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Angela Rayner: I know first hand that child poverty is about more than just money

Child poverty is more than an abstract problem to me. It’s something I know all too much about.

Poverty isn’t just a financial issue, though. Growing up without love, without being cared for, might be the worst type of poverty. Many parents know that hugging your children – telling them how amazing they are – is so important.

Some parents, through no fault of their own, don’t realise this. My mum was one of those who didn’t realise, and I almost was too. It wasn’t because she didn’t love me, or my brother and sister, it’s because she didn’t know how to. She hadn’t been loved when she was a child, and that absence had stayed with her. Sometimes we forget that no one is born with parenting skills.

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What broke that cycle for me was my local Sure Start centre. No one was better than me at changing nappies, or providing for my baby, but no one told me just how important emotional development was for children. I learnt that there: my parenting course made me realise that the love you give to children stays with them for their entire life. Since then I’ve wrapped my other children, and now my grandchild, in the love they deserve.

It’s no exaggeration to say that it changed everything for me. 

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Pictures of the first children taken into care

Shape Created with Sketch.
Pictures of the first children taken into care

1/30 Edward Taylor (left)

Born around 1857, admitted to Bonner Road in 1871. Father Charles Taylor was a fish porter but died in October 1870

2/30 Thomas Shield

Born 23 October 1861, admitted to Bonner Road in 1871. Father is a tobacco pipe maker, mother is a needlewoman

3/30 Mary Ann Annett

Born 2 December 1863. Admitted to Bonner Road in London in 1871. Father William Sale was a silk dyer who left for America

4/30 Edward Maltby

Thirteen years old when admitted, father and mother dead. Left in the charge of a stepmother who constantly ill-treated him. He had slept on the streets for several nights. Went to Canada 15 May 1873 to be employed in the Printing Office and board with Bob Self.
Bonner Road, London – 1870

5/30 Chirs Barned (L) related to George Oliver

George Oliver was the first boy to be taken into care by the charity at their first home in Lambeth. He is also the great-great grandfather of Chris Barned from East London

6/30 Jan Twynam (L) related to Alice Valentine

Alice Valentine stayed in care homes in London and Yorkshire and she the great-great aunt of Jan Twynam from Chichester

7/30 Lance Richardson (L) related to Emmie Rhymes

60-year-old Lance Richardson was pleased to find that he is the grandnephew of Emmie Rhymes who was admitted to the Princess Alice Orphanage in Warwickshire in 1898 after the death of her parents

8/30 Annie Augusta Barfield

Admitted to Bonner Road in London on 8 June 1871, aged 1 year

9/30 Agatha Johnstone, Ivy Keeping, Nora Blake

Harpenden, Hertfordshire – 1918

11/30 Master Charlie Woodwitt

Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire – 1904

12/30 Mary Anne Leigh

Bonner Road, London – 1871-1880

13/30 Sister Theta Stormer with children

1/30 Edward Taylor (left)

Born around 1857, admitted to Bonner Road in 1871. Father Charles Taylor was a fish porter but died in October 1870

2/30 Thomas Shield

Born 23 October 1861, admitted to Bonner Road in 1871. Father is a tobacco pipe maker, mother is a needlewoman

3/30 Mary Ann Annett

Born 2 December 1863. Admitted to Bonner Road in London in 1871. Father William Sale was a silk dyer who left for America

4/30 Edward Maltby

Thirteen years old when admitted, father and mother dead. Left in the charge of a stepmother who constantly ill-treated him. He had slept on the streets for several nights. Went to Canada 15 May 1873 to be employed in the Printing Office and board with Bob Self.
Bonner Road, London – 1870

5/30 Chirs Barned (L) related to George Oliver

George Oliver was the first boy to be taken into care by the charity at their first home in Lambeth. He is also the great-great grandfather of Chris Barned from East London

6/30 Jan Twynam (L) related to Alice Valentine

Alice Valentine stayed in care homes in London and Yorkshire and she the great-great aunt of Jan Twynam from Chichester

7/30 Lance Richardson (L) related to Emmie Rhymes

60-year-old Lance Richardson was pleased to find that he is the grandnephew of Emmie Rhymes who was admitted to the Princess Alice Orphanage in Warwickshire in 1898 after the death of her parents

8/30 Annie Augusta Barfield

Admitted to Bonner Road in London on 8 June 1871, aged 1 year

9/30 Agatha Johnstone, Ivy Keeping, Nora Blake

Harpenden, Hertfordshire – 1918

11/30 Master Charlie Woodwitt

Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire – 1904

12/30 Mary Anne Leigh

Bonner Road, London – 1871-1880

13/30 Sister Theta Stormer with children

Alverstoke, Hampshire – 1869-1900

I was lucky, though, to have a Labour government on my side; one that understood that early years’ support was a vital part of education policy. However, a new generation of children have grown up under a Tory government that hasn’t fought for them.

What the Conservatives (and the Liberal Democrats) have done to early years education is shocking. When Labour left Downing Street in 2010, there were more than 3,500 Sure Start centres in the country. In the last nine years, however, more than 1,000 centres have been closed or hollowed out – including the one that changed my life. It’s an injustice.

In the last election we sought to right this wrong, and we’re going further this time. We’re increasing our investment in early years to a billion pounds – reversing Tory cuts and establishing a new generation of Sure Start centres: Sure Start Plus.

This new programme will fully integrate education, health and family support to deliver essential services to the youngest children and their parents. And it’ll be delivered in an integrated service that nurtures a generation of children, especially those in the most disadvantaged areas. 

As well as reviving the vital service of Sure Start, with £1bn of new investment, we will radically expand early years education.

Under the Tories the most disadvantaged three and four-year-olds, whose parents are unemployed, are locked out of 30 hours of free childcare a week, which only applies to children of working parents. The maximum childcare two-year-olds are entitled to is 15 hours per week.

Under Labour this will change. We will give 30 hours of free early years education a week to every child aged two to four. 

Not only will this save parents thousands of pounds a year, it will transform the life chances of a generation of children. Early years education sets the path for the rest of a child’s time in school; if they fall behind before they get to school they will likely never catch up. This investment will mean that no child falls behind simply because of their background.

For us, early years is the foundation of both a world-class education system and a moral society. We can’t have children growing up feeling unloved – the price is too high for that. Our new Sure Start Plus will make every child feel valued.

Angela Rayner is the Labour MP for Ashton-under-Lyne

This content was originally published here.

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