Heywood nursery hailed as ‘huge boost’, despite being located next to several hundred children
MP celebrates early education milestone with laminated talking points and one confused toddler
A brand-new nursery at St Luke’s Primary School in Heywood has been unveiled to widespread acclaim and at least one incident involving glitter glue. The facility, funded by the government’s plan to make childcare slightly less ruinously expensive, is being billed as a “huge boost for families” and an even bigger boost for parents who haven’t had a warm cup of tea since 2019.
Heywood and Middleton North MP Elsie Blundell visited the site to smile warmly at infants, praise “trusted school environments”, and definitely not check if any toddlers knew what a marginal seat was. “The facilities are fantastic,” she said, gesturing at a pastel-coloured plastic slide and an exhausted teaching assistant covered in mashed banana. “This is exactly what working families need, somewhere to drop the kids while attempting to remember what silence sounds like.”
The school received £130,000 in funding, enough for construction, child-sized toilets, and a selection of toys so noisy they’ve already been banned by NATO. St Luke’s joins a growing list of schools across England getting new nurseries as part of Labour’s Best Start initiative, which includes free childcare, free breakfast clubs, and the vague promise of “living your best life”, assuming that involves cleaning jam off ceiling tiles.
Blundell, herself a new mum, stressed how helpful the scheme would be for “balancing work and childcare,” a task many parents currently approach with the time management skills of a bomb disposal expert on roller skates.
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson also chimed in, noting that school-based nurseries provide “stability, nurturing, and the opportunity to experience bureaucracy from an early age.” She confirmed 4,000 extra places are being rolled out this month across England, with another 7,000 planned by 2026, assuming nobody in government accidentally reallocates the funding to emergency pothole sculpting.
In related news, Ofsted has confirmed that nursery children at St Luke’s have already begun early life lessons in resilience, cooperation, and how to politely ignore a politician while still holding a juice box.
Reporting from down the M62, we at the Rochdale Times say: if the kids are thriving, the parents are coping, and the soft play area remains mostly upright, that’s a win for everyone, except whoever has to clean up after snack time.
