less than 15% of whose candidates for the General Certificate of Secondary Education in the academic year ending immediately before its discontinuance obtained at least 5 grades A* to C;
 “key skills qualification” means a qualification accredited as such by the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority under section 24(2)(g) of the Education Act 1997;
 “key stage 2” means the second key stage referred to in section 355(1)(b) of the 1996 Act;
 “key stage 3” means the third key stage referred to in section 355(1)(c) of the 1996 Act;
 “learning support unit” means a unit which provides separate short-term teaching and support programmes for pupils who need intensive support;
 “maintained school” means a school maintained by an education authority;
 “National Grid for Learning” means a system of inter-connecting networks and education services based on the Internet which is designed to support teaching, learning, training and administration in schools, the wider education service, and the community;
 “nursery education” means full-time or part-time education suitable for children who have not attained compulsory school age (whether provided at schools or elsewhere);
 “prescribed expenditure” means
(a) expenditure by an education authority for or in connection with any of the purposes specified in Schedule 1 other than the purpose specified in paragraph 6(c); or
(b) expenditure by an education authority which satisfies the conditions specified in paragraph (2) below for or in connection with the purpose specified in paragraph 6(c) of Schedule 1;
 “relevant lender” has the meaning given to it in regulation 65(1) of the Local Authorities (Capital Finance) Regulations 1997;
 “small school” means
(a) a primary school other than a special school with no more than 200 registered pupils, or
(b) a secondary school other than a special school with no more than 600 registered pupils.
 “standards fund grant” means a grant under these Regulations;
 “study support centre” means a centre providing an out of school hours learning programme aimed at raising standards in literacy and numeracy;
 “teacher” means a person who by virtue of regulations relating to the employment of teachers from time to time in force under section 218 of the Education Reform Act 1988 is qualified to be employed as a teacher at a school of the kind described in subsection (12) of that section;
 “teaching assistant” means an employee of an education authority or of the governing body of a school who is normally present in a classroom with a teacher and who assists the teacher; and
 “youth and community worker” means a person employed or working in a voluntary capacity in connection with the provision of facilities of a kind mentioned in sections 2(3) (b) or 508 of the 1996 Act other than a person undertaking duties that are solely administrative, secretarial, clerical or manual.
(2) The conditions referred to in sub-paragraph (b) of the definition of “prescribed expenditure” in paragraph (1) above are that on 1st April 2001 the education authority—
(a) has a credit ceiling, as determined under Part III of Schedule 3 to the 1989 Act which was nil or a negative amount; and
(b) had no money outstanding by way of borrowing other than—
(i) short-term borrowing (within the meaning of section 45(6) of the 1989 Act); or
(ii) borrowing undertaken before 24th August 1995, other than borrowing by the issue of stock on or after 15th December 1993 from a person who is not a relevant lender.
3 
Standards fund grants shall only be payable in respect of prescribed expenditure incurred or to be incurred in a financial year to the extent to which that expenditure is approved for that year by the Secretary of State for the purposes of these Regulations.
4 
Where—
(a) an education authority incurs expenditure in making payments, whether by way of maintenance, assistance or otherwise, to any other body or persons (including another education authority) who incur expenditure for or in connection with educational purposes; and
(b) that expenditure by the recipient of the payments or any part thereof would be prescribed expenditure if it were expenditure by the authority,such payments shall to that extent be treated as prescribed expenditure for the purposes of these Regulations.
5 

(1) Standards fund grants in respect of approved expenditure incurred on or after 1st April 2001 shall be payable at the rate of 100 per cent. of such expenditure in respect of items referred to in paragraphs 1(b), 2(b), 3(a) and (d), 4, 5(a) and 6(a), (c) and (d) of Schedule 1.
(2) Standards fund grants in respect of approved expenditure incurred on or after 1st April 2001 in respect of items referred to in paragraph 3(c) of Schedule 1 shall be payable, in relation to the education authorities listed in the left hand column of the table in Schedule 2, at the percentage rate of such expenditure specified in the right hand column of the table.
(3) Standards fund grants in respect of approved expenditure incurred on or after 1st April 2001 in respect of items referred to in paragraphs of Schedule 1 other than those mentioned in paragraph (1) or (2) above shall be payable at the rate of 53 per cent. of such expenditure.
6 

