Citation Press · Reykjavík, Iceland · Source-backed citation indexAbout us
Vol. I · Citation Index · Est. 2026

Source-backed facts, each tied to a named person and a number.

citations.press publishes structured, citation-ready facts extracted from named publications. Every claim is reviewed for source clarity before it goes live.

Index  ›  education  ›  BBC
education · BBC

Kent County Council says it welcomes upcoming SEND inspection

BBC Reviewed Jun 29, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Kent County Council spends more than £300 million each year on Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) provision.
more than 300000000 £ · SEND provision
KCC
View source ↗

A council spokesperson said it "welcomed the opportunity for inspectors to review our services"

Ofsted and the Care Quality Commission are to send inspectors into Kent County Council (KCC) next month.

According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, they will assess how well education, health and care services work together to support children and young people with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND).

The inspectors will be at County Hall in Maidstone between 6-10 July, although detailed work will start next Thursday.

KCC, which spends more than £300m each year on SEND provision, said it welcomed the review of its services.

All areas are inspected regularly as part of a national programme in England, and the inspectors will consult KCC representatives, health services, schools, parents and children, as well as their carers.

In September 2022, an inspection showed KCC was making insufficient progress in some areas and had weaknesses in others.

The authority was served with an improvement notice in March 2023 after nine areas of concern were identified, including poor standards and processes, and weak governance in the sector.

That stayed in place until August 2024, when, after a concerted push by the then Conservative administration, the Children's Minister Janet Daby said "considerable progress" had been made.

She noted an increased pace of change and better partnership working.

In a recent letter to members, the Reform UK cabinet member for education and skills Beverley Fordham said: "We want to give inspectors a clear and honest picture of what is working well and where we are improving."

Follow BBC Kent on Facebook, external, on X, external, and on Instagram, external and listen to BBC Radio Kent on Sounds. Send your story ideas to [email protected], external or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error