Early-years provision is facing a crisis in nursery places and will leave some parents without childcare after the summer holidays
A quarter of councils are not confident they have the capacity for the expansion of government-funded childcare support, i can reveal.
A report by the Local Government Association (LGA), shared exclusively with i, found that 25 per cent of councils in England said they are "not very confident they have sufficient early years and childcare places" to manage the Government's policy.
This means that of 153 local authorities, at least 38 feared the local workforce would be unable to deliver the next phase of the Government's childcare rollout.
From September, working parents will be able to access 15 hours of support for children aged nine months to three years.
But the LGA survey suggests that early-years provision is facing a crisis in nursery places and will leave some parents without childcare after the summer holidays.