(1) No payment of standards fund grant shall be made except in response to an application from an education authority to the Secretary of State.
(2) An education authority shall, when requested by the Secretary of State, inform him of the approved expenditure in respect of which an application for grant has been made which has been or which it is estimated will be incurred by the education authority during the course of the financial year.
7 
Where at the time of approving expenditure for the purposes of these Regulations, the Secretary of State requests information in respect of any purpose listed in Schedule 1, payment of standards fund grant in respect of that purpose shall be conditional on that information being included in the education authority’s application for payment of grant.
8 

(1) The Secretary of State may from time to time determine further conditions on the fulfilment of which the making of any payment under these Regulations shall be dependent.
(2) Where conditions have been determined under this regulation no standards fund grant shall be payable unless such conditions have either been fulfilled or been withdrawn under paragraph (3) below.
(3) The Secretary of State may determine to withdraw or, after consulting the education authority, vary conditions determined under this regulation.
9 
Any education authority to whom a payment of standards fund grant has been made shall furnish the Secretary of State with such further information as he may require in connection with his functions in relation to the payment of standards fund grant.
10 

(1) Any education authority to whom a payment of standards fund grant has been made shall comply with such requirements as may be determined by the Secretary of State in the case in question.
(2) Requirements determined under this regulation may in particular include requirements as to—
(a) the repayment of standards fund grant;
(b) the payment to the Secretary of State of other sums related to the value of assets acquired, provided or improved—
(i) with the aid of standards fund grant; or
(ii) by any other body or persons referred to in regulation 4(a) above with the aid of payments made by the authority in respect of which standards fund grant has been paid; or
(c) the payment of interest on sums due to the Secretary of State.
11 

(1) The Secretary of State may require any education authority to whom a payment of standards fund grant in respect of any of the items specified in Schedule 1 is made to delegate decisions about the spending of—
(a) such grant, and
(b) the amount allocated by the authority to meet the approved expenditure,
to the governing body of a maintained school.
(2) The Secretary of State may determine to withdraw or, after consulting the education authority, vary requirements determined in pursuance of this regulation.
12 

(1) The Regulations specified in Schedule 3 are hereby revoked.
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), Regulations made under section 484 of the 1996 Act shall continue to apply in relation to financial years beginning before 1st April 2001 for the purpose of paying grant in respect of expenditure incurred in those financial years and any condition or requirement determined by or in accordance with any of those Regulations shall continue to apply.
Estelle Morris
Minister of State,
Department for Education and Employment
6th March 2001
SCHEDULE 1
Regulations 2, 5 and 11
1 

(a) School improvement, save as mentioned in (b) below.
(b) Initiatives to raise standards in schools with the lowest levels of attainment.
2 

(a) Support for—
(i) measures to reduce the number of exclusions and levels of truancy, except in relation to truancy buster awards as mentioned in paragraph 2(b)(iv) below;
(ii) the provision of full-time education for children of compulsory school age not attending school;
(iii) pupils with special educational needs;
(iv) measures designed to improve the educational achievements of children who are looked after by local authorities;
(v) drug prevention;
(vi) out of school hours learning; and
(vii) the training of youth and community workers.
(b) Support for—
(i) mothers and expectant mothers of compulsory school age in education and measures to reduce the level of pregnancy among pupils;
(ii) measures designed to improve the educational achievements of children who are unable to attend school because of illness or injury;
(iii) schools drugs advisors;
(iv) truancy buster awards, being awards in respect of schools which have achieved the greatest reductions in levels of truancy to enable them to take action to further reduce such levels and to disseminate good practice to other schools;
(v) measures to improve standards of education of pupils whose parents are asylum seekers; and
(vi) measures to support child protection procedures.
3 

