Teachers ‘bringing in shoes and food’ for Leeds pupils in poverty

A councillor has called Leeds teachers the ‘fourth emergency service’ for children who are living in poverty.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

The comments came during a discussion on the council’s new child poverty strategy, which was adopted late last year and claimed more than 30,000 children in the city were now living below the breadline.

Coun Julie Heselwood (Lab) told a full Leeds City Council meeting that teachers in the city were having to bring in uniform, shoes and even food for poverty-stricken pupils.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

She said: “Children living in poverty is a long-standing problem but it has nearly doubled in the last decade.

Coun Julie Heselwood made the comments in a full council meeting.Coun Julie Heselwood made the comments in a full council meeting.
Coun Julie Heselwood made the comments in a full council meeting.

“It means going to bed hungry and cold, not being able to do your homework and children crying at the end of the day because they don’t want to go home to a cold house.”

She added that examples of teachers having to intervene include: “Buying uniform and shoes, bringing in food for children at lunchtimes and helping them deal with the emotional impacts of poverty.”

She concluded: “Teachers in Leeds have become the fourth emergency service for many of these children and families.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The authority’s child poverty strategy was approved by decision makers in November 2019. It claimed a fifth of children in the city were living in poverty.

The council’s executive member for children and families Fiona Venner said: “There are more food banks than branches of McDonalds. It is shocking that that is the world young people are now growing up in.

“It was depressingly predictable that there was nothing in the queens speech about tackling poverty.”