TWO children “missing” from school in Gwent last year turned up in America, councillors have been told.
Councils are required to keep track of children and identify if they are missing from education.
Torfaen Borough Council education officials, who were presenting information on school attendance to councillors, were questioned around its Child Missing in Education procedures.
Fairwater Labour councillor Jayne Watkins asked how many such cases the department dealt with.
Andy Rothwell, the council’s head of learning and achievement, replied: “Those cases not too many, last year five in total that we explored and shut down.”
He said the department works with the council’s benefits team, and nationally with HMRC the tax office, as well as the police to find where a child is if necessary and then a case can be “shut down”.
He added: “There were two cases in America. It was discovered they’d moved to America and we were happy the local authority in America had eyes on those children.”
A school to school tracking system is also used across the UK while education officer Claire Williams said names are also discussed at education panel meetings meaning children can be identified before the Child Missing in Education procedures are required.
Mr Rothwell promised to share the procedures with Cllr Watkins after she asked what was meant by the report stating such children are identified “quickly”.
He said the procedures sets out what schools need to do and in what timeframe and also the timeframe, and what is required, of the local education authority.