(a) Raising standards of achievement by pupils, save as mentioned in sub-paragraphs (b), (c), (d) or (e) below.
(b) 
(i) Measures to provide equality of educational opportunity for all minority ethnic groups, including in particular measures to assist pupils for whom English is an additional language and measures to raise standards of achievement for those minority ethnic groups who are particularly at risk of under-achieving.
(ii) The improvement of literacy and numeracy skills of parents and children through family literacy programmes and family numeracy programmes respectively.
(iii) Preparation for changes to the National Curriculum or in relation to personal, social and health education.
(iv) The introduction of courses leading to General Certificate of Education advanced level and advanced subsidiary examinations, the introduction of post-16 key skills qualifications, or units thereof, and preparation for other changes to the post-16 curriculum.
(v) Study support centres within or near the premises of football and other sports clubs participating in the Department for Education and Employment’s programme known as Playing for Success, other than in the case of those education authorities piloting innovatory types of sports and education partnership under the programme.
(vi) Training and development of staff providing nursery education when the education provided is included in an education authority’s early years development plan under section 120 of the 1998 Act.
(vii) Improving adult: pupil ratios in reception classes.
(viii) Improving the teaching of literacy and numeracy in primary, middle and special schools.
(ix) Improving results at key stage 3, except in those schools which were included in the Department for Education and Employment’s pilot programme known as “transforming key stage 3”.
(x) Additional literacy and numeracy classes for pupils in maintained schools who will complete key stage 2 in the summer of 2001.
(c) Education authority music services to schools.
(d) Additional support for the teaching of literacy and numeracy in primary, middle and special schools.
(e) The making of provision to promote and facilitate access to education and more regular school attendance and to promote levels of educational achievement by any person who—
(i) by reason of his way of life (or, in the case of a child, his parent’s way of life) either has no fixed abode or leaves his main abode to live elsewhere for significant periods in each year;
(ii) fell within sub-paragraph (i) within a period of two years immediately preceding the making of the provision referred to above; or
(iii) is for the time being resident in a camp or other accommodation or establishment provided for refugees or for displaced or similar persons.
4 

(a) Support for particular descriptions or groupings of schools or further education institutions.
(b) Support for summer schools for gifted and talented pupils.
5 

(a) Support for teachers, save as mentioned in sub-paragraph (b) below.
(b) Support for—
(i) the induction of newly-qualified teachers;
(ii) advanced skills teachers up to the target number for such teachers set for the education authority by the Department for Education and Employment;
(iii) the national Leadership Programme for Serving Headteachers;
(iv) teaching assistants;
(v) small schools; and
(vi) the early retirement of head teachers.
6 

(a) Capital projects and other projects relating to the buildings and other infrastructure of schools, save as mentioned in sub-paragraph (b) or (c) below, the setting up and running of Fresh Start schools, the setting up and running of learning support units and schemes by education authorities to pilot new methods of providing education services.
(b) 
(i) Enabling maintained schools to secure effective use of the networked educational services made available through the National Grid for Learning.
(ii) Measures to improve school security.
(iii) Measures to reduce the size of classes at key stage 2.
(c) Capital projects and other projects relating to the buildings and other infrastructure of specialist schools, being schools which are designated as such in the Department for Education and Employment’s programme for specialist schools.
(d) Information and communication technology.
SCHEDULE 2
Regulation 5(2)


