The council is in £1.8bn worth of debt following a series of high-risk investments and Conservative austerity measures.
Warrington North has returned a Labour MP since it was first established in 1983 - but Warrington South has been split for the majority of that time
Warrington is a town of reconciliation and community. But its seems even this town cannot forgive 14 years of Tory misrule
A comfortable night for Labour in Warrington, returning two MPs
Culture Warrington's community engagement approach is genuine - and for that reason, it's getting results
Women and children are choosing to be reunited with their families in a war zone rather than be without them in the safety of the UK.
Peatlands are disappearing at an alarming rate - so Pestfurlong Moss has enormous importance in our eco-system.
Academies were meant to ensure greater investments in pupils, curricula and teachers. But in many, the most direct beneficiaries have been the senior leaders.
A report has warned young people who are educated at home “make up a significant proportion” of those who are out of work or not in education or training after they finish compulsory schooling
The teaching profession has been devalued to the point of absurdity, with staff drafted into classrooms with little or sometimes no qualifications.
Trafford is known for its stronghold of grammar schools and its high educational standards mean its attractive to parents. But as people flood to the area for schools, children in Altrincham and Sale are being left without a place.
The government claims it wants to prevent children from safely acquiring knowledge about sex until they are "ready" for it. Abusers will have no such scruples.
CCTV and motion sensors are becoming more common in primary and secondary schools - the aim is to improve behaviour, but the cost is a worrying slide towards privacy infringements.
The British-Nigerian historian, author and BAFTA-winning filmmaker on why younger generations are facing a unique convergence of challenges, and why they need more support to build the future of society.
The government has decimated school support for kids with special educational needs - and now it's launched a crass attendance campaign that feels like a direct assault on the parenting skills of already struggling families.
Don't speak. Don't take your eyes off the teacher. Just nod - or else. Britain's schools are starting to feel like dystopian nano-states that cherish performative obedience and quantifiable grades above all else. How come? And why are private schools exempt from the hyper-disciplinarian approach richly meted out to working class kids?
As cost-of-living becomes more deeply ingrained in our vocabulary, teachers are forced to go above and beyond to ensure kids can learn effectively
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