Just to clarify for you, this option has been removed as the school tightens its belt due to existing cuts. Nothing to do with the proposed further cuts, except to illustrate the actual REAL decisions that are having to be made by schools.
I'll give another EXISTING REAL example if you like. The primary school that the two lads went to is a small one. Amongst its staff are no dedicated PE teachers. In fact to a (wonderful, hard-working) lady they are midle aged, experienced teachers, with zero interest, aptitute or physical ability to teach 6-11 year olds about sport or exercise. 'PE lessons' would at best just be like an extra play-time, and at worst binned off altogether.
To counter this, the head teacher brought in a young chap from the Schools Sport Partnership. Effectivelythe guy worked as the PE teacher at three local schools splitting his time equally between them, providing proper lessons to the children, and enabling the school's teachers to concentrate on what they are good at. It was an excellent arrangement, and the kids loved it.
It doesn't happen anymore. The SSP got scrapped to save money. The chap in question lost his job, and the kids are back to playing catch.
You can continue to shoot down everything you hear, and I'll continue to describe small, but genuine examples of the effects of funding cuts.
Then the decision made by the professionals within that school obvious deemed it an unnecessary expense, perhaps they were wrong I cannot be sure.
But decisions and budgets have to be met and decisions made, my wifes school has a dedicated activity provider, which is paid for directly by the pupils and or pupil premium.
It would be nice if it was free, but I guess budgets determine that it is an activity of choice and any prospective cost would be better spent elsewhere.