LEA Grant Rate
City of London 100.0%
Camden 74.6%
Greenwich 90.5%
Hackney 62.5%
Hammersmith 81.6%
Islington 82.7%
Kensington & Chelsea 90.5%
Lambeth 92.5%
Lewisham 82.0%
Southwark 72.3%
Tower Hamlets 86.9%
Wandsworth 64.5%
Westminster 50.0%
Barking 65.5%
Barnet 100.0%
Bexley 88.1%
Brent 75.2%
Bromley 90.1%
Croydon 89.6%
Ealing 64.2%
Enfield 72.3%
Haringey 81.6%
Harrow 100.0%
Havering 79.7.%
Hillingdon 70.5%
Hounslow 96.3%
Kingston upon Thames 50.0%
Merton 60.6%
Newham 61.3%
Redbridge 72.0%
Richmond upon Thames 79.8%
Sutton 68.7%
Waltham Forest 73.8%
Birmingham 69.7%
Coventry 64.4%
Dudley 50.0%
Sandwell 100.0%
Solihull 50.0%
Walsall 87.0%
Wolverhampton 75.9%
Knowsley 82.0%
Liverpool 95.0%
St Helens 100.0%
Sefton 91.1%
Wirral 86.7%
Bolton 77.8%
Bury 96.2%
Manchester 100.0%
Oldham 59.9%
Rochdale 100.0%
Salford 97.3%
Stockport 89.2%
Tameside 89.0%
Trafford 96.2%
Wigan 100.0%
Barnsley 88.4%
Doncaster 98.2%
Rotherham 96.2%
Sheffield 100.0%
Bradford 100.0%
Calderdale 72.9%
Kirklees 88.8%
Leeds 100.0%
Wakefield 94.4%
Gateshead 91.6%
Newcastle upon Tyne 58.1%
North Tyneside 75.5%
South Tyneside 98.3%
Sunderland 88.8%
Isles of Scilly 100.0%
Bath & NE Somerset 100.0%
City of Bristol 91.0%
North Somerset 92.1%
South Gloucestershire 93.5%
Hartlepool 92.0%
Middlesbrough 0.0%
Redcar and Cleveland 0.0%
Stockton-on-Tees 0.0%
Kingston-upon-Hull 100.0%
East Riding of Yorkshire 100.0%
North East Lincolnshire 61.2%
North Lincolnshire 100.0%
North Yorkshire 97.2%
York 95.1%
Bedfordshire 100.0%
Luton 66.0%
Buckinghamshire 71.7%
Milton Keynes 83.0%
Derbyshire 73.6%
Derby 0.0%
Dorset 74.2%
Poole 0.0%
Bournemouth 0.0%
Durham 100.0%
Darlington 80.2%
East Sussex 96.8%
Brighton & Hove 95.8%
Hampshire 81.3%
Portsmouth 54.4%
Southampton 70.2%
Leicestershire 100.0%
Leicester 88.2%
Rutland 100.0%
Staffordshire 89.2%
Stoke-on-Trent 83.0%
Wiltshire 100.0%
Swindon 50.0%
Bracknell Forest 81.7%
Windsor & Maidenhead 100.0%
West Berkshire 97.1%
Reading 100.0%
Slough 58.4%
Wokingham 100.0%
Cambridgeshire 85.2%
Peterborough 100.0%
Cheshire 91.7%
Halton 100.0%
Warrington 85.6%
Devon 85.2%
Plymouth 0.0%
Torbay 0.0%
Essex 67.5%
Southend-on-Sea 77.3%
Thurrock 85.9%
Herefordshire 88.7%
Worcestershire 83.3%
Kent 73.0%
Medway Towns 77.5%
Lancashire 71.8%
Blackburn with Darwen 87.8%
Blackpool 80.4%
Nottinghamshire 86.9%
Nottingham City 90.7%
Shropshire 100.0%
Telford & Wreken 100.0%
Cornwall 67.6%
Cumbria 80.5%
Gloucestershire 73.9%
Hertfordshire 81.1%
Isle of Wight 87.6%
Lincolnshire 93.4%
Norfolk 92.8%
Northamptonshire 100.0%
Northumberland 94.2%
Oxfordshire 81.6%
Somerset 69.0%
Suffolk 90.5%
Surrey 87.9%
Warwickshire 87.1%
West Sussex 92.3%
SCHEDULE 3
Regulation 12


(1) (2)
Regulations revoked References
The Education Standards Fund (England) Regulations 2000. S.I.2000/703.
The Education Standards Fund (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2000. S.I. 2000/2332.
The Education Standards Fund (England) (Amendment No. 2) Regulations 2000. S.I. 2000/3329.
The Education Standards Fund 2000 (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2001. S.I. 2001/210.