Richard Quigley MP has welcomed a major campaign victory after the Government formally adopted his call for a targeted education programme to improve outcomes for young people in coastal communities like the Isle of Wight West.
The announcement came last week in the Government’s Schools White Paper, which confirmed the launch of ‘Mission Coastal’ – a new initiative aimed at tackling inequality seaside towns and boosting educational opportunity for children growing up by the coast.
It comes following a campaign launched by Richard Quigley MP as part of the Coastal Parliamentary Labour Party (Coastal PLP), a grouping of 66 Labour MPs representing coastal areas who campaign for government action to transform the lives of communities living on the coast.
Improving educational outcomes on the Island has been one of Richard’s core ambitions. With GCSE and A-Level results lagging well below the national average, and literacy rates among the worst in the region, the need for meaningful change is undeniable.
Richard has said:
“We all understand the additional challenges we face here on the Island. We have the second-highest level of educational deprivation in the South, with one in three children leaving school unable to read at the expected level. This initiative won’t solve everything, but it is an important step in the right direction and I’m really pleased that the government have listened to myself and coastal colleagues and taken this action”
The campaign was launched at last year’s Labour Party Conference, where the Coastal PLP called for a “Coastal Challenge”, modelled on the successful Blair-era London Challenge that transformed school standards and life chances for young people across the capital.
Mission Coastal will focus on improving outcomes for young people in disadvantaged coastal areas, where opportunity is often limited by geography, fragile local infrastructure, poor transport links, and the compounding effects of deprivation. The programme will work with schools, academy trusts, and local partners to tackle barriers to learning and strengthen the conditions that allow young people to thrive.
Central to the initiative will be collaboration, with new local partnership boards bringing together teachers, school leaders, councils and community representatives. Where challenges such as low parental engagement persist, Mission Coastal will take a “test, learn and grow” approach – building evidence of what works and scaling up successful practice.
Richard Quigley MP for Isle of Wight West said:
“I was proud to back this campaign from the very beginning, because young people on the Island deserve the same focus, ambition and support from government as those growing up in our major cities.
“The Government’s decision to launch Mission Coastal is a huge step forward for young people in Isle of Wight West It is exactly the kind of bold, targeted intervention local schools and families have been calling for, with the potential to deliver the same lasting, transformative impact for coastal communities as New Labour’s London Challenge did for young people in the capital.”
Chair of the Coastal PLP, Polly Billington MP, said:
“In the 1990s, London’s young people were written off, but the last Labour government defied the pessimists by launching the London Challenge, which transformed educational outcomes for London’s young people and whole communities in the process. I’m delighted the government has adopted the Coastal
PLP’s proposal for a similar programme in coastal areas.“Mission Coastal shows the same ambition for coastal young people as New Labour had for London — the determination needed to deliver a decade of renewal and opportunity in coastal areas that have been neglected for too long.”































































































Better wages, many island companies are coining it in
yet pay minimum wage.
This article is about tackling educational deprivation. If you want to talk wages, that’s a separate issue. Also, “many companies are coining it” is vague, which ones? Most Island businesses are small, seasonal and operating on tight margins.
If you’ve got data, share it. Otherwise it’s just another sweeping claim.
The chocolate teapot is at it again. How did we let this clown get elected oh wait a minute Labour Lies.
My children could read and tell the time before they even went to school at 5 years old. Just a little time spent nightly does help them progress.