Crewe councillor warns how cost of living crisis is hitting children

By Gwyn Griffiths 18th Feb 2022

Cllr Laura Smith: 'parents struggling'.
Cllr Laura Smith: 'parents struggling'.

THE cost of living crisis is hitting children in Crewe - some of whom "don't have a bed to sleep in" - warns a councillor.

Crewe South councillor Laura Smith says the mental health and well-being of children who don't have an "adequate home" will be affected even more by witnessing their parents struggle with the ever-increasing financial pressures as food and fuel prices soar.

Cllr Smith told this week's meeting of Cheshire East Council's children and families committee that children's learning was being affected by the crisis.

"In the areas that we represent in Crewe there's children with no beds, things like this, people haven't got a mattress, a bed to sleep in," she said.

"How can you then go and have a healthy day at school where you're going to be learning and taking on board?"

Cllr Smith praised the work the council was doing regarding children's mental health and well-being, but asked how it was working with the housing department and others to help alleviate the pressures on hard-pressed families.

"I think this is one of the huge crises so many of our children are facing – they don't have a home which is adequate and that obviously has a huge mental health impact, as does watching their parents struggling with the cost of living crisis that we're now starting to really feel," she said.

"I feel that it's very difficult for us to talk about mental health and well-being of children without addressing the fact that so many of these children are going to be witnessing huge financial pressures in their household and that burden doesn't go away when they go into school, that stays with them.

"As somebody who, as a child, experienced it, the weight of it is incredible, incredibly hard."

Clare Williamson, interim director of early help and prevention at Cheshire East Council, told the meeting how the council had continued funding the post of a mental health coordinator, originally grant funded by the DfE, and introduced programmes into schools such as My Happy Mind, which had benefited pupils and teachers.

She told Cllr Smith: "As part of early help and prevention we will be looking at holistic needs of the children and that, absolutely, takes on board in regards of understanding what is going on within that family home.

"We will need to be looking at how we support our families."

     

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