The incoming Nottinghamshire County Council leader says he will keep applying pressure on the Government for changes to services for young people with special educational needs as the county’s access to specialised health plans improves.
Nottinghamshire County Council’s Children and Families Select Committee met on 2 December to discuss updates on their children’s and SEND services – for children with special educational needs and disabilities.
The committee also received an update report on Educational, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) across the county – there have been delays in getting these completed for some Nottinghamshire children.
The plans are legal documents for young people detailing their needs, required support, and progress goals.

The target timeframe for a young person to receive their plan is within 20 weeks after assessment – the Government’s target is for 50 per cent to be issued within this time.
Between January and October 2024, there were 1,396 Nottinghamshire requests for an assessment, which is 23.4 per cent higher than in the same timeframe the year before.
The council has made significant improvements in EHCPs being administered within 20 weeks.
Between January and October 2024, 36.3 per cent were provided within this timescale, compared to 27.9 per cent the year before.
Just 4.5 per cent of new EHCPs were issued within 20 weeks in 2022.
Cllr Sam Smith (Con), current cabinet member for education and SEND and incoming leader of the council, said he hopes the council will hit the Government’s 50 per cent timescale target by the end of the academic year.
He said: “We’ve spent millions of pounds trying to get there, we’ve employed nine extra educational psychologists, we’ve got SEND pathway officers.
“We secured £16 million off the previous Conservative Government to really improve SEND services.
“I want to be in line with the national average by the end of the [academic] year, and whoever I appoint in a few days’ time to sit in this chair will have that as their prime focus, and I’ll be holding them to account.”
Cllr Smith says the council “needs SEND changes through the Government” and added he will keep putting pressure on Whitehall.
With his new future role as leader of the County Council, Cllr Smith will sit on the East Midlands Combined Authority meetings and the County Councils Network, where he says he will be “banging on the drums for education” – including lobbying ministers.
He said: “I’ll take that experience… although I’m not going to be sitting in this office, it doesn’t mean we’re going to lose that big, strong voice – I will amplify it as leader. Across all streams I will work in.”
Cllr Smith wants to see a more streamlined approach for qualifications for educational psychologists and for this to be championed by universities and local authorities.
He also called for a national review of the EHCP timeframes given the rising number of assessment requests.
He added: “The 20-week timeframe was probably introduced when demand was far less than it is now.
“There’s been a 100 per cent increase in demand, and councils’ [timeframes] are still the same – does that need to be reviewed? Yes.”
Cllr Smith will select a councillor to take over his current cabinet role in a few weeks.