The report, 'Local Authorities and Child Poverty: Balancing Threats with Opportunities' is launched today at a CPAG conference in Birmingham aimed at assisting local authorities fulfil their obligations under the Child Poverty Act to implement effective local child poverty strategies. The report and the conference have been funded by Barrow Cadbury Trust.
In the North East region the numbers of children officially living in poverty in each local authority and the cost is:
Children
below the relative poverty line
|
Cost
of child poverty in £millions
|
|
1.
County Durham
|
27,230
|
296
|
2.
Newcastle upon Tyne
|
17,622
|
191
|
3.
Sunderland
|
17,185
|
187
|
4.
Northumberland
|
13,453
|
146
|
5.
Middlesbrough
|
12,300
|
134
|
6.
Gateshead
|
11,120
|
121
|
7.
Stockton-on-Tees
|
10,982
|
119
|
8.
North Tyneside
|
9,754
|
106
|
9.
South Tyneside
|
9,496
|
103
|
10. Redcar and Cleveland
|
8,620
|
94
|
11. Hartlepool
|
7,005
|
76
|
12. Darlington
|
5,680
|
62
|
The North East is losing £1,635 million every year due to child poverty and a large part of that cost lands on council services. This is not only a waste of money but a waste of our children’s prospects. We need to stop paying for failure and instead invest in our children’s future potential.
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