Prøve GULL - Gratis
Hundreds of parents fined for not sending their children to school
Cynon Valley Leader
|June 12, 2025
MORE than 500 parents were fined across Wales last term for not sending their children to school, with more than 100 prosecutions.
The figures, obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests, were revealed as schools face the annual problem of families taking their children out of lessons to go on summer holidays before prices rise in peak season.
The Welsh Government, councils and schools are struggling to get more children back into classrooms.
Despite a very small improvement in school attendance this academic year, it still trails pre-pandemic levels more than five years after classrooms first closed due to the threat of Covid. Some children have never returned at all.
Schools inspectorate Estyn recently warned it would take a decade, at the current rate of progress, to get attendance rates back to where they were before Covid, and some schools believe fines and court action are the only answer.
On average, secondary-age pupils miss about one day of school a fortnight and now miss 11 days of school more each year than before the pandemic.
More than one in 10 secondary school sessions - counted as half of a school day - are now being missed on average in high schools across Wales with absence rates worst for less-well-off children and those in key GCSE year 11.
Estyn has described low school attendance in Wales as "an important national concern".
The watchdog said school leaders in some parts of the country have told inspectors they are frustrated their local authorities won't fine parents who don’t send their children in.
They have told Estyn this failure to act is "restricting their ability to challenge families to improve pupils’ attendance".
The data shows while some councils are issuing fines and prosecuting parents for not sending their children to school, others, such as Anglesey, are not.
Fixed penalty notice (FPN) fines for parents not sending their children to school are £60, rising to £120 if that's not paid within 28 days.
Denne historien er fra June 12, 2025-utgaven av Cynon Valley Leader.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Cynon Valley Leader
Cynon Valley Leader
WINDFARM PLAN DIVIDES OPINION
PEOPLE WHO WOULD BE LIVING IN THE SHADOW OF PROPOSED CARREG WEN ENERGY SCHEME HAVE THEIR SAY PAGES 18&19
1 min
August 07, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
'I CLING TO THE HOPE I'LL SEE HIM AGAIN'
SIX YEARS AFTER HER SON DISAPPEARED, HIS MUM IS STILL LIVING IN A NIGHTMARE OF UNCERTAINTY PAGE 7
1 min
July 31, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
'NO JUSTICE OVER DEATH OF MY PARTNER'
WIDOW SLAMS POLICE OVER LACK OF INVESTIGATION INTO MAN'S DEATH AFTER LAND DISPUTE
1 min
July 24, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
Phonics on form
Cwmaman's finest make a triumphant stadium return
1 min
July 17, 2025

Cynon Valley Leader
Pupil referral unit receives a near-perfect inspection report
A EDUCATION unit has been judged near-perfect in a glowing report from inspectors.
1 mins
July 10, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
Fine for woman who paid to have rubbish removed
A WOMAN has been left £400 out of pocket after almost 20 bags of waste were dumped in a village.
1 mins
July 10, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
Calls for 'Owain's law' for patients
SENEDD members have called for “Owain's law”, in memory of a young father, to ensure a gold-standard approach to preserving human tissue for other cancer patients in future.
2 mins
July 10, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
Glamorgan in a great rhythm, believes strike ace Gorvin
ANDY Gorvin believes Glamorgan are finding the consistency which could make them a real threat in the Vitality Blast.
1 min
July 10, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
Lionesses not ready to wave goodbye yet, warns Lotte
LOTTE Wubben-Moy has urged England to \"ride the wave\" after the defending champions' opening defeat to France left their Euro 2025 hopes hanging by a thread.
1 mins
July 10, 2025
Cynon Valley Leader
£4.5m bid to secure the future of castle
A CASTLE which has been described as being in a “significant state of deterioration” will see £4.5m spent on it for urgent conservation works as it marks its 200th anniversary.
1 mins
July 10